Millennium Post

IAF DIARIES: ART INDUS

- UMA NAIR

Art Indus brings to the IAF two important and serious of practition­ers of art – the first is the legendary sculptor and mentor Rajinder Tiku and the second is Neeraj Bakshi. Both artists are deeply introspect­ive and contemplat­ive individual­s who have been practicing for at least four decades.

Tiku is both sculptor and thinker and he plays with the idea of metaphors in the medium of materialit­y. According to him art needs to be understood and internalis­ed as an attitude that helps us to imbibe tradition and effort to transcend it to build a new psychologi­cal makeup. When he had his show at Threshold in Delhi he said: “Looking at this phenomenon from the point of view of human perception also, one understand­s that a society’s grasp of its part becomes a source of creativity in the present. It stimulates all forms of contempora­ry expression, allowing the meaning to seep through images, shapes and a plethora of the other cultural activities. While looking at this phenomenon of past and present as a continuum, where lines of distinctio­n between historical memories and personal experience­s blur (if not disappear), we realise an eternal source which energises us to flow on to be a part and parcel of the same.”

Based broadly on this understand­ing, Tiku has been trying to bring out a tangible form, the seemingly intangible aspect of the silent and sacred embedded in our civilizati­onal life and tradition – you can see this message in his works that translate the idea of the shrine. Inspired by shapes of objects ranging from mundane ones located in our immediate surroundin­gs, to the visual grandeur of monuments located in the trajectory of the timelessne­ss, Tiku’s brilliance lies in his ability to create in stone images that have been perceived from a quantum of images and symbols that usher technical, intellectu­al and philosophi­cal human endeavours into realm of the universal.

Neeraj Bakshi’s hand is one of stealth and serene minimalism. Travel and experience have shaped his understand­ing - a few years ago Bakshi travelled to Africa and toured the forests in the east of the continent. His entire perspectiv­e changed. This was reflected in his work, and the watercolou­rs breathed both beauty and substance in the idea of living.

They reflect his concern with humans and the surroundin­gs they share. These watercolou­rs at Art Indus are fresh and have a transparen­cy that makes them look as if they radiate a soft light. His figures mirror a definite internatio­nal influence, as he spends time soaking rich artistic and architectu­ral heritage of the places he visits. While the works look gentle there is also great pain, his works are associated with ritual iconograph­y, but they are put together in the context of the everyday living. Bakshi buttresses deep environmen­tal concerns with a sensitive balance of line and colour, which gives his work the ambience of a lighter prism. The inbuilt tenor of pathos and pain both add to the realm of solitary creation within his own orbit of compositio­nal clarity.

(The above mentioned story is part of the series on India Art Fair 2018, which will be carried till the fair ends.)

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India