Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Paresh Maity retrospect­ive: Exhibition showcases art work from 1990 till now

- Chintan Girish Modi htmumbai@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: A massive, multigenre exhibition showcasing artist Paresh Maity’s work from the 1990s up to the present day opened at Snowball Studios in Worli on Sunday.

Audiences stood transfixed by the visual spectacle created in the film studio, juxtaposin­g the sculpture of a charging bull made of metal bells with the painting of earthen lamps evoking peace and serenity on the ghats along a river. The absence of captions and wall text gave audiences an invitation to interpret what they saw in the artworks – trumpets, boats, trees, humans – on their terms.

The show will remain open for viewing until January 10. It is part of a retrospect­ive titled “Infinite Light” across four Indian cities over five months. It is a collaborat­ion between Art Alive Gallery in Delhi, Art Musings in Mumbai, Gallery Sumukha in Bengaluru, and the Centre for Internatio­nal Modern Art (CIMA) in Kolkata. In Mumbai, it is being held at Snowball Studios, Art Musings and Jehangir Art Gallery.

The retrospect­ive presents highlight from Maity’s widerangin­g body of work which includes drawings, paintings, sculptures, ceramics, installati­ons and films. Reflecting on the trajectory of his career, Maity said, “An artist continues to evolve throughout his life but this evolution can be understood clearly only in retrospect. It has been a pleasure to work with every medium, to not restrict my imaginatio­n.”

Several artists and art movements have played a role in this evolution. Maity recalled the influence of English painter Joseph Mallard William Turner during the early part of his career when he was engrossed in creating landscapes. When Maity turned his attention to figurative art, he developed a great fondness for Spanish painter Pablo Picasso. “Cubism and impression­ism have been major sources of inspiratio­n for me,” he added.

Sangeeta Raghavan, Gallery Director at Art Musings, spoke of the gallery’s long associatio­n with Maity. Her mother Shanti Chopra and her aunt Kasturi Wadhwani started the gallery, and their inaugural exhibition in 1999 displayed a young Maity’s work alongside masters like M F Husain, H S Raza and Anjolie Ela Menon.

Raghavan said, “I have a deep emotional connection with Paresh. I got to know him as a friend first and a gallerist later. My mother and aunt discovered him when he was a student. Though he was just starting, these women put him up with the best of the best. Their gut instinct told them that he was cut out for greatness.”

A book titled – Infinite Light – was released by cricketer Sachin Tendulkar at the opening in Mumbai. He said, “I used to love drawing and colouring as a child, and my elders used to shower me with compliment­s but I grew up and learnt that my strokes with the brush were not as good as my strokes with the cricket bat in my hand. I’m glad that we have an artist like Paresh who makes our country proud because of his hard work, discipline and persistenc­e.” Tendulkar also spoke about his warm relationsh­ip with Maity and his wife artist Jayasree Barman. The book is written by cultural theorist and art critic Ranjit Hoskote who also served as the curatorial advisor for the exhibition.

“Maity’s practice as an artist was founded in a mastery of watercolou­rs and the reflexes he has acquired in that medium have also defined his work with other mediums,” Hoskote said over a phone call.

The play of light and depth, colour and saturation in his work, and his ability to work with scale and monumental­ity are praisewort­hy features of his art, he added. Hoskote also referred to Maity’s lifelong critical engagement with Picasso as well as the Bengal school of painting, and the influence of “the living tradition of terracotta sculpture from Bankura in Bishnupur.”

Maity is not planning to retire anytime soon because he believes that “art is life and life is art.”

 ?? PICS COURTESY: ART MUSINGS ?? The sculpture of a charging bull made of metal bells with the painting of earthen lamps, evoking peace and serenity.
PICS COURTESY: ART MUSINGS The sculpture of a charging bull made of metal bells with the painting of earthen lamps, evoking peace and serenity.
 ?? ?? Cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar with artist Paresh Maity at the opening of the exhibition.
Cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar with artist Paresh Maity at the opening of the exhibition.

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