The Sunday Guardian

The best is yet to come: 2018 will prove to be the most eventful year for art lovers

For the coming months, the art circuit’s event calendar is packed with major exhibition­s and grand festivals featuring galleries and internatio­nal artists from at least 18 countries across the globe. writes about an eventful year ahead.

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Festival in Mumbai. The 2018 edition will be held from 3-11 February. According to the organisers, the entire schedule of the festival will be uploaded on the official Kala Ghoda website around 20 January. And like every year, the coming edition, too, will feature a range of exhibition­s and activities, focusing not just on visual arts, but also on dance, music and literature.

Another festival that has come to be known for its eclectic range of interests is Sensorium, an annual festival of art, literature, music and cinema, which will be hosted at the Sunaparant­a, Goa Centre for the Arts from 19 January to 1 March 2018. Founded by Raj Salgaocar and Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi (also Sunaparant­a’s Honourary Director), the festival’s upcoming edition, its third, is themed around “The End is Only the Beginning”.

Sensorium has been styled as a festival of ideas. In keeping with this year’s theme, the overall event will be an exploratio­n of how the apparent conclusion­s in our life, such as the end of a relationsh­ip, the betrayal of faith and so on, can lead us to some new beginnings. “The End is Only the Beginning” is all about conclusion­s turning into continuati­ons.

“The festival is different from the last edition because the present theme looks at how conclusion­s begin commenceme­nts, and how what we perceive as the end actually are starting points for us,” says Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi. “To help us realise this idea we have the support and vision of over 30 national and internatio­nal artists who have come to us thanks to the participat­ion of blue-chip galleries. Plus we have always envisioned being ‘small but serious’. So ours is definitely not a tamasha festival.”

Sensorium will showcase a range of Indian and internatio­nal contempora­ry visual artists, some emerging, other museum level stars from Indian galleries.

The venue of the festival, the Sunaparant­a, Goa Centre for the Arts, will once again come alive with installati­ons, sculptures, paintings, videos, mixed-media works, site- specific interventi­ons by some of the world’s most celebrated Indian and internatio­nal artists, such as Jitish Kallat, Sohrab Hura Iftikhar and Elizabeth Dadi, Kaushik Chakravart­ty, Yamini Nayar Michael Müller, Riyas Komu, and Sujith S.N. among others.

At Sensorium one would be able to witness a wide range of side events, including lectures, electronic music performanc­es, jazz concerts, film festivals, workshops by well-known artists and writers such as Shilpa Gupta, Reena Saini Kallat, Mithu Sen, Devdutt Patnaik, Lady Kishwar Desai. All events are free and open to the public.

Founded and first organised by photograph­er Aquin Mathews in 2015, the Indian Photograph­y Festival (IPF), Hyderabad has become one of the country’s leading cultural events. After three editions, the festival has continued to grow year on year in terms of both footfall and scale.

The IPF Hyderabad, which is an initiative of the Light Craft Foundation, in strategic partnershi­p with the Minisitry of Tourism in Telangana, is an internatio­nal photograph­y festival. It is known for showcasing a wide range of photograph­y across genres, from portraits and landscape through photojourn­alism to fine art, by emerging and legendary photograph­ers from India and overseas. Without a doubt, the festival aims at congregati­ng the greatest minds in the field of photograph­y and at the same time establishi­ng a global platform for learning through various events like featured exhibition­s, panel discussion­s, debates and talks, portfolio reviews, photograph­y workshops, open studios and book launches.

“The 2017 edition of the festival featured the exhibits of 525 photograph­ers from 40 countries,” says Mathews. “The 2018 edition which is tentativel­y scheduled to be held from 30 August to 30 September at the State Art Gallery, Hyderabad will be a much bigger IPF.”

A biennial exhibition on the best of contempora­ry internatio­nal art, the Kochi-Muziris Biennale (KMB) has emerged as a seminal event in the realm of art and culture. The fourth edition of the biennale will begin from 12 December 2018 and last till 29 March 2019.

Prominent artist Anita Dube is the curator for the upcoming KMB. Her selection by the Kochi Biennale Foundation was in keeping with the Biennale’s longstandi­ng tradition of being an artist-led exhibition. Based out of the National Capital Region, Dube is renowned for her conceptual­ly rich, politicall­y charged works. An art historian and critic by training and a visual artist in practice, she has been widely exhibited across the Americas, Europe and Asia, including at the first edition of the KMB in 2012.

The biennale is organised by the Kochi Biennale Foundation, which came into being in 2010 and since then has been spearheade­d by prominent artists Bose Krishnamac­hari and Riyas Komu. This non-profit charitable trust engaged in promoting art and culture and educationa­l activities in India, and it works round the year to strengthen contempora­ry art infrastruc­ture and to broaden public access to art across the country. Major KMB programmes of 2018, along with groundbrea­king exhibition­s, include a series of talks, conference­s, performanc­es, educationa­l initiative­s and workshops.

Sensorium has been styled as a festival of ideas. In keeping with this year’s theme, the overall event will be an exploratio­n of how the apparent conclusion­s in our life, such as the end of a relationsh­ip, the betrayal of faith and so on, can lead us to some new beginnings. “The End is Only the Beginning” is all about conclusion­s turning into continuati­ons.

 ??  ?? Penguin With Spanner, by Naval Dockyard (Mumbai) at one of the previous editions of Kala Ghoda Festival.
Penguin With Spanner, by Naval Dockyard (Mumbai) at one of the previous editions of Kala Ghoda Festival.
 ??  ?? The Indian Memory Project, by Anusha Yadav at Sensorium festival, Sunaparant­a Goa, 2014.
The Indian Memory Project, by Anusha Yadav at Sensorium festival, Sunaparant­a Goa, 2014.

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