Thursday, 18 December 2025

“Chittadarshanee” Art Exhibition by contemporary artist Dhiraj Hadole in Jehangir Art Gallery

 Holding Space: Dhiraj Hadole’s Geometry

Dhiraj Hadoles work enters the long history of geometric abstraction not through utopian rigidity or formal bravado, but through a quieter, inward recalibration of what geometry can hold within. Where early modernist abstraction like Constructivism, De Stijl, Suprematism, often positioned geometry as a universal language detached from subjectivity, Hadole belongs to a later, more reflective strain of abstractionists that allow structure to coexist with memory, affect, continuity, and care.

Artist: Dhiraj Hadole 

His compositions recall the disciplined clarity of hard-edge abstraction, yet they resist its doctrinaire coolness. Unlike the mathematically assertive geometries of artists such as early Bauhaus painters, Hadoles planes feel lived-in. They are not declarations; they are settlements. The edges meet without aggression, and colour behaves less like a system and more like a mood. This places his work closer to artists who softened geometry through experience, where colour interaction became psychological rather than purely optical, like Josef Albers.

At the same time, Hadoles surfaces carry an unmistakable emotional register that aligns him with a lineage of felt abstraction, artists who used reduction not to erase feeling, but to distil it. One senses an affinity with quiet grids, where repetition functions as a form of attention rather than control. Hadole treats geometry as a meditative framework, a way to steady the mind rather than dominate it. It is evident in the way he constructs the wood stretcher, and drapes the canvas over it deftly, almost like one was reenacting a childhood memory, shaping it to precision.



The stitched and layered qualities in his work also introduce a material memory absent from classical geometric abstraction. Here, the work quietly diverges from Western modernist purity and moves toward a more indigenous abstraction; one shaped by domestic knowledge, textile logic, and inherited labour. Hadole’s quilt-inspired works situate him within a broader global shift where abstraction absorbs cultural specificity without becoming illustrative of the milieu. The geometry does not reference craft directly, yet it carries its ethics: patience, repair, assembly, warmth.


Emotionally, these works do not aim for expressionism. There is no outburst, no rupture. Instead, they emerge as a feeling that can exist in equilibrium, that care can be structured, that intimacy can be measured without being diminished. This places Hadole in dialogue with post-minimalist sensibilities, where restraint becomes a moral position rather than an aesthetic trick.

What makes Hadole's paintings quietly radical is their ethics. They insist that stability is not the enemy of life. They argue, without preaching, that a composed surface can still carry intimacy, that precision can still be soft. Dhiraj Hadoles geometry is not about control for its own sake; it is about building a space where inner turbulence can settle without being forgotten. In that sense, his work aligns with the exhibitions spirit of ChittaChitra: the mind and heart translated into image, not through confession, but through construction.

These are paintings that behave like shelters. They do not shout to be understood. They stay, they steady, and they reward the viewer who is willing to slow down and meet them at their pace.

Sushma Sabnis

Mumbai

December 2025


From: 23rd to 29th December 2025

"CHITTADARSHANI"

Art Exhibition by contemporary artist Dhiraj  Hadole

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

Oscar-Qualified Marathi Short Film Dear Panther Selected at London Lift-Off Global Network

The Oscar-qualified Marathi short film Dear Panther has been officially selected at the prestigious Lift-Off Global Network – London Lift-Off Film Festival 2025, marking a significant international milestone for Indian independent cinema. The festival is regarded as an important global platform for emerging filmmakers, offering international exposure and industry networking opportunities.

The Lift-Off Global Network hosts a series of film festivals during the Lift-Off Season, featuring curated screenings, showcases at Pinewood Studios, workshops, and structured networking programs. Selected filmmakers are invited to join the Lift-Off Network Members Hub, enabling participation in global focus groups, professional workshops, and collaborations through both online and in-person sessions.

Set against the backdrop of a rapidly advancing yet deeply unequal India, Dear Panther presents a powerful social narrative. While the nation celebrates historic achievements such as the successful launch of Chandrayaan-3, a significant segment of its educated population continues to struggle for basic rights. The film captures this contradiction with sensitivity and realism, earning its status as an Oscar Qualified Short Film.

The story revolves around a PhD scholar fighting a prolonged legal and bureaucratic battle with the local Municipal Corporation to claim his rightful home. His personal struggle evolves into a broader resistance against systemic injustice, administrative neglect, and widening socio-economic inequality. As the divide between the privileged and the marginalized deepens, Panther emerges as a voice for the oppressed. The film compellingly questions whether he can lead his community out of systemic deprivation—or be consumed by it.

The film’s impact is strengthened by its strong creative execution. Director Dhananjay Nirmalaxman Sable delivers a compelling vision, supported by Shonali Dhakane’s precise editing, Ajay Sagar’s realistic cinematography, and evocative background music composed by Pratik Borase, which draws audiences deeper into the emotional landscape of the narrative.

A unique aspect of Dear Panther is its authentic portrayal of real-life residents from Mumbai’s Dadar chawls, many of whom continue to live without basic civic amenities or housing rights. Their lived experiences lend the film a powerful documentary-like realism. Sable also plays the lead role of Panther, delivering a restrained yet impactful performance that captures inner conflict, resistance, and moral urgency. The supporting cast—including Deepali Badekar, Ashlesha Gade, Shonali Dhakane, Pragya Garibe, Atish Akhade, Harish Kadam, Kishor Bachhav, child actor Aaradhya Jadhav, and 73-year-old Vanitabai Kharat in her debut performance—adds emotional depth and credibility. Officials’ roles portrayed by Ankush Chourpagar, Amar Lahane, Nitin Shinde, and Ravi Kale further strengthen the narrative.

Dear Panther has received recognition at several prestigious film festivals worldwide, including:

12th Goa International Short Film Festival, Panaji 2025 – Best Indian Writer (Screenplay)

Jaipur International Film Festival 2026 – Official Selection

Vaanam Art Festival – P.K. Rosy Short Film Festival, Chennai

Kobani International Film Festival, Germany

Egyptian-American International Film Festival, New York

Ajanta-Ellora International Film Festival, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Maharashtra

The film’s post-screening Q&A sessions have sparked meaningful discussions, underscoring its strong social relevance and cinematic impact. With Dear Panther, writer-director Dhananjay Nirmalaxman Sable establishes a distinct voice on the global stage, while co-producer Nitin Shinde, in his debut as producer, successfully shoulders a significant creative responsibility.

The production received substantial local support from Amar Lahane Mitra Mandal, Chunabhatti, and Bouddhajan Panchayat Committee No. 127, Dadar, whose cooperation was instrumental during filming.

The international recognition of Dear Panther is not merely a milestone for a single film but represents a meaningful step forward for socially conscious Indian and Marathi cinema.

🔗 Vote for Dear Panther at the London Lift-Off Film Festival 2025:

Tickets are now available for purchase by the public via website:

Dear Panther Voting and Preview Tickets are now available for purchase by the public via website:

Liftoff.network/london-lift-off-film-festival-2025/

Thursday, 27 November 2025

"Manthan" Art Exhibition by Anisha Sanghani in Kamalnayan Bajaj Art Gallery

From December 1–6, 2025, U.S.-based artist Anisha Sanghani brings her inspiring exhibition “Manthan—Let the Churn Begin Within You” to Mumbai. With oceans occupying 71% of our planet, Sanghani uses the Samudra Manthan myth to reimagine Earth’s vast waters as sites of both crisis and transformation.

Artist: Anisha Sanghani

This edition of “Manthan” focuses on plastic suffocation, portraying turtles navigating choking debris, fish trapped in drifting nets, and mythological figures gasping under symbolic coils of waste. Yet Sanghani’s luminous palettes offer a sense of hope—suggesting that awareness can spark change.

 

Her mixed-media artistry weaves textures with radiant strokes, showing that beauty can exist even in struggle. Sanghani’s own immersion experiment—submerging with plastic on her face—deepened her resolve to speak for silent marine beings. “Their lungs became my lesson,” she reflects.



Ocean Illusion Collection (1 of 8 Paintings )12x12 inchesMixed-Media on Canvas


 

“Manthan” stands as an invitation: to awaken, introspect, and begin the conscious inner churning needed to protect the waters we rely on.

 

This show will be inaugurated on 1st December 2025 at 5pm by Distinguished Guests:

Ms. Nidhi Choudhari, IAS, Director, National Gallery of Modern Art, Mr. Sameer Balvally and Shilpa Jain Balvally, founders of the award-winning architecture and interior design practice Studio Osmosis, Mr. Ronak Sutaria, CEO, Respirer Living Sciences, Mr. Rishiraj Sethi, Director, Aura Art Development Pvt Ltd and co-founder of Aura Art, Dilip Ranade, Distinguished Indian artist and former Senior Curator at Mumbai’s CSMVS, Prakash Bal Joshi, Renowned Artist and Author.


 Manthan: Let the Churn Begin Within You” — An Environmental Awakening


Kamalnayan Bajaj Art Gallery, Nariman Point, Mumbai | Dec 1–6, 2025

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.