Showing posts with label Makarand Rane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Makarand Rane. Show all posts

Saturday, 7 March 2026

Stratographs

Makarand Rane’s paintings feature repeated botanical forms that organize color in various hues and traces. His imagery is influenced by Matisse's cut-outs and Ellsworth Kelly's drawings of plants, as well as direct observation of fallen leaves and flowers. The works reveal a close examination of the process of painting as an act of depicting and covering and connect the painted image with the flatness of printing and the dimensionality of sculpture. Born in Kankavli, Sindhudurg he studied art at Sahyadri School of Art, Sawarde, Chiplun. Inspiring Makarand to explore Konkan’s corollary in the visual arts, where landscape is culture. The works disrupt usual ways of looking at iconic works while interrogating the ways that visual depictions of place tell us much about cultural and historic attitudes towards the natural world and our environment.

Artist: Makarand Rane

At the entrance to the visual center of the gallery and in some ways the entire show, is a magnificent yellow painting, which unfolds across a gold leaf screens. Here, the painting follows the folds of the panels making use of their movement to reveal a landscape of mountains and water. A narrative unfolds and at its dramatic conclusion, the scholar who has arrived by boat to contemplate the scene makes his appearance, serene under a massive rock formation. The effect is operatic, the brushwork that has come before at times as gently black as mist, at other times a staccato flurry builds to a crescendo here in the swirling black strokes of the rock formation.

The physicality of the brushwork is what commands attention; the painter appears to have been moving his ink-laden brush like a fevered conductor. And yet, the scene is one of contemplation, of absolute stillness. How can this be? These visual paradoxes, and the rhythms of the making evident in the masterful brushwork, create the compelling imagery, the rocks themselves depicted in urgent of dark strokes. So begins this small gem of an exhibition, featuring 10 carefully chosen works which from the onset, challenges viewers to re- think the pictorial representation of landscape and nature in Konkan while offering an opportunity to view masterpieces on canvas.“My idea was to put together a show of landscape painting,” says the artist, “without using the word ‘landscape’. I wanted to expand popular ideas of ink brush painting to help people see beyond the usual expectations of what art from Konkan should be.” The division of the show into three main themes: imagined places, mountains, trees, fields are sacred to the artist.

The emphasis is upon the possibilities of brushwork and the resulting tonality in the handling of black ink on paper, alongside colors on canvas. What constitutes “landscape” is also radically different from Western painting traditions. Japanese pictorial vision relied on invented scenes, literally called sansui, “mountains and water,” or as in the case of the yellow leaf, as imagined in peak Konkan summer. Nature as a subject of contemplation is not something apart from man, but rather, man is as much a part of nature as the mountains and water.  Even the language of comparison becomes tricky. The term “landscape,” (which derives from the German word landschaft, denoting agriculture), not apply to Japanese ink painting, but neither does the word nature, which does not even exist in the Japanese language. The closest Japanese word, “shizen,” which only entered the language in the 19th Century through translations of Western texts which used the word nature, is used primarily as an adjective meaning to act naturally, or in keeping with one’s essential nature. Naming is of course a critical act of separation of self from the object being named.

In religion and philosophy, the concept of man versus nature has been an enduring theme, depicting an artist setting to work on a painting of an outdoor scene, beginning with a mountain, but soon details make it clear that this artist is seated inside and the mountain he paints is from his imagination. Makarand’s piece, in romantic vision of nature has been burned, perforated and rendered unstable, bits of it piled on the floor in what amounts to a stark critique of the idea of nature as something pristine, apart and thus enduring. We are reminded that visions of landscape reflect culture, history, and in very direct ways, the subject position of the viewer.  Just as refreshing, the stance of eco-critical art history, which extends beyond questions of representation to consider the environmental implications of materials, is introduced.  We engage the ways art has always embodied ecological conditions both materially and conceptually whether the maker recognizes them or not.

The title of the exhibition, “Stratographs” pays homage to the new republic’s urgent sense of exceptionalism, based in the idea that a place apart, a previously un-peopled and unspoiled wilderness where history could begin again a new Eden.  As the exhibition reveals, Konkan’s wilderness as the ethical, spiritual and aesthetic birthright went hand in hand with a ruthlessly extractive view of nature as raw material to be used for progress., rendered with a quality of light that evokes beauty, truth and inspiration; we feast on a romantic vision of nature as all-powerful and beyond the reach of human ken. But as our eye travels the lines of cliffs and down through trees and rock formations, something interesting happens, the formal elements of composition begin to tame this wilderness. Symmetric and asymmetric forms are balanced by areas of intense light and dark, creating rhythms of looking, encouraging the eye through this painted landscape in an orderly and logical progression. We are not crashing through the underbrush, scratching ourselves on thorny vines and poison oak. Magnificent wilderness is rendered safe as a postcard, while the sloping cliffs and falls intensify the sense of space and openness. The visual logic of the painting not only supports the exceptionalism of the costal nature; it renders this wilderness critically spacious and empty, ready for settlement.

Environmental humanities is a relatively new and evolving field, but this show, the result of years of work by Makarand, demonstrates the ways in which the eco-critical lens is both timely and moving. His indirect and painstaking process creates spirit-filled visions, where the experience of perspective and rational space is blurred into fragments and projections. They are like elegiac shrines to the natural world and to the impossibility of separating human presence from the landscape, which is as much a product of the mind as the weather. Strata of cultural and personal memory accumulate in dense deposits like layers of compressed rock: his paintings are as much geological as psychological.



Abhijeet Gondkar

March 2026

Phansop, Ratnagiri