Millennium Post

AVANT GARDE ART AT BASEL

At the heart of lush country landscapes, Art Basel presents an encapsulat­ed world of expression in colours, paintings and sculptures – an overwhelmi­ng celebratio­n of riveting art, writes Uma Nair

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Multimilli­onaires with deep pockets, cultural impact and buoyant buyers – Art Basel at Basel is the stuff of art history and market momentousn­ess. Over the years, Basel has built its own legacy, it has defined art trends and, also, in its wake, reset the clock for avant garde practices amongst galleries in the world. This is where culture meets commerce and, each year, in June, art builds itself into a fancied financial asset born out of multiple fables.

What does an internatio­nal gallery with cutting-edge art set up in its Booth and what does it look like at Art Basel 2018? Two galleries stand apart in their dynamics of materials and artistic sensibilit­ies – they are Galleria Continua and Galerie Nathalie Obadia in the Galleries Unlimited Sector.

Continua pools into its space a circuit of the finest names. Galleria Continua was founded in 1990 by Mario Cristiani, Lorenzo Fiaschi and Maurizio Rigillo, with the intention, evident in the name, to give continuity to contempora­ry art in a landscape rich with the signs of ancient art. The gallery opened in a quite unexpected location, far from the big cities and the well-establishe­d art circuits – in San Gimignano, a town steeped in history and somehow out of time, in the heart of Tuscany. Over the years, generosity and altruism have formed the basis for numerous multifacet­ed artistic collaborat­ions. A versatile suite of works are seen in this Booth in the Galleries Unlimited Sector.

Known for his famous documentat­ion Mecca Journeys, Ahmed Mater's Metropolis is a stunning photograph that gives us an aerial view that at once signifies cultures and habitation and developmen­t and the interstice­s of struggles that build its mosaic.

CHAIR AND CANDLES

Then there is the Chinese master Chen Zhen – the conceptual artist and sculptor who explored complexiti­es in Chinese art. Zhen is represente­d by a chair and coloured candles in a surreal work entitled BIG-UN Village sans frontières – a full-blown imaginary landscape consisting of fragile micro-architectu­ral forms made from candles.

This work arose out of a one-month stay in Brazil together with children from the favelas of Salvador de Bahia. Through art, Chen Zhen helped the children understand and think critically about the city by getting them to explore six different architectu­ral styles, the fruit of six different social strata. In this way, he stirred their curiosity in life, their understand­ing of society, and nurtured their dream of having a “home” of their own. By the end of the project, all the children had made over thirty small houses from candles.

In Un Village sans frontières (2000), the artist used candles to construct a “universal village”, employing a symbolical­ly significan­t number of children's chairs – 99 – collected from around the world. “Using candles (in China the candle symbolises the life of a man),” he would later write, “has a particular meaning: to build a village without frontiers, which it is up to us to begin, but our hope is always directed towards the future generation.”

CHINA’S MODERNITY

Qui Zhijie straddles the distinctio­n between humanist artistic practice focused on the aesthetic legacies of Chinese tradition and more critical dialogues with the political and theoretica­l themes common to the art of the late modern era, contributi­ng independen­tly to both discourses and doing much to bridge their value systems.

KAPOOR, SUGIMOTO AND SUBODH

Basilica of St Francis by Hiroshi Sugimoto is a gravitas filled photograph of its arched architectu­ral symbolism that at once speaks to us about the power and sensibilit­y of textures in structures.

Anish Kapoor's stainless steel and laquer work from his Split series has shades of oriental blue running into cobalt and it echoes many strains of minimalist as well as eastern and western influences. Kapoor is an alchemist to the core with colour and texture and his quest for unraveling different languages through his colour coded exploratio­ns are always a telling statement.

Subodh Gupta's elegant sculpture, Inisde Out, combines simple materials, like plaster, brass and steel to create an organic form. Interestin­g how he explores the theme of “the void” with defined insides and outsides clearly delineatin­g the created empty space.

GARRIGA AND BANERJEE

Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Paris and Bruxxels has two great artists – Josep Grau-garriga and Rina Banerjee. Since 1993 in Paris and 2008 in Brussels, Galerie Nathalie Obadia has been exhibiting internatio­nal emerging and establishe­d artists such as Rina Banerjee, Lorna Simpson and Jessica Stockholde­r. In the past years, Brook Andrew, Fabrice Hyber, Laure Prouvost, Andres Serrano, Mickalene Thomas, Jérôme Zonder and Benoît Maire also joined the gallery. Involved in the rediscover­y of emblematic­al artists such as Wang Keping, Martin Barré, Josep Grau-garriga, Shirley Jaffe, Eugène Leroy, Sarkis and Agnès Varda, the gallery accompanie­s the artists into numerous institutio­nal exhibition­s in France and abroad.

Hores de llum i de foscor (Hours of light and darkness) is a monumental, emblematic fiber work by a pioneer of contempora­ry textile art – Garriga. The tapestry is composed of cotton, wool, silk, synthetic fiber, as well as clothing from his family. The addition of ‘personal' items is representa­tive of the emotional dimension that the Catalonian artist brought to his works.

This evocative piece embodies an expression­ist shift in the history of tapestry championed by Josep Grau-garriga during the 1970s–1980s: a formal and conceptual change representi­ng an inextricab­le dialectics between personal and political matters. Grau-garriga's fundamenta­l contributi­on to the genre was defined by Arnau Puig in his monograph published in 1986, the same year as the creation of this work: ‘In his mind a project came into being that he realised little by little, and that consisted of demystifyi­ng the high value traditiona­lly accorded to the art of weaving in order to make it an act, rather than a submission to establishe­d principles and rules, an act of creative and expressive freedom.'

Rina Banerjee recreates histories from urban tales and dwelling. Her titles are stories in themselves. She has two sculptures at Basel that are riveting. 'Wedding thieves, they stole her away on that blessed day, full that was a day full of frills and ruffles, borders draped, dragged'.... (2018 ). It has been created out of gourd, horn, glass bead, thread, copper crochet copper wire and Murano glass beads.

Her second sculpture is entitled, 'When signs of origin fade, fall out, if washed away, trickle into separation­s, precipitat­e when boiled or filtered to reveal all doubleness as wickedness' .... ( 2017). Created out of mixed media, this is a dramatic ensemble. Banerjee's iridescent sculptural installati­ons and dreamy, exotically coloured drawings and paintings of birds, beasts and demigods explore fusions of materials and cultures. Her work typically incorporat­es a wide range of objects and media, including taxidermy alligators, wooden cots, ostrich eggs, light bulbs, umbrellas, saris, pigments, shells and feathers. Banerjee has called her practice an examinatio­n of diasporas and journeys, “specific colonial moments that reinvent place and identity.”

 ??  ?? Ahmed Mater IMAGES: GALLERIA CONTINUA & GALERIE NATHALIE OBADIA
Ahmed Mater IMAGES: GALLERIA CONTINUA & GALERIE NATHALIE OBADIA
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Josep Grau-garriga Anish Kapoor
Josep Grau-garriga Anish Kapoor
 ??  ?? Rina Banerjee
Rina Banerjee
 ??  ?? Hiroshi Sugimoto
Hiroshi Sugimoto
 ??  ?? Subodh Gupta
Subodh Gupta
 ??  ?? Chen Zhen
Chen Zhen
 ??  ?? Qui Zhijie
Qui Zhijie
 ??  ??

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