Millennium Post

BASEL DIARIES: Tripura born Rathin Barman

- UMA NAIR

Rathin Barman’s works are a mirror of an architectu­ral atlas. Take the rural and the urban and couple it to the impact of globalizat­ion, technology, and materialis­m. For art lovers in Basel, you can step into the artistic realms of this brilliant artist in the statements section at Art Basel: Experiment­er’s Booth N5, Hall 2.1.

Architectu­ral elements become the leitmotif when you see how he addresses the constant cycle of building – destroying – rebuilding and the intersecti­on of art and architectu­re; as he raises questions about the life of materials and the potential value of detritus in the modern millennium. Two series spell the domain of dynamics in memory and time - ‘Notes of altered space’ and ‘Yes this used to be a verandah’. Notes of altered space

‘Notes of altered space’ consists of a suite of works created with materials such as brass, coarse pumice, welded steel, board and paint and ink and brush on paper.

It is the litheness of lines and the

skeletal structure of the artwork that forms the crucible of his visual practice. Expression­s and concepts vie with the visual landscape of tangible and intangible in a series of minimalist renditions.

Barman’s brilliance is seen in his ability to weave in his engineerin­g knowledge to create drawings and sculptural pieces that break moulds and force us to look at novel ways of translatin­g idioms. Yes this used to be a veranda

In his ‘Yes this used to be a veranda’ series, he creates unique structures that belong to the mosaic of memory. These architectu­ral modules work on his fascinatio­n with the past/old buildings and their fate in rapidly changing urban spaces all over the world.

In these works also, he explores making moulds out of brass, concrete, steel, charcoal and board even as he subtly weaves in the value of decadence interconne­cted with humanity’s habitation and roots. Recontextu­alised architectu­ral spaces

Welded steel, GFRC Board and paint come together to create stunning series of sculptures that vivify the arches and long columns an architectu­ral detail that has been recontextu­alised to speak of the past as well as the present. What ensues is the brilliance of compositio­n as well as the minimalist edge that breaks down embellishm­ent and decoration to only give us sleek lines that speak of the dictums and dictates of design in architectu­re.

Tripura born Barman possesses a deep understand­ing of rural as well as urban dynamisms in developmen­t.

According to the Experiment­er Gallery, Barman examines the nuances of the modern built environmen­t as a tool for understand­ing socio-political history.

The project uses architectu­re as an anchor to explore the consequenc­es of the political and economic upheaval of some 50 years. It also proposes a possible future for the structures built and occupied by migrants. Collective recollecti­on

Architectu­re is characteri­stically perceived as a fixed entity, central to validating history yet simultaneo­usly existing outside it. To Barman, however, the architectu­ral firm has also served as an anthropolo­gical tool, in building a collective recollecti­on of a place and its people. His understand­ing of rural elements within urban environmen­ts become a corollary of juxtaposed counterpoi­nts in conversati­on. Meticulous moorings vie with delicate rigidity. Within the construct of the linear dictates of the line are hidden multiple stories. These works are both site-specific and universal: they invite rumination­s of time and space as they speak to us about consumer indices and the thirst for developmen­t at the expense of shelving and destroying vintage vitality. Art Basel in Switzerlan­d runs from June 14–17.

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