Latest news with #PurushaPrakriti


Hindustan Times
26-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Hindustan Times
Report: The Purusha Prakriti exhibition, Ahmedabad
Devin Gawarvala's two-year-old venue in Ahmedabad, Bespoke Art Gallery, is currently hosting the ambitious Purusha Prakriti art exhibition curated by Uma Nair. Dedicated to artist Himmat Shah, who died in March this year – Head from his London series occupies a place of honour at the entrance of the gallery -- the works on display, according to the curatorial note, 'symbolise the dual principles of nature and consciousness'. Ankon Mitra's A Fleeting Moment of Infinite Bliss and Ram Kumar Manna's Ganeshas (Saurabh Sharma) Visitors to the gallery are sure to be captivated by Simon Max Bannister's Falcon, a bronze-and-stone-sculpture that strangely recalls Helen Macdonald's memoir H Is for Hawk, in the way it exudes both grace and grief alongside a love for birds. Curator Uma Nair (Saurabh Sharma) Three stoneware works by Keshari Nandan Kumar, (Nair reveals the younger artist 'happens to be a great favourite of Shah') titled Bapu, Animal and Owl appear to be inspired by Pablo Picasso. Ahmedabad-based Karl Antao's wooden art forms, Symphony of Breathes and Symphony of Phases, too hark back to Picasso. Nair says their visual grammar 'reminded me of the Africans', adding that one mustn't forget that 'Picasso first studied African art to get into modern art'. Sudip Roy's luminous water colours, Faith and Conversations, celebrate the richness of Banaras. Another piece on the city of death that is absolutely stunning is an untitled Manu Parekh from 1997 that was exclusively for this collection. Nilesh Vede's giant artwork, Enlightenment, Nair notes, is typical 'Purusha Prakriti'. The moon, in this work, she says, belongs to everyone, effusively reminiscent of vintage Bollywood songs. At the Bespoke Art Gallery with Harsh Durugadda's yellow Topo Sculpturein the foreground (Saurabh Sharma) Two pieces from Muzaffar Ali's Calligraphy series recalled, for this viewer at least, Orhan Pamuk's line that 'From tiny experiences we build cathedrals'. Both works demonstrate how several layers of meaning can be hidden beneath a work of art for those willing to engage with it. Gazing at these works, the viewer feels compelled to think about everything from religion, media and history to contemporary politics and modern life. Ankon Mitra's pieces are unmissable. A Fleeting Moment of Infinite Bliss is suspended from the ceiling while The Framed Frame, 'a frame within a frame', that decorates a gallery wall challenges the viewer's perception. Occupying the central spot of the exhibition space is Dhananjay Singh's untitled artwork, which can easily be called The Tree of Life. However, in not naming this tree made of steel wires, which so effortlessly informs viewers of Singh's deep interest in nature and his understanding of botany, he allows art enthusiasts to wonder about the inspiration behind this work. 'Singh has been doing trees for more than 25 years,' states Nair who pointing to the work's microscopic detailing. From nature to divinity is but a small leap and Ram Kumar Manna's two terracotta Ganeshas present the god's fun avatar while also conveying his Vighnaharta aspect – the One who removes obstacles. Rini Dhumal's love for the 'Shakti image' is reflected in her Devi. Poonam Bhatnagar's Buddha and Meerabai convey both the calming meditative vibe of Buddhism and the absolute surrender of Bhakti respectively. Padma Shri-awardee Bhajju Shyam's three artworks demonstrate his control over his craft. The pen on paper work entitled Vriksha 1 and the other two untitled acrylics on canvas show his unmatched ability to centralises the power of nature. The marble eye in Arzan Khambatta's bronze work, Mustang Sally, immediately arrests the viewer's attention. Subrat Kumar Behera's Gandhi challenges the generally-held perception of the Mahatma. Never have his eyes looked as ferocious as they do here. At the bottom are his famous three monkeys that allude to his principles. The bare cloth that covers Gandhi's upper body rises in the shape of wings making the viewer wonder if they, perhaps, signal the work's satirical nature. Harsh Durugadda's yellow Topo Sculpture, Gillie and Marc's They Like Doing Things Differently and Jesús Curia's Construction I signal a queering of nature. Or perhaps they're trying to challenge the conventional understanding and appreciation of nature in fixed categories. The last two works celebrate nature in all its complexity and do not separate desire into normative and non-normative terms as they usually are in India, which is largely a culture hinged on conformity. Adding much joy throughout the exhibition are KG Subramanyan's six untitled works, all of which commemorate natural beauty in both bare strokes and dense forms. They stand out from the rest in a way only trademark Subramanyan pieces can. Gillie and Marc's They Like Doing Things Differently (Saurabh Sharma) Clearly the themes of influence, confluence and connection pulse through the exhibition that includes the work of artists from across generations and geographies who all seem to engage with ideas of the interdependence between 'man and nature'. The exhibition which began in April and will go on until the end of June also coincided with Earth Month making the point that what perhaps really unites humans is their innate and often unconscious desire to (re)produce nature in their own works of art. 'Purusha Prakriti' is on view till 30 June 2025. Saurabh Sharma is a Delhi-based writer and freelance journalist. They can be found on Instagram/X: @writerly_life.


Time of India
15-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Time of India
Kala Sutra at Singapore unveils magic and caprice
Critic and Curator Uma Nair has been writing for the past 35 years on art and culture She has written as critic for Times of India and Economic Times. She believes that art is a progressive sojourn. She learnt by looking at the best shows in Washington D.C. and New York. As author her most important books are Reverie with Raza and Meditations on Trees by Ompal Sansanwal. LESS ... MORE Kala Sutra, contemporary Indian art exhibition held annually in Singapore, showcased works by prominent Indian artists. This collaborative event between Phi Events and Sanchit Art Gallery had within a multiple mediums and materials and compositions that regaled. The 2025 edition, titled 'The Lineage of Light,' held at The Arts House in Singapore had two distinctive famed masters – Dipak Bannerjee, the pedagogue of Benares Hindu University and Neeraj Goswami, India's meditative Guru and modernist master. With them was the young figurative fantasia specialist Nandan Purkayastha. Mystic symbolism of Dipak Banerjee Dipak Banerjee's mixed media on canvas world is worthy of scrutiny. Banerjee was influenced by tantric symbolism and his understanding of geometry gave his works a cohesive formula of perfection which withstood the formulae of time and space. He wove into his work the principles of 'Purusha Prakriti' and the traditional nuances of Indian miniature painting. His work Kali created in 2013 is a veritable masterpiece of magical elements in mythic rituals. The work is reflective of deep symbolism. Banerjee graduated from Government College of Art, Kolkata. His first job was to collect different cultural motifs which he used to copy from the walls of temples in Kolkata. He went to Paris in 1965 on scholarship. He studied printmaking under William Hayter of Atelier 17 as well as the master printmaker Krishna Reddy. Modern mandalas This Kali painting looks like a modern mandala, a medley of geometry and symbolism. The tantric elements and the motifs of Indian miniatures are all meshed into meticulous variations that exude a deep spirituality within and without. His command of a free fluidity of lines and the warmth of colour zones all become a precise permutation of in-depth accuracy and balance of choreography. His second work Vishnupada, has about it an antique aura that is unseen in today's world. This is a reflection of his understanding of cold and warm tones, the fluidity of lines and their linear graphics. He said during one of his shows in Delhi in the 1990s, ' I am not a practicing tantric but I gradually moved to the tantric mode of self-realisation during my many explorations. In my collection of temple motifs, I was unconsciously gaining an album of tantric symbolic motifs like Purusha Prakriti, Vishnu, Sahasra, Nathji and Kundalini, which presented the spiritual dynamics of content in ancient Indian art. So you could say that the journey which began in Paris got its final direction through the lanes of Benaras.' Attention to detail and the earth-toned colours talk about the spiritual and the sublime. Ornamentation in linguistic alphabets was the norm in his work. Miniature divinities settled into the cosmic realm of his design dynamics. These variations make his works iconic. Within the dictums of tantric symbolism, we see an intense expression of evocative elegance. His work was a quest that transcended beyond space and time, and was a communion with the Absolute. Neeraj Goswami's meditative symbolism Neeraj Goswami's canvases reaffirm his brilliance as an artist of rare timbre and compositional classicism. Goswami is a voracious reader and his work is born of contemplative idioms. In his early years in the 1990s he would speak of Kant's empirical analysis and philosophy. 'Kant wrote that reason itself is structured with forms of experience and categories that give a phenomenal and logical structure to any possible object of empirical experience.' But when we speak of the transitions in art these categories cannot be circumvented to get at a mind-independent world, but they are necessary for experiencing their natural behaviour and logical properties. Bhraman a stroll in red space is about the treatment of the form. It brings on the fascinating facet of transcendental meditation and the underlying harmony of empirical experience. The second work is Musical Float. In both these works we see a certain sophistication of quietude, an intuitive intent, that tells us that the artist's gaze can be one of admiration and appreciation and deep attention to details. Goswami has over the past 40 years presented the allure of gesture as well as the perfection of poise in his manner of fusing form and colour in prismatic indices to tell us that the human form is an enduring and eternal form which is also deeply powerful as a visual lexicon. The manner of divisional dynamics as well as the fragmentary felicity both become imperative studies in precious observations in the hands of this contemporary master. Nandan Purkayastha's earthsongs Detailed and stylistically nuanced the canvasses of Nandan Purkayastha are an integration of a contemplative practice of drawing from imagination as well as his own proficiency in techniques of controlled contours within the frame of his own fantasia. Botanica and The Eternal Cosmos are two top notch creations that grab your gaze for form and fervour. These two canvasses exhibit the arduous labour that entails the cultivation and refinement of his own sensibility. We also observe the totality of an artist's passion for drawing as well as painting muralesque works that celebrate human and ecological and biological elements come floating into his frames. Humans and animals and birds and textural terrain all flit and swim freely in his aggregation of beings born of the spirit of harmony. This pair of paintings exudes a visual as well as intellectual vibrancy and attraction which, by far, exceeds their modest scale. Last year during his solo show in Delhi at the Bikaner House, Nandan said: ' Drawing as well as painting for me is more than intuitive as a journey, for me it is a deep rooted quest where my figures of humans as well as animals and birds are not just literal figures, but they are imbued with an essence of being or meaning born of mythological moorings .' These three artists at Kala Sutra in Singapore, used a configuration of intuitive embellishments, deciphering and adjusting their own observations and experiences into expressive paintings, born of years of thought as well as contemplative idioms. Images: Sanchit Art Gallery Facebook Twitter Linkedin Email Disclaimer Views expressed above are the author's own.


Time of India
21-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Time of India
Purusha Prakriti celebrates earth month in Ahmedabad
Critic and Curator Uma Nair has been writing for the past 34 years on art and culture She has written as critic for Times of India and Economic Times. She believes that art is a progressive sojourn. She learnt by looking at the best shows in Washington D.C. and New York. As author her most important books are Reverie with Raza and Meditations on Trees by Ompal Sansanwal. LESS ... MORE The works of 39 artists come together in a historic showing at Bespoke Art Gallery Ahmedabad, in a celebration of Earth Month titled Purusha Prakriti. Paintings, prints, sculptures and ceramics by some of India's finest practitioners are all under one roof and it breathes of rhythms of the earth and the beauty of as an avant garde space by the brilliant architect Shomu Dasgupta, this is a free floor plan, longitudinal space that invites the gaze of art lovers to create a world within a world spanned over long walls. Himmat Shah and Manu Parekh Dedicated to the late modernist sculptor Himmat Shah, it begins with a small head by Himmat that belonged to his London series specially given for the show. The spartan, archetypal bronze textured head is a masterpiece in meditation and the idea of the human head always being an enigmatic symbol of life to artists and sculptors all over the idea of the dedication is taken from the fact that Himmat was born in Lothal in Gujarat and his life has been one of selfless service to the art of sculpture in of Bespoke Devin Gawarvala says: The Himmat sculpture is a definite example of his brilliance and we are so honored to have this in our gallery in Ahmedabad. The second master to be part of this epic exhibition is Manu Parekh. His early 1997 canvas on board is a monumental work created in acrylic and sand with a few splashes of deep purple that creates evocations of chants and the beauty of rituals and time spent savouring the world of contemplated idioms in Benares. Manu's handling of the compositional alchemy comes from his love for Abstract Expressionists and his idea of blending both materials and mediums to create Benares in its contemporary character. Manu was specially chosen after this critic saw his historic Samudra Mathan at India Art Fair as well as Astaguru's Showkeen at Mumbai. Director Anar Gawarvala, said she liked Manu Parekh's Banaras for its narrative of tradition and the suggestion of bhakti always being a part of Indian accents in the lifestyle of people from all walks of life. Ankon Mitra and Karl Antao Sculptural studies add to the inventory of artistic aesthetics in this show. The exhibition has an installation of 3 aluminium butterflies that have been powder coated and folded in origami style by the maestro Ankon Mitra whose installation is also a part of Ahmedabad Airport Terminal frame within a frame is the second work in this show and it extols the virtues of time as a testimony. Ankon is known also as a landscape designer who melds the consciousness of the inner spirit with a yen for botanical brilliance. The entrance of the show has a pair of Burmese teak multiple facaded sculptural heads by Ahmedabad dweller Karl Antao. Director Devin Gawarvala who admired Antao's works was delighted to discover Antao and said he was unaware that Ahmedabad had such a brilliant sculptor in the city. Antao is well known for his monumental sculpture at Trident Oberoi in Mumbai and has been a seasoned sculptor who works only in wood .Accents and shades of sanding down in varied colour tones is what sets apart Antao's work for its contemporary charisma. Sanjay Bhattacharyya and Phaneendra Nath Chaturvedi The idea of Purusha Prakriti, was to include multiple mediums and materials. Amongst drawings in the show two stellar drawings speak of the oldest tools in the world, pen and ink, pencil ,pastel and graphite. Sanjay Bhattacharyya's Durga is a lithe lined beauty created as a tribal form and nestled in the beauty of says his Durgas are a celebration of form and feminine fervour and it isn't about religion. However it is the nestling of elements that draws the gaze of art lovers. Phaneendra Nath Chaturvedi's Winged -5 mixed media on archival paper goes back to 2014 is work of depth and an artist Phaneendra is versatile in many mediums and uses his love for pencil to create man in monochrome suited to fashion modern urban wing of a bird is one deep zoological depth. ' The central figure is a figure of beauty,' says Phaneendra. ' My choice of donning him in a striped shirt represents the beauty, I associate with confidence. The wings of the eagle represent a different beauty: of unbridled freedom, of living life on one's own terms and an ambition that keeps him going in a competitive world.' Images: Bespoke Art Gallery Ahmedabad Facebook Twitter Linkedin Email Disclaimer Views expressed above are the author's own.