The Sunday Guardian

Probir Gupta’s exhibition is a telling visual narrative of our times

- SIDDHI JAIN

Inspired by the 2012 Nirbhaya gang rape case that had India in throes, and the Arab Spring that saw similar mass movements in another part of the world, an on-view artwork by Probir Gupta is a sharp commentary on the socio-political times we live in. Titled The Indian Tempest, that uses both photograph­y and painting, the massive work builds upon citizen mass movements that marked the Arab Spring earlier this decade, and later came to unify India in collective anguish after the Nirbhaya case. Gupta’s solo exhibition titled Family is Plural, presents works of art layered with activist and political overtones, and showcases a spirit of citizen protest interwoven in the artist’s cultural ethos.

Presented by Anant Art, the ongoing exhibition in New Delhi’s Bikaner House sits at the junction of personal, political and historical. It is curated by London-based art critic and writer Shaheen Merali.

Through paintings, sculptures and installati­on work, Gupta seems to give socio-political events an artistic, thought-provoking spin.

“Talking about my personal body of work, I need to be engaged with things happening around me, with people and situations. I read news and engage with debates on various political, social or human rights issues. But, I need a direct contact. I can’t my work solely on the news that is fed, otherwise it won’t have that strength,” Gupta, who had gone protesting himself after the Nirbhaya case, told Ianslife.

“For me, above everything is humanity. I don’t like any human being to be hurt, discrimina­ted against or to lose her/his democratic rights. Visual arts is a language of protest, I can’t give a solution to a situation. I can highlight and communicat­e concerns through art.”

He added that in India, speaking politics through is a sad state of affairs. “It’s a very small circuit of people who would interact with an artist about our social contempora­ry issues and statements.”

“Often I end up in conversati­on in people who are not art practition­ers, but there is this curiosity and hunger, where they will witness works of art that will speak about our times. They know this language is complex and multilayer­ed, but in India we don’t have that hunger yet,” the artist, who was born in Kolkata in 1960, said.

The exhibition runs till December 29 and is free to attend IANS

 ??  ?? An artwork by Gupta.
An artwork by Gupta.
 ??  ?? Probir Gupta.
Probir Gupta.

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