Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Review : A Surface That Breathes: Deepashri Dixit’s Meditative Landscapes at Nippon Gallery

 At Nippon Art Gallery, Deepashri Dixit’s solo exhibition unfolds as a contemplative study of the Nilgiri tree—one that moves beyond representation into an experiential and material engagement with nature. Rather than positioning the tree as a passive subject, Dixit approaches it as a living system, allowing its rhythms of growth, decay, and renewal to shape both the visual and conceptual language of her work.

Central to the exhibition is the surface of the Nilgiri bark. Its peeling layers and subtle chromatic transitions are translated into thick, tactile applications of oil paint. Dixit’s surfaces are not merely painted; they are constructed through layering, scraping, and reworking. In works such as Golden Horizon and Middle of Life, the bark dissolves into abstract terrains, suggesting erosion, sedimentation, and time compressed into matter. The palette remains grounded in earthy browns and ochres, punctuated by shifts into pale whites and cool blues, echoing the organic transformations described in the curatorial framework.

Artist: Deepashri Dixit

A notable formal device across the exhibition is the use of circular formats, particularly in Ankur. These works function less as images and more as cross-sections, inviting the viewer to look into rather than at the surface. Dense, radial mark-making generates a sense of internal movement, evoking cycles of growth and regeneration. The circular form disrupts linear temporality, instead proposing a cyclical understanding of time—one that aligns with ecological processes.

In contrast, larger works such as Patriarch (Karta Purush) introduce a more assertive visual presence. The tree trunk stretches horizontally across the canvas, intersecting a luminous circular form that reads simultaneously as sun, core, and symbolic anchor. While the scale suggests monumentality, the fragmented, textured surface resists idealization. The work holds tension between stability and transformation, suggesting that even the most dominant forms remain subject to time and environmental forces.

The smaller works titled Silence operate in a more restrained register. Reduced in scale and composition, they isolate fragments of bark-like textures, encouraging close, attentive viewing. These works function as pauses within the exhibition, where silence becomes a space of concentration rather than absence.

What ultimately anchors the exhibition is its ecological sensibility. As noted in the curatorial text, Dixit observes the Nilgiri not as an isolated organism but as part of a network of interdependence—roots, branches, and surrounding systems functioning collectively. This framework extends metaphorically into the human condition, suggesting parallels between ecological balance and social relationships.

Dixit’s exhibition resists spectacle. Instead, it demands duration—an attentive, slowed engagement with surface, texture, and transformation. In doing so, it offers a quiet but compelling proposition: that to understand nature is not to represent it, but to remain present within its ongoing processes.




Review By Mukur Biswas

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Thanks for comment JK