Thursday, 20 November 2025

“The Pulse of Harmony” Solo Show of Paintings By well-known artist Dadasaheb Yadav in Jehangir Art Gallery

In this new body of work, Dadasaheb Yadav steps away from the representational terrains that once anchored his explorations of monsoon, earth, and the fragrant immediacy of Earth. Instead, he enters the atmospheric unknown; an arena where gesture becomes geography, colour becomes emotion, and abstraction becomes a language of its own unrestrained logic. These water colour and mixed-media surfaces carry forward his lifelong fidelity to nature, but they no longer describe it; they distill it.

 Arist: Dadasaheb Yadav 

The works surge with washes of violet, viridian, cobalt, cadmium gold, and sudden explosions of black; strokes that feel like weather rather than depiction. Yadav has always been an artist tuned into elemental rhythms. Here, those rhythms unspool into pure energy. The paintings breathe in gradients, drips, and splashes, suggesting the moment before a storm breaks, the hush between waves, the twilight blur of sky dissolving into land. But this time, the harmony he invokes is not pastoral; it is kinetic, restless, charged with the honesty of lived experience. These abstractions demonstrate an artist unafraid to cut away the literal. What remains is an emotional architecture: atmospheres rather than landscapes, sensations rather than scenes. The viewer is invited into a space where colour becomes memory, movement becomes intuition, and the boundary between internal and external worlds collapses. This is harmony understood not as quietude, but as equilibrium born out of flux, nature’s true state.

Yadav’s mature confidence is evident in his handling of fluid media: bleeding edges that resist containment, fields of pigment that collide yet hold their ground. His gestures feel both spontaneous and inevitable, as if the work knows how to form itself. The paintings echo the lineage of abstract expressionism yet remain unmistakably rooted in his own sensibility, devotional to nature but no longer beholden to its forms.

In these works, Dadasaheb Yadav offers viewers not a window to the world but a mirror to their own internal weather. The visual intensity, the chromatic rush, the raw immediacy, all converge into a profound reminder that harmony is not found; it is felt, encountered, and made anew each time the colours meet.


Sushma Sabnis -Mumbai

November 2025 - 

From: 24th to 30th November 2025 -“The Pulse of Harmony”

Solo Show of Paintings By well-known artist Dadasaheb Yadav

Jehangir Art Gallery,161-B, M.G. Road,Kala Ghoda, Mumbai 400001Timing -11am to 7pm.



Aakriti Art Gallery Kicks Off 20th Anniversary Celebrations with Gurucharan Singh Exhibition

Kolkata, 20 November 2025 — Aakriti Art Gallery, one of Kolkata’s leading contemporary art spaces, launched its landmark 20th anniversary celebrations with the inauguration of A World Made Visible, a solo exhibition of recent works by renowned artist Gurucharan Singh, on Wednesday evening.

 Prayag Shukla and Gurucharan Singh

Curated by noted poet and art critic Prayag Shukla, the exhibition opened to a packed house of art lovers, collectors, artists, and literary figures. The event, held at the gallery’s premises at 12/3A Hungerford Street, turned into a vibrant gathering of Kolkata’s cultural community.

The highlight of the evening was a rare live drawing session by the artist himself. In a deeply engaging gesture, Gurucharan Singh unveiled the show not with a speech, but through the spontaneous act of creation—sketching directly onto canvas in front of the assembled audience. The drawing, composed in bold strokes of charcoal, depicted a layered composition of architectural and human forms, emblematic of the themes explored in the exhibition.

“To witness Gurucharan Singh draw live was to watch decades of artistic thought unfold in real time,” said one of the attendees. “It felt deeply personal, like an offering to the viewers.”

The exhibition features Singh’s recent body of work—complex, vibrant, and rooted in a narrative style that blends myth, memory, and lived experience. His visual language, marked by angular figures, architectural motifs, and a subtle interplay of light and gesture, continues to evolve while maintaining its contemplative depth.

In his curatorial note, Prayag Shukla described the exhibition as “an act of revelation—where the artist allows us to see the visible and the imagined in the same breath.”

The inauguration marks the beginning of a year-long celebration by Aakriti Art Gallery, which has played a pioneering role in promoting modern and contemporary Indian art since its founding in 2005.

“This is not just an exhibition—it is the first of many events that will celebrate our two-decade journey with artists and collectors,” said Vikram Bachhawat, Director of Aakriti Art Gallery. “We are honoured to begin the celebrations with a master like Gurucharan Singh.”

The exhibition A World Made Visible will remain open for public viewing in the coming weeks. Entry is free and all are welcome.

Aakriti Art Gallery (AAG)

Address: Orbit Enclave, 12/3a, Picasso Bithi, Mullick Bazar, Park Street area, Kolkata, West Bengal 700017

Phone: 033 2289 3027