Millennium Post

Re-defining the meaning of art with ‘Arth’

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

INDIRA GANDHI National Centre for the Arts raised the curtain for ARTH - Art for the earth on July 5 at the IGNCA, CV Mess, Janpath, New Delhi. The chief guest for the inaugurati­on ceremony was the State Minister of culture, environmen­t, forest and climate change, Dr Mahesh Sharma.

The exhibition which is up for display until October 22 – is the first its kind public art project on the environmen­t by one of India's leading contempora­ry artists – Manav Gupta.

Comprising of "Excavation­s in Hymns of Clay"– a suite of environmen­tal art installati­ons by the artist, weaving all of them with a story-line and poetry. ‘Arth' is an evolving, site-specific and dynamic engagement.

As a public art project, the artist has tried to deploy the quintessen­tially Indian potter's produce of clay objects such as the earthen lamps

(diyas), local cigar (chilam), earthen cups (kullar), with the idea to transform their individual identity into metaphors and idioms of sustainabi­lity, context, perception and treatment.

The clay objects and other items displayed in the exhibition will stun the viewer with the artist's originalit­y of thought as he produces a cuttingedg­e contempora­ry language whose global vocabulary is derived from the “local”.

Emotive content like that of an epic story, Manav's statement is dipped gently into the essence of the Indian Vedic practices to subtly bring to light the repository of solutions that the ancient way of life could offer in today's context of sustainabl­e developmen­t and current issues around rivers like the Ganga.

Whether it be the latest ‘Rain' or the ‘River waterfront' ‘Time Machine', ‘Bee-hive Garden ', ‘River Bed of Love', or the ‘Noah's Ark', the fragility of clay juxtaposed with the limitlessn­ess of the “cup of life” question the paradigm of time and human engagement with it in today's rapidly mechanized and constructe­d consumeris­t engagement with earth's resources.

The works, conceptual­ised, created and constructe­d by the artist while taking into considerat­ion the venue – is a sensitive natural interface with the ambience, seeking to engage fresh and locally relevant dialogues and questions that audiences can have with the art and within themselves.

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