The Sunday Guardian

INDIA ART FAIR RETURNS TO DELHI

The India Art Fair has made a mark for itself as one of the most definitive cultural events of the year in the national capital.

- NOOR ANAND CHAWLA Noor Anand Chawla pens lifestyle articles for various publicatio­ns and her blog www. nooranandc­hawla.com.

Over the years, the India Art Fair (IAF) has grown from being a trade fair for the sale and purchase of art to a living, breathing exposition of everything creative, served on a platter to art connoisseu­rs and collectors. And its 2023 edition is its most ambitious one to date. Spread across the main venue of NSIC Exhibition Grounds in Okhla, and a number of parallel programmin­g partner locations, over 9-12 February, the IAF made a mark for itself as one of the most definitive cultural events of the year in the Capital city.

Led in partnershi­p with BMW India, the fair presented 85 exhibitors, of which 71 were galleries and 14 were other institutio­ns. There was expanded floorspace to showcase South Asia’s greatest talent ranging from contempora­ry art and modern masters, as well as an extended Studio to present the fair’s Digital Artist in Residence programme. Jaya Asokan, Fair Director of India Art Fair explains the intent behind this expansion, “This year, the India Art Fair raises the bar, boldly presenting

its most ambitious edition to date. With an expanded programme of galleries, talks, performanc­es, workshops, a new all-womxn artist posterzine, and the first-ever Young Collectors Hub in the city, the fair sets the stage for powerful artists’ voices to be heard loud and clear. As the market for Indian and South Asian art continues to expand, we invite visitors to immerse themselves in a world of creativity, and to embrace and proudly own their culture.”

Sunday Guardian rounds up the highlights of the IAF 2023 for you:

GALLERIES THAT MADE A MARK

One was spoilt for choice with the best-knownindia­n contempora­ry galleries displaying beautiful art across the board. This included the likes of Vadehra Art Gallery, Gallery Espace, Nature Morte, Blueprint1­2, Chatterjee & Lal, Jhaveri Contempora­ry, Chemould Prescott Road, EMAMI ART, Apparao

Galleries, Gallery Veda (both from Chennai), among many others. There were also modern master galleries like DAG and Dhoomimal Gallery showing iconic masterpiec­es. There was also a plethora of internatio­nal galleries participat­ing which included Galleria Continua who presented a large-scale newly commission­ed sitespecif­ic project by Cuban artist Osvaldo González alongside works by Anish Kapoor, Kiki Smith and JR; Bruno Art Group which presented Andy Warhol; among others. As part of thefocusse­ction, there were solo presentati­ons of distinguis­hed names like Jayashree Chakravart­y (Akar Prakar, Kolkata / New Delhi), Avijit Dutta (Kalakriti Art Gallery, Hyderabad) and Waswo X. Waswo (Gallery Espace, New Delhi). New galleries like 079 | STORIES ART GALLERY (Ahmedabad), Treasure Art Gallery (New Delhi) and Iram Art (Ahmedabad);

as well as a vibrant Platform section to showcase the rich folk and tribal art traditions of India from Warli (Vayeda brothers), Gond (Dhavat Singh), Madhubani (Padma Shri Baua Devi), Pattachitr­a (Prakash Chandra), Kalamkari art (S. Srinivas Rao), Bhil traditions (Padma Shri awardee Bhuri Bai) and Chamba Rumal (Charu Centre run by DCC), were other noteworthy elements. DIGITAL ART: ‘The Studio’, a separate space for tech-related art housed a selection of projects and installati­ons, including the work of the three India Art Fairdigita­l Artists in Residence, all made on

ipad Pro, in response to the theme ‘Finding the Extraordin­ary in the Ordinary’.

INSTITUTIO­NS THAT PLAYED A BIG ROLE

The work of institutio­ns and foundation­s, explored the wide range of creative arts. One could browse through soft sculptures and book projects by Britto Arts Trust(dhaka); a series of textile panels by Lakshmi Madhavan for Devi Art Foundation (New Delhi); a never-before-seen painting by Raqib Shaw for Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (New Delhi / NOIDA); among others. The curated selections ofmuseo Camera (Gurugram),kochi Biennale

Foundation (Kochi), Purushotta­m Public Trust (Vadodara) and a collaborat­ive presentati­on by Space Studio (Vadodara) andprameya Art Foundation (New Delhi), also stood out. ‘ALIGN AND DISRUPT’ TALKS PROGRAMME TO SPREAD AWARENESS OF ARTRELATED SUBJECTS: Supported by Shiv Nadar University Institutio­n of Eminence and curated by Shaleen Wadhwana, the IAF talks programme aimed to spread knowledge of the arts by engaging in conversati­on on critical subjects that would collective­ly shape the future of an inclusive art scene. The topics ranged from ecological concerns to making art history approachab­le, from language barriers in the promotion of art to the intersecti­on of technology, art and law, to name a few.

YOUNG COLLECTORS HUB

For the first time, a separate area was demarcated for young collectors to congregate and enjoy art in an approachab­le environmen­t. The Young Collectors Hub at Bikaner House was supported by Ruby’s Signature, and featured a range of engaging and thought-provoking exhibition­s, including Gallery XXL with Who Are These Outsiders showcasing pioneering new urban artists like Japanese artist Lady AIKO’S iconic bunnies, anonymous street artist Daku’s infamous

Stop Signs and new works by Anpu Varkey, Aravani Art Project, Fintan Magee, Guesswho, Ishaan Bharat, Osheen and Hansraj Dochaniya, Khatra, Papi Navela, Sameer Kulavoor and the Trespasser­s. The hub also hosted an exhibition of contempora­ry photograph­ers curated by Chennai Photo Biennale, and offered an immersive Video Creators Room to promote the medium as a collectibl­e art form. A performanc­e art piece supported by BODICE by Indian artist Sajan Mani tackled important issues related to Dalit rights. The Young Collectors Programme also organised tours of the art neighbourh­oods of Delhi whichculmi­nated in a showcase at Stir Galleryin Chhatarpur.

PARALLEL PROGRAMMIN­G

The parallel programmin­g of India Art Fair began in January and will continue until March, in an attempt to keep the art frenzy going strong. A series of womenled exhibition­s were the most prominent feature of this program. They included the showcase of works by renowned names such as Arpita Singh and Nasreen Mohamedi at Vadehra Art Gallery, Chitra Ganesh atgallery Espace, Sumakshi Singh at Exhibit 320 and a group show of over 20 women artists from the Baroda School presented by Anant Artat Bikaner House, along with exciting showcases by Thukral & Tagra at Nature

Morte, Debasish Mukherjee at Akar Prakar and Karan Shrestha at Shrine Empire. Kiran Nadar Museum of Art showed Pop South Asia, one of the first major exhibition­s of modern and contempora­ry South Asia engaging with popular culture,the Gujral Foundation exhibited new paintings and digital artworks by Raghava K.K., and Devi Art Foundation presented Vayan – Art of Indian Brocades, an exhibition of silk brocades from prominent Indian handloom centres at the National Crafts Museum. Other cultural programmin­g on offer was a two-day celebratio­n of World Kathak Day organised by Shivani Varma to mark the occasion of her Guru Pt. Birju Maharaj’s birth anniversar­y. Titled ‘Daastaan-e-kathak: The Story of a Storytelle­r’, the first day had a number of performanc­es at Sunder Nursery by renowned artists, including Varma herself who performed a piece titled ‘Tat Tvamasi’, and the second day of celebratio­n was marked with a performanc­e by Pt. Hariprasad Chaurasia accompanie­d by Pt. Ram Kumar Mishra on the Tabla. It was indeed an extended period of revelry and beauty for art lovers and enthusiast­s alike. On that note, we bid farewell to IAF 2023 in anticipati­on of what next year will bring.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Pt. Hariprasad Chaurasia performing for World Kathak Day IAF Parallel Program.
Pt. Hariprasad Chaurasia performing for World Kathak Day IAF Parallel Program.
 ?? ?? Debashish Paul.-beyond The Body and Gender-i-2021. Performanc­e. Courtesy of the artist scaled
Debashish Paul.-beyond The Body and Gender-i-2021. Performanc­e. Courtesy of the artist scaled
 ?? ?? Facade of India Art Fair 2023.
Facade of India Art Fair 2023.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India