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- Ram Kumar
- Akbar Padamsee
- Amrita Sher-Gil
- Vanita Gupta
- Smita Kinkale
- Ratnadeep Adivrekar
- Tathi Premchand
- Nilesh Kinkale
- Prabhakar Kolte
- Chintan Upadhyay
- Prabhakar Barwe
- Shankar Palsikar
- Yashwant Deshmukh
- Prabhakar Kolte
- Sanchita Sharma
- Prakash Waghmare
- Ranjit Hoskote
- Premjish Achari
- Pankaja JK
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Saturday, 22 February 2014
Vinita Dasgupta, 30
A large figurative portrait of a frail, distraught-looking lady set against the backdrop of Pattachitra paintings from Raghurajpur in Odisha adorns the wall at artist Vinita Dasgupta’s first solo show titled Storytellers. Although all her works on display were sold out, this is one piece that Dasgupta says she will never sell. “This is a portrait of my dida (grandmother) and she is my storyteller,” says the 30-year-old artist.
The series of paintings depicts a new pictorial style and artistic
practice that she developed three years ago after visiting Raghurajpur.
Although the village is known for its heritage of Pattachitra paintings
that date back to 5 BC, to the artist,
it is a cradle of early childhood memories and stories that her
grandmother used to tell her. Much like the Pattachitra paintings that
depict tales from Hindu mythology in a pictorial form, her grandmother
too would narrate mythological stories and folk tales. As Dasgupta grew
up and graduated from Delhi College of Arts, the memories of Raghurajpur
faded, but not the influence of her grandmother, who continues to be an
inspiration for her work.
“The biggest strength of a woman is her power to love,” says the artist.
“And it starts with the ability to love oneself.” That’s one of the
lessons that her mother and her grandmother taught her. No wonder
Dasgupta’s early works have a deeply autobiographical touch. She used
self-portraits to create metaphors of herself and her realisation of
womanhood. These early works are characterised by broad, free-flowing
brush strokes. “Here was a woman who painted like a man and that is what
drew me to her work,” says curator Rahul Bhattacharya. “But that style
comes naturally to her.” And she never changes her style until she gets
bored of it.
Although a personal connect with Raghurajpur drew her to the village
at first, the craftsmanship, detailing and precision of the folk
painters inspired her to incorporate elements of their work into hers.
“It was these artists who helped me realise that something ‘popular’
could also be deeply rooted in discipline and have a strong cultural
dialogue,” she says. Since then, Dasgupta has adopted a more controlled
technique and introduced new compositional elements in her work.
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Artist : Vinita Dasgupta Photo: Vijay Pandey |
Although initially she transposed motifs from the village onto the
borders of paintings depicting popular personalities, they are now
deeply entrenched in her artwork. For her latest series, the artist
has painted Pattachitrakathas on small pieces of canvas, rolled them to
create small scrolls and used them to create an intricate detailing in
her latest series of portraits. “I have seen Vinita sitting in the
corner making canvas rolls for hours together,” says Bhattacharya, who
feels that Dasgupta’s drive to create art combined with her fidgetiness converts her art
into a meditative practice. “What makes her work unique is that it is
contemporary, yet embodies our heritage in the form of scrolls,” says artist Niladri Paul.
Although Dasgupta has never had trouble selling her work, the
detailing in her work is time-consuming; a single piece of work can take
her up to three months to complete. Her works can be bought for Rs 1-5
lakh. Though there are times when she has to struggle to make ends meet,
that is about to change with her first solo show being a runaway hit.
Perhaps she can now put her energies into refining her work.
(Report courtesy Published in Tehelka Magazine, Volume 11 Issue 7, Dated 15 February 2014)
Re telling a story teller:
Yet the search
continued, she discovered that to work with popular imagery she needed to
re-present them with greater conceptual layering. The gestural modernist within her can only be
deconstructed through a practice connected with tradition and discipline. Her
(re) discovery of Raghurajpur folk painting tradition finally leadsto this search
finding a resting place from where she can explore future directions. How do
craft, storytelling and meditative practice become carriers of contemporary
concepts? This body of work ‘The Story Tellers’ marks an
important turning point in her journey, specially reflecting a sustained
engagement with technique, inspiration and concept.
Odishahas been a part of
the artist’s childhood, and that nostalgia has played an important role in
Dasgupta being able to culturally respond to it’s artistic tradition. The
Raghurajpur folk painting tradition also offered her adifferent access to the
‘popular’, a ‘popular’ that was deeplyentrenched in a disciplined and controlled
approach to art. This art making is robust, colorful and yet deeply in dialogue
with the culture of contemporaneity. The philosophy of craftsmanship attracted
her deeply along with its notions of detailing, precision and the ‘handmade’. Moreover,
Raghurajpur offered her an escape from the noise of mainstream popular culture
as well as an alternative understanding of the narrative possibilities of art
making. Since her (re) visit to Raghurajpur about three years ago, newer pictorial
style and artistic practice slowly began to find space in her works. Initially
it was just motifs coming into the borders of her paintings depicting Bollywood
and popular personalities...and slowly it entered deep, deep into the artwork
itself.
The encounter with
Raghurajpur did not lead her throw away her personal love for the urban popular
traditions, instead what resulted is a complex layering of both. Taking
photographs of the Raghurajpur paintings,the artist painstakinglymakesnumerous
canvas rolls and usesthem to make portraits of painters, performers and story
tellersto make her world. Paint is given at a final layer of detailing that
helps the artist to develop a language that challenges the boundaries of
painting. This merging of boundaries makes her a child of postmodern
eclecticism and also gives her meditative therapy of craftmanship that her soul
has been looking for.
Apart from the artist’s
natural flair for figuration and an ability to strike a chord with portraiture, what makes her current body of works significant
is the possibilities of enquiries that they open and the complex layering of
folk and urban they embody. This layering of folk and urban also mirrors the
zone between art and craft that mark the physicality of her works. The inspiration
behind these rolls has been earrings she discovered where in Coke and Fanta
cans were cut and rolled. This dismembering and creation of a new identity
opened up the possibilities for Dasgupta to assimilate the Raghurajpur
paintings into her works and yet mask them. Over the last two years apart from
the painters and performers of Raghurajpur, other prominent personalities have
come in her artworks...almost as a continuation of her earlier subject matter.
However even though sometimes these popular mainstream icons enter her work,
their representation has completely changed. There is a fragmentation and
realignment that happens, this breaks their iconicity and positions them within
the vulnerability
of popular storytelling.
As
she moves deeper into understanding and practicing this direction in her
practice, she is also beginning to realize that within this idiom there is a
great possibility of conceptual fine-tuning and experimentation. These works
have captured the imagination of viewers, yet the artist is looking for more, eager
to walk a tightrope between making her practice more deeply personal, and
universal. The journey is to entrench her works deep into the dialog of
contemporary, yet go deeper into her love for craft and the handmade. The
Storytellers is standing on the edge, rooted and yet ready to take off.
Rahul
Bhattacharya
Curator
and Writer
Wednesday, 19 February 2014
FLAG MARCH OF REASSURANCE- Art and Deal - Delhi
REVIEW
FLAG MARCH OF REASSURANCE
- SUSHMA SABNIS
Every once in a while, a nation chooses to display its strength as a reassurance to the citizens it houses, aptly called a flag march, where various streams of security forces parade in all their glory and finesse. These times of recession urged six artists to display their show of strength titled, ‘Flag March’ with a similar intent of reassuring the art world, at the newly opened Art Gate gallery, reviews Sushma Sabnis.
- SUSHMA SABNIS
Every once in a while, a nation chooses to display its strength as a reassurance to the citizens it houses, aptly called a flag march, where various streams of security forces parade in all their glory and finesse. These times of recession urged six artists to display their show of strength titled, ‘Flag March’ with a similar intent of reassuring the art world, at the newly opened Art Gate gallery, reviews Sushma Sabnis.
Conceptualized and organized by artist Tathi Premchand, the show he believes is a ‘flag march for safe investment in art’. Six eminent and upcoming artists from Mumbai came together to display an array of their works at the newly opened art gallery, Art Gate. This was the gallery’s debut show and its intent at showcasing these six specific artists was more than just a launch of their new space in an age when gallerists are closing shop. Owned and managed by Runish Chedda and at 3000 sq ft of display space and well equipped, the gallery is not just reassuring for the artists displaying their works, but anyone who walks through their doors and is connected to the art world. The show ‘Flag March’ displayed the works of six contemporary artists of our times, Archana Mishra, Gajanan Kabade, Pradeep Nerurkar, Prakash Waghmare, Rahul Vajale and Tathi Premchand. With an eclectic mix of the range of works on display, from abstracts to contemporary art and drawings, the show had a little something for everyone. The participating artists have been working in their chosen field and medium for the past 10-20 years and the works on display are a testament to theireffort and evolution of their art practices.
Artist Archana Mishra, reaches deep within her mind and heart to depict her abstractions on large scaled canvases. In this show however, along with her large format works, were a selection of small format works named, ‘Moon series’. Fluid and lyrical in form and colours, the abstracts descended over the viewer like a comforting gaze. The palette, unlike Archana’s earlier works, was replete with cool blues, pale yellows and luminous ochres. Archana believes in the influence of nature in everything and it reflected in her works as well.
Artist Gajanan
Kabade employed a very unique method to layer his canvases or paper
works. He used coloured cellophane tape. Multiple hued and varying in
different width as per the necessity of the artist’s vision, the works
were bit by bit layered. The translucency of these cellophane pieces
ensured the textures and luminosity of the works. Contrasting the shades
used the artist left minute crevices between the layering like lighted
windows to peep into his art process and his thought processes. Some
portions displayed a water colour treatment and appeared to be meshed
behind the translucent tape. Raising the ordinary cello tape from a mere
material to a medium of art, Gajanan aimed to show beauty in the
mundane to the viewer. Once in a while an artist becomes so influenced
by nature that instead of just depicting it through the paint medium,
they engage in a seemingly tactile depiction of it, like artist Pradeep
Nerurkar. One had to only look at the acrylic painted surfaces that were
on display at the show to imagine the stages of art processes that went
into creating the art work. The artist engaged in nearly covering the
white of the canvas with another sharply emerging cotton mesh element
which leapt out at the viewer in absolute boldness. There was little of
gradual merging of the contrasting textures of the canvas and the
treated, coloured, hardened cotton mesh which stood out almost as a
pedestal. The artist drew inspiration from nature and its diverse
secrets and his choice of cotton, a natural fabric cementedthe reliance
and faith he harbours in nature.
The works of artist Prakash Waghmare were intense colour fields, reflecting depth of the artist’s art practice and thought process. An ardent practitioner of Yoga, this artist based his meditative and soulful canvases on the silence he experienced during those moments of practice. If one were to observe a silent river, one would encounter bits of floating elements now and then, which float and sink as the river ebbs and flows. Prakash’s canvases displayed a similar essence to that river in flow. Fluid, deep and hinting at the elements it encompassed, the canvases were large format colour fields with the occasional geometric shapes which surfaced only on closer observation by the viewer. Like the wind playing with a window grill and a curtain, the possibilities of the objects behind thescreen seem more hypnotic than the directly visible.
(Report courtesy Art and Deal - Delhi)
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