The Hindu (Erode)

RANJAN KAUL’S HYBRID IDENTIT

The New Delhibased artist thinks of his paintings as “selfsuffic­ient short stories”, and in ‘Within, Without’, he crafts around an Indian sociopolit­ical theme

- Aditya Mani Jha

Ranjan Kaul’s 2023 painting Phake Neuj is a highly effective demonstrat­ion of the kind of ‘suspended animation’ great art leaves the viewer with. Here, a bespectacl­ed senior citizen (the glasses are a psychologi­cal trick, to imbue the subject with ‘trustworth­iness’) is reading a newspaper called ‘Phake Neuj’. A friend of his is peeking into the paper curiously — signalling the inevitable spread of falsehoods. A third figure, of whom we can only see their legs, has put their feet up as they consume the latest IPL match, ignoring the “breaking news” chyron at the bottom of the screen. There’s so much going on here that works as a straightfo­rward indictment of India’s media ecosystem and yet, the overall effect is that of an urgent whisper in the dark. This rather striking work is indicative of the artist’s ability to discuss serious issues with a light touch.

Phake Neuj is part of ‘Within, Without’, Kaul’s fifth solo exhibition. Curated by art critic Georgina Maddox, the show brings together works from the last six years that reflect “the complexiti­es of contempora­ry times”. While the emphasis is on issues pertaining to Indian society, even the standalone works have a strong sense of narrative, crafting a story around an Indian sociopolit­ical theme.

“Hybrid identities have always fascinated me. I am born to a Kashmiri father and a Marathi mother, so I too have a hybrid identity of sorts,” Kaul says, during a video interview. “I am primarily a figurative artist. So, if you see my paintings like Myrmidons and others, I have used humananima­l hybrid figures to present my point of view.” The painting he is referring to is a watercolou­r he made in 2018, that is also part of the exhibition.

In Homer’s Iliad, the Myrmidons were the tribe of warriors commanded by

Achilles. The charisma and godlike status of their leader meant that they are now associated with the idea of ‘blind following’. In Kaul’s painting, we see a Pied Piperlike figure with an animalhead leading a group of mansheep hybrids into violence, their blades raised aloft in anticipati­on of bloodshed.

Drawing on Shelley Literature and literary references are never far from Kaul’s work. A writer himself, his published works include a novel, Through the Forest

Darkly (2012, Hachette India) and a short story collection, Silent Realities (2016, Niyogi Books). “I have all but stopped writing fiction, although I still maintain a blog where I write about art. Sometimes, I think of my paintings as selfsuffic­ient short stories,” he says, speaking about his literary career and how it informs his artwork. “They explore one idea in detail and that way, across an exhibition, I am able to talk about several different things, express myself in several different media.”

To that end, ‘Within, Without’ includes a series of five works inspired by the Romantic poet Percy Shelley. Like Hope Confronts Anarchy (2022, oil on canvas), which is in conversati­on with Shelley’s poem ‘The Masque of Anarchy’, written in 1819 following the

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