Reghu’s work finally finds its way to Mumbai
mumbai — After 15 years, sculptor G. Reghu has come to Mumbai where most of collectors live. One of his most cherished collectors, Sangita Jindal, opened his show at the Jehangir Art Gallery on Tuesday.
Reghu’s language and aesthetic has been moulded by two significant encounters: His early contract with Elizabeth and Laurie Baker with their Gandhian philosophy of working with indigenous materials and J. Swaminathan at the Bharat Bhavan who, in his persona of a “tribal” artist, voiced the cause of the dispossessed, says Uma Nair, one of India’s foremost curators who has studied Reghu’s works for over two decades.
The surface of Reghu’s work in its muted organic earth colours, has a matte finish. The work is shaped by an artist who is intimate with the tactile processes of using his hands: Patting mud walls, throwing the clay on the potter’s wheel or even dexterously kneading dough and handling food. The medium and method reflect familiarity with a rural lifestyle.
“Using the processes of hollowmodelling, slabbing, folding, coiling and pinching, Reghu creates a racial type that mingles Dravidian and African facial features — bulging eyes, thick lips, cabbage ears — evocative of an ancient civilization and its wisdom. His “head” exudes both a warmth and an innocence which are typical of his work.
“These are almost doll-like, tribal images are evocative and full of
conversations. The motif of the Indian villager dominates and he is placed in situation open to excitement and anxiety. Nostalgia for lost childhood is replete in his figurative compositions of a boy watched by two garden lizards. The cows also moo and talk,” said Nair, who has curated the show, which will run till January 21. Reghu, like
some of his contemporaries, has moved from the earlier formalistic style in sculpting to the deliberate use of the figure and its dynamics as a subject of exploration.
The choice of terracotta — a fragile material with a timeless quality — is consonant with the sculptors’ desire to revive the folk-craft tradition. —