The Sunday Guardian

Making use of that contemplat­ive space that’s essential for creating art that lives

Mumbai-based artist Jitish Kallat, whose retrospect­ive is now on view at Delhi’s National Gallery of Modern Art, attempts to explore philosophi­cal questions in his work, but without losing sight of simpler aspects of life, writes

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tions. Despite these two divergent interests I thought that may be applied arts are right for me to pursue, but when I walked through the corridors of the Fine Arts Department at the J.J. School of Art, I thought ‘I am at the right spot of the planet’,” says Kallat. Maybe this is why some of the works by the artist draw on these varied interests, namely ideas related to time, birth, death, sustenance, the circadian rhythm of moon.

Epilogue, a photo series by Kallat, consists of photograph­s of progressiv­ely eaten rotis represente­d as the moon. The installati­on displayed at the very start of the gallery represents 22,889 moons Kallat’s father saw during his lifetime. The lone moon at the end of the display represents the celes- tial body on the night of 1 December 1998. It was the last moon his father saw.

Cry of the Gland is a photo work where the artist has displayed images of bulging shirt pockets. The colourful pockets build a narrative of their own and sometimes look like an extension of the body of the people wearing those shirts. The viewer is able to see pens, wallets, notepads, spectacles and the like sticking out of the pockets. These possession­s characteri­se the daily struggle of the mundane city life. Similarly, the installati­on piece titled Syzgy represents sleeping figures pointing at the weariness of commuters at different bus and train stations.

Kallat resides in Bombay and it is not easy to escape the hustle of city life in the metro. To achieve this, he works at his two studios in Byculla and Bandra. “I often decide where I am going in the morning. One is more contemplat­ive space which I use for writing, reading, drawing and thinking and the other one is a larger space which allows huge space for larger scale of work,” he says. .

The artist, despite having had his debut show at Chemould Prescott Gallery just after graduation and the second show at India Habitat Centre at age 24, is never disturbed when he is not able to make any creative headway. He says: “It can be very edgy space when an artwork is not happening; one needs to befriend that space. The best work comes when you take a space between comfort and silence. One has to continuous­ly retreat between action and silence and be comfortabl­e with the space where ideas have not yet formed. As per experience, I can say that the best work comes when one is in that space and the work becomes really meaningful to the world.”

It is important for the artist to understand what viewers bring to a particular artwork. He says, “Artworks have their own birthright to articulate themselves away from your intent and connect to what the viewer brings to the work. Most of us seek this interpreta­tive open-endedness in the works. Different things bring different meaning to people which can also vary from what your original intent was in your time. It should change when you change. When the work is out there it is no longer yours, it has its own autonomy.”

He shares an anecdote to elaborate his point: “Aquasaurus, which is a full-scale water tanker made up of resin and steel, was not created with the thought of water shortage initially. It was in a show in Australia where looking at the piece people identified it with the water crisis in the country. It was also picked up by non-art writers and was talked about. The presence of the artwork in 2008 at Sydney transforme­d the meaning of the piece.”

The visitors will find certain themes, ideas, materials and even methods recurring in works spanning a time frame of about 25 years.

“It can be very edgy space when an artwork is not happening; one needs to befriend that space. The best work comes when you take a space between comfort and silence. One has to continuous­ly retreat between action and silence .”

The exhibition is on till 14 March at NGMA, New Delhi

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