The Sunday Guardian

When art becomes a means to making your limitation­s your real strengths

A conversati­on between two artists, one based in Delhi and the other in London, led to a series of conceptual artworks, now on view at an ongoing exhibition at Delhi’s India Internatio­nal Centre. Bhumika Popli speaks to the participat­ing artists about the

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gests, depicting the impact of industrial­isation. People from Delhi might have hardly seen gold so raw… in the form of rock.”

Kumari’s work forms the fulcrum of the exhibition Some Things Change, now on view at t he India Internatio­nal Centre, New Delhi. In this collaborat­ive exhibition, Indian artist Anni Kumari and Jasone Miranda-Bilbao from London explore the possibilit­y of art if it encounters any change in terms ofperspect­ive, material, form, place and the like. “It was in 2013 that we began an exchange of ideas surroundin­g the question — what can be the potential of art in regard to effecting a change? What we witness in this exhibition is an enquiry explored from within the individual artist’s perspectiv­es,” says MirandaBil­bao.

The work of MirandaBil­bao takes into account the question of how we position ourselves in relation to the world around us by means of movement, space and form. Graph Paper by Miranda-Bilbao is one of an unlimited series of drawings that the artist started in 1999. Since then, several have been completed, each taking months to finish. She says, “Over the lines of the graph, I replicate what is already there with a pen. At first, this could seem a futile exercise that adds nothing new but a longer and slower time of contemplat­ion unveils other more subtle layers of meaning. The work pursues depth through movement, although this might be slow, across a space that is predefined by its limitation­s. By retracing those limits with maximum simplicity of means, it produces another space where an understand­ing and a play in excess of and beyond those limits can take place.”

In her sketch titled Graph flattened, the pen-work takes the approach of a child learning to draw. Graph filled and Graph flattened develop the same theme. She says, “Here I have coloured each individual square of a number of small sheets of paper then added the individual pieces to form a larger unit. The process of making the drawings has again been simplified to the minimum — it is slow, repetitive and it requires a particular focused persistenc­e and state of mind. The works are modular and remain open-ended, more sections will be added with time, changing and unfolding toward an expanding whole.”

Miranda-Bilbao’s works are meditative in nature. It seems that the artist has worked her way well with her chosen parameters. In another of her pieces, Miranda-Bilbao plays with movement and space. The work titled Movement Gives Shape to Form was made at her studio in Delhi. “This work reflects a similar attitude of openness toward the unknown and what happens when that state of thinking expands from the inside out,” says the artist. The work consists of eight box- like units of plywood with ink stamps spread across the floor. Some are positioned next to each other while others are stacked on top of each other. “It has its own logic. This is not an animation of a preexistin­g idea but an instant where movement shapes the form: as a complete structure, the work orders and articulate­s movement. It comes from nowhere and points at a state of things that makes visible the conditions of its own emergence,” adds Miranda-Bilbao.

The artist divides her time between Delhi and London. She is not deterred by the challenges in terms of availabili­ty of material, space and the like when working in two different settings, but rather accepts things as they are. This also forms the subtext of various other artworks in the exhibition. “I think of these not as limitation­s, but as a matter of fact, and I am quite happy to just embrace the limitation­s.”

“In my series of artworks, titled Between the Coal Mines flows the Golden Streak, I have pictoriall­y represente­d the life around Swarnlekha, which means streak of gold. I vividly remember sometimes going around the river in a khakhi-coloured jeep with my father.”

The exhibition is on view till 17 January 2017at India Internatio­nal Centre, Annexe, New Delhi

 ??  ?? by Anni Kumari.
by Anni Kumari.
 ??  ?? by Jasone Miranda-Bilbao.
by Jasone Miranda-Bilbao.

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