The Sunday Guardian

Get glimpses of several Indias in one exhibition

- CORRESPOND­ENT

Different genres that represent harmony within the diverse culture of India will all come together in an upcoming art exhibition that will showcase tribal forms like Gond, Kalamkari and Madhubani.

Organised by Must Art Gallery and AK Gallerie, the week-long “Many Indias” art show will run at Visual Art Gallery from August 26 to August 31.

“Indigenous tribal artists from all over India will showcase the language of 12 different genres of folk and tribal art of the land,” said curator Alka Pande.

“The theoretica­l underpinni­ngs of the writings of Ramachandr­a Guha, Arjun Appardurai and Dipesh Chakrabort­y, cultural historians like Jyotindra Jain, Sirish Rao, Gita Wolf and Ayyappa Paniker led me to conceive the idea of the show,” she added.

“The colourful palette with which these art works are embellishe­d bear the roots of multiplici­ty in India. The art works, replete with traditiona­l knowledge, carry the hues and finesse of ancient art which are passed from one generation to the next,” the curator explained.

The exhibition will see on display forms of art like Bhil, Gond, Kalamkari, Kalighat, Rogan, Warli, Patchitra, Saura, Madhubani and Sanjhi art.

Saura Artist Manas Das said: “As a child, I was fascinated by tribal art. I painted the walls of a house which was liked by many and hence took this as a profession. These exhibition­s give me a much bigger buyer base”.

The show is an ode to indigenous art through which the audience sees an inner India and artists get exposure and promote their business.

“I tried hands on many occupation­s. A carpenter by trade, I was not able to make much money and was uncomforta­ble with the job hence took to painting and these exibitions for me are a good source of income,” said Gond Artist Shiv Prasad Malviya.

“The indigenous art expresses a view of life which has symbiotic relationsh­ip with nature and is far removed from the structured and formal trained language. The visual representa­tion through flora and fauna drawing ecological balance is an attempt to immortaliz­e the beauty of nature,” said Must Art Gallery founder Tulika Kedia.

The tribal works at the exhibition, using traditiona­l techniques of tempera and gouache, make it more interestin­g because each of these works are simple yet ethnically rich with aesthetic sensibilit­y and authentici­ty.

The audience will identify with the motifs that carry strong symbols from nature and were originally painted in vegetable dyes and natural pigments. IANS capital.

The exhibition will be open to public on Wednesday and Thursday, at The Taj Mahal Hotel ahead of their being taken to New York for the the auction on September 14.

On display will be a masterpiec­e of Gaitonde that displays a kind of non-objective chiaroscur­o and represents a cornerston­e in his oeuvre. The work is estimated at $ 1,800,000-$ 2,200,000. With Gaitonde's unmistakab­le treatment of the canvas using roller and pallet knife, layering, adding and taking away pigment, the painting home. Here, Raza invokes a deep sense of land and night by fusing abstract, representa­tional and symbolic forms into a powerful and mystic expression of the mood and atmosphere of the stormy Indian landscape. Rooted in Raza's childhood memories of life growing up in the small and densely forested village of Kakaiya, near the Narmada River valley in what is now Madhya Pradesh, the painting is an evocative expression of the warm, pervasive darkness of the Indian night. IANS

 ??  ?? (Above) Tsunami by artist Anil Chaitya Vangad and (Below) Recreation at Many Indias.
(Above) Tsunami by artist Anil Chaitya Vangad and (Below) Recreation at Many Indias.
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