Anand Mahindra drops a humble reply to a man who made his Portrait using Tamil letters

Anand Mahindra is one of the most admired personalities in India. The billionaire tycoon is also quite active on the micro-blogging Twitter platform. Every now and then, he comes up with interesting or catchy tweets to engage with his fans and followers on social media.

From posting Monday motivation stuff to expressing his opinions, the Twitter fraternity has seen it all. At the same time, he never shies away from giving befitting or epic replies to the haters on social media.

Anand Mahindra drops a humble reply to a man who made his Portrait using Tamil letters

We have seen time and time again that Mahindra has the knack for shutting the critics with classy and bossy replies. On the other hand, he also has an incredible sense of humour, something that the netizens would love to the core.

Anand Mahindra drops a humble reply to a man who made his Portrait using Tamil letters

An artist from Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu, has amazed the internet with his incredible skills. The artist, Ganesh, created a unique portrait of industrialist Anand Mahindra using ancient Tamil letters. He shared a video of his artwork on Twitter, which caught Anand Mahindra’s attention.

The video, posted by Ganesh on May 19, shows him drawing Anand Mahindra’s portrait with ancient Tamil script. The 24-second clip has garnered over 1.75 lakh views.

Anand Mahindra not only complimented the artist but also expressed his wish to display the portrait in his home, responding with a quote tweet written entirely in Tamil.

“Hey, @anandmahindra. This is Ganesh, from Kanchipuram, I have drawn a pic of you with 741 Ancient Tamil letters. It’s one of the first drawings of this kind. Would love to hear your opinion on this,” Ganesh wrote in the tweet alongside the video.

Anand Mahindra not only praised the artist but also expressed his wish to display the portrait in his home through a quote tweet written entirely in Tamil.

“For the sake of the grandeur of the Tamil language, I would like to place a portrait in my house in appreciation of the creator,” reads Anand Mahindra, when translated from Tamil.