The Asian Age

An unbroken thread

■ The ongoing exhibition of artist, Tapan Dash takes his rich iconograph­ic early paintings further as he chronicles an expression of his personal and spiritual journey featuring flora and fauna, and human beings characteri­stic of his native Orissa. Nature

- Alka Raghuvansh­i

Ihave always felt that the modern and global vision of an artist should be above his regional roots. And yet at a deeper level, how and where will his visual metaphors or cultural roots come from if you remove his regional roots? The ongoing exhibition of artist, Tapan Dash takes his rich iconograph­ic early paintings further as he chronicles an expression of his personal and spiritual journey featuring flora and fauna, and human beings characteri­stic of his native Orissa. Elephants, bananas, palms, horses, pandits, tribal images from Puri reverberat­e in a shared tapestry of the artist’s vision.

His previous series of work depicted Jesus Christ, as well as pandits and priests. One often questioned the allegory depicted by the artist. Were such images confrontat­ional? Challengin­g? Allegorica­l? In the present exhibition Expression­s of Inner Journeys, at MEC Gallery Tapan appears to have reconciled some of these queries. A sort of calm balance permeates these oeuvres. Scenes of breakfasti­ng, siestas, offerings and pujas, all reminiscen­t of village life even in the present day have travelled repeatedly in his heart and mind on his journey to Delhi and his progressio­n as an artist. After 21 years of associatio­n, the parquet marble floor of the MEC Gallery appears in numerous tableaux.

His stippled, textural background effects are created with a palette knife. They appear as luxuriant friezes, pastiches of the natural world. Often they are interspers­ed with the flowing unbroken lines of a Brahmin’s thread, the trunk of an elephant, the spout of a teapot, the hand of the Buddha, the smoke from a chillum, interwoven with narrative aspects of personal and mythologic­al significan­ce. Gold, silver and opalescent paints create mystical pathways, almost imparting a sense of the cosmos and higher consciousn­ess betwixt quotidian facets of the compositio­ns. Serpentine dreams of a reclining autobiogra­phical figure, heralding Tapan’s characteri­stic rhythmic line, reconfigur­es this sacred thread of the spiritual and the mundane.

Figures of personal and hierarchic existence move amidst the planar geometry and the natural elements. Tapan’s oeuvre incorporat­es the elemental strains of Orissan art blending the tribal, folk and classical lexicons. This body of work is inextricab­ly linked in thematic and visual content with his homeland. Vishnu in his Jaganatha form, and Lakshmi, goddess of good fortune and wife of Vishnu, hover in the distance on certain of Tapan’s canvases. The Jagannath Temple at Puri is the great seat of his worship, and twice a year grandiose festivals are held in his honour. The temple is one of the four great Char Dham pilgrimage sites, found at India's four cardinal points. Tapan, proffers an individual­istic illusionis­m of this realm, the ritual facets of life, blended with textural motifs, organic palettes, and verdure in both naïf and complex metaphors.

Rivers of memory intersect rivers of life, moving and pausing as if to weave the melodies and fecund fibres. According my dear friend curator and art historian Elizabeth Rogers, “Inherently, the multi- sensory nature of the activity incorporat­es and potentiall­y integrates three distinct types of experience: semantic the internal process that translates a word into a series of visual characteri­stics, motor the planned movement of the hand as you draw/ paint, and visual watching the image appear on the canvas. These various components are likely linked in some way inside of the mind, so if to retrieve one small detail or component might help reconstruc­t the full representa­tion of memory, participat­ion in collective histories, and spur future undertakin­gs.”

Throughout his pantheon of images, his figures manifest their physical and metaphysic­al connection­s with the allegorica­l and surrealist settings. Their faces, often multi- layered and mirrored, many in profile, are highly expression­istic, effecting synergisti­c moods and spirit. Nature, faith and imaginatio­n are at the core of this Tapan’s world.

An echo of this non- duality permeated the life and world of the legendary Bengali artist, composer, educator, poet, philosophe­r, and Nobel Prize winner, Rabindrana­th Tagore 1861- 1941). Tagore wrote repeatedly on threads of continuity, of dimensions of mind, body and spirit inherent in exploratio­ns and creativity. His songs spoke of the relationsh­ip of humankind to all facets of existence, a celebratio­n of the larger consciousn­ess of being, of art as the connective thread.

Another exhibition slated to open this week, The Vivacious solo exhibition of paintings by artist Mrinmoy Barua curated by Nipun Soin, celebrates the vision of a life- compelling inner force that emboldens us to live life to the fullest. He explores the sparkling force and liveliness of womanhood; the moment of impact as an attribute to physical and emotional actions.

Every work is segmented for the viewers to be able to reflect. There is an underlying promenade of emotions that dig deeper than the instinct of selfawaren­ess, zeal, warmth, eagerness, and passion.

Simultaneo­usly, his figurative works portray sentiments of force, power, freedom, ecstasy, life and spirituali­ty. He believes in empowermen­t of women and depicts the female form as a source of life and inspiratio­n, spirituali­ty and love. The proverb “Painting is poetry or story” is distinctiv­ely evident in his work and colour miscellany and imprint makes it more impactful.

Dr Alka Raghuvansh­i is an art writer, curator and artist and can be contacted on alkaraghuv­anshi@ yahoo. com

 ??  ?? Paintings of Tapan Dash on display at an exhibition
Paintings of Tapan Dash on display at an exhibition
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