The Sunday Guardian

Multimedia exhibition on Gandhi’s Dandi March

- CORRESPOND­ENT

The Dandi March, an act of courage etched deeply in Indian history, is recreated here in an ongoing exhibition that seeks to answer how artists contempora­ry to Mahatma Gandhi imagined and portrayed the figure who led the Salt Satyagraha in 1930.

Dandi Yatra, a multimedia exhibition that presents a slice of the past, is part of the year-long celebratio­ns of the 150th birth anniversar­y of Mahatma Gandhi. It is open at the National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA) here.

The show begins with an art installati­on tracing through a river of salt, the historic 24-day march that began from Sabarmati Ashram to protest against the tax levied on the common household item—salt. It marks on the journey, all stops Gandhi made before reaching the coastal town of Dandi.

Next in the exhibition, is a sculpture of Gandhi made by renowned sculptor Ramkinkar Baij ( 1906- 1980), where his form clad in a single white cloth and holding a ‘lathi’ stick, is seen walking, determined.

What’s interestin­g about the show is a room full of 40 tonnes of salt brought from Gujarat. As one peeps through windows and doors, what’s seen are projection­s of Gandhi, and his ocean of supporters, picking up salt and breaking a British law.

As NGMA director general and sculptor Adwaita Gadanayak said, recreating the atmosphere of the mass movement was important to them.

“In our artistic imaginatio­n of him, we did want to focus on the form of Gandhi—his short, lean build, his stick, his iconic spectacles—but also wanted to focus on recreating the entire atmo- sphere of the Dandi March, and Gandhi, who had the power to mobilise thousands in a single stroke,” Gadanayak, who recently completed two years in office, told IANS.

While a battery of journalist­s, photograph­ers and documentar­y filmmakers descended in Gujarat to cover the march, a 27-yearold artist Chhaganlal Jadav armed with a drawing book and pencil also joined the 242-mile route to Dandi.

Capturing a pictorial documentar­y of the satyagraha and satyagrahi­s, even life in the Nashik prison after arrest, Jadav’s drawings were found by historian Rizwan Qadri in a kabaadi bazaar (scrap market) 85 years later.

A rich historic resource, the visuals contain rare drawings of Gandhi on the move, and are exhibited for the first time. Also displayed is a linocut work by Nandlal Bose and another painting by Upendra Maharathi.

‘Dandi Yatra’ is open for public viewing till 10 February. IANS

“In our artistic imaginatio­n of him, we did want to focus on the form of Gandhi—his short, lean build, his stick, his iconic spectacles—but also wanted to focus on recreating the entire atmosphere of the Dandi March, and Gandhi, who had the power to mobilise thousands in a single stroke,” Gadanayak, who recently completed two years in office.

 ??  ?? Mahatma Gandhi statue on the Parliament premises.
Mahatma Gandhi statue on the Parliament premises.

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