Alok Bal:
Bal is an
artist whose imaginative mind is
plugged into the city’s landscape
while his finger is on the pulse of
urban growth. His canvases are filled
with the irony of everyday existence
and the struggle between concrete and
earth, between nature and the
intentions of man. Bal’s preoccupation
and nadir is to understand the
consequences of the tip in the
delicate balance of ecology that is
bound to human existence.
Trained at
the Faculty of Fine Arts, M S
University, Baroda, in art after a
B.Com from Sambalpur in his native
Orissa, the 40-year-old Bal has a
touch of the figurative narrative
style that is a hallmark of most
Baroda trained artists. However,
recently the artist has moved towards
a more symbolic, if you will, abstract
style. Clearing the canvas of clutter
Bal concentrates on one symbolic
object that fills up his canvas…it
could be a fallen tree, an onion that
also doubles as a bulb or in this
instance, a potted plant.
In these
two canvases, Bal does not simply
confront his viewer with a plant in a
pot but layers the metaphor further.
If one looks closely t the pot it is
in fact a miniature forest with the
figure of a horse standing among the
burnt and singed trees. In the
background a fire blazes. In the next
canvas we see that the horse has
morphed into an elephant and the fire
is no longer in the distance, but
scorching the body of the elephant
that stands motionless and trapped
among blackened trees.
Hence, Bal constructs a complex
narrative within a seemingly simple
troupe. After a slew of over 40 shows,
the artist has refined and tuned his
skill and prowess to evoke a layered
dialogue with the issues of Modernity,
through a strong and effortless
evocation.
Birendra
Pani:
Many
strains and influences run through
this artist’s creative oeuvre. While
absorbing the delicate and complex
lines of Orissa Pata paintings, Pani
has also be exposed to the Romantic
styles of Kolkata’s Santiniketan and
the narrative school of Baroda’s
Faculty of Fine Arts, M S University.
The artist has crystallized these
various influences into a toned and
disciplined workmanship.
The
40-year-old Orissa born artist has
based his recent suite of paintings on
the plight of traditional gotipua
dancers of his native land. The boy
dancers who perform a devotional dance
ritual are quickly declining in
today’s cosmopolitan workl, Pani makes
it a point to entwine his empathy for
the dying art with an opinion on our
post-Modern era. In that respect, Pani
does not try to create nostalgia for
the decline in the taste for the
dancers, instead he problematizes the
issue by bringing in a dispassionate
view of the issue.
The two
canvases on display in this
exhibition, features the gotipua
dancers in different situations. In
the first situation Pani has created a
hybrid character, with the face of a
boy from Orissa but the hair tied in a
turban like a Sikh boy. This hybrid
character stands against a brick wall
next to potted cacti, with only a
sliver of landscape in the background
visible. What the artist is trying to
say in the work is clear through the
grouping of metaphors, it is that ties
with the natural world and with
tradition is slowly but steadily
blocked out as the concrete wall of
progress raises its ugly head.
The other
canvas is a hyper-real portrait, a
close shot of a gotipua dancer with
liquid innocent eyes and a small smile
playing upon his lips he confronts the
viewer, while half of his face has
been severed by a blade. The blade is
a recurring motif in Pani’s work and
it has multiple functions and
meanings. In this instance its meaning
is rather clear—one where modernity
eclipses tradition.
Debraj Goswami:
The Bengal
born Goswami trained as a graphic
artist, but for this particular show,
he has chosen to show a canvas. While
his style of painting differs from
both Bal and Pani, he chooses like
them, to dwell on a single object,
investing it with the power of the
metaphor, a signifier for larger
issues.
His brush work and stokes harkens back
to his days as a graphic artist
however the manner in which he renders
forms is painterly. His use of acid
green and fluorescent yellow lends a
surreal atmosphere to the works.
In these
two canvases, the 34-year-old Goswami
looks at the environment and the
strained environment with its human
counterpart. A wooden frame is topped
by the head of a white eagle, while
the bottom half of this figure is
completed by a human hand, clothed in
a torn rubber glove. A hook pierces
the middle finger while the thumb
peeps out. To complicate the image
further, the shadow of the glove
appears to be the wings of the eagle.
There
could be several readings to this but
one that fits well is of rebellion and
protest. The eagle seems to be
fighting back at human domestication
and exploitation. It is a larger
comment on the pyramid of life that
challenges the supremacy of mankind.
In the
other canvas Goswami has quoted an
artistic reference. The thinker by
Auguste Rodin has long been a symbol
for civilized man. The ability to
reason, remember and create history is
what set man apart from animals. Yet
this colossal statue seems to be
humbled from its throne of greatness
as it is housed in a child’s paper
boat with holes in it. The artist is
most likely making a reference to the
melting ice caps that threaten one day
to submerge the world in a watery
grave.
Hariprasad
Tripathy:
This
artist was once a student of zoology,
before he turned to his creative side.
After studying at Santiniketan in
Kolkata he moved to Baroda where he
studied painting. The 26-year-old
Orissa born artist, has been part of
many group shows and workshops, but is
yet to have his solo.
Early in
his career, Tripathy shows
sophistication in understanding and
portraying interior spaces, much like
the Surrealist Giorgio de Chirico who
produced many of the most iconic
images of the surrealist era.
However the comparison ends at the
representation of space, because the
tropes created by Tripathy are not
intended to evoke a surreal
experience, rather they are rooted in
empathy for middle class aspirations
and dreams.
The first
of the two canvases in this show, is
an amalgamation of several views of a
house, you see the decorative panel,
the brick wall with a sewing machine
upon it and a hint to another room. A
dark outline in at the top register of
the canvas indicates a neighborhood of
similar shaped houses.
The sewing
machine is a very Indian, middle class
icon and it bespeaks a certain type
struggle towards a better life.
The second
work plays upon the same emotion, by
placing a small pile of pebbles, like
an artificial grotto in the middle of
a similar setting or home.
Here though, there is no reference to
the outside world, only bright yellow
walls and mysterious passageways
leading to closed doors. The absence
of human presence heightens the
forlorn nature of the otherwise bright
settings.
Kamal
Pandya:
This
Baroda based artist, belongs to that
generation of painters who explore
urbanity through the metaphor of the
edifice. Houses are icons of history,
change and aspiration. A collection of
houses becomes a symbol of a society,
a culture and a civilization.
Working
both in two and three dimensional
aspects, Pandya creates layers of
history and human existence through
the edifice. Here a Haveli meets a
tenement flat or a street square
merges with a neighborhood. The
high-rise yields to the slum and the
garden or the porch becomes a thing of
the past, as every space is snapped up
by the urban migrant.
This exhibition showcases two of
Pandya’s works. One canvas the other a
sculpture made of PVC.
In the
first work, we observe the city at
night. Each home or edifice is aglow
with its own light and the bright
colour of each house is swathed in
nightlight. The sky hovers over the
city a dark impenetrable dome, except
for the shooting star that streak s
across the sky, or is it a plane?
Pandya leave it ambiguous, allowing
the viewer to construct his/her own
narrative.
The next
work evokes the claustrophobia of a
city, packed with teaming humanity.
Tiny PVC houses are jammed together
one, over the other, to form a
monolithic pillar—one that mimics a
high-rise when viewed from a distance.
In tune with his stylistic preference
for bright colours, Pandya has painted
each house in blue, pink, green and
yellow. Not ignoring the caste
undertones of these houses—blue is the
colour of Dalit homes while green is
the colour to denote a Muslim area—Pandya
goes on to comment on the impermanent
nature of our world made of plastic.
The
critique is a subtle one, but its
effect is one that lingers.
Kundan
Mondal:
This
Bengal born artist, presents two
disparate works for this exhibition,
one a watercolor and the other an
acrylic on canvas. What ties them
together stylistically however is that
both inhabit a fantastical world of
creatures that belong to the
imagination of a wondrous and
hallucinating mind. An elephant with
eight tales and a spotted headscarf
stands upon a splayed man who has no
arms instead a series of tubes issues
from the front of his body.
Sitting
atop the elephant is another man,
whose body is balanced at a precarious
angle, and once more he has no arms.
One may be
tempted to associate the painterly
style and the two men and elephant
with later painter Bhupen Khakhar.
However this painting is bereft of
such homoerotic underpinnings. What in
conjures instead is a surreal world
where man, animal and plant morph into
one homogenous being and
differentiation is a matter of the
past.
In the
second work, on canvas, the human
presence is suggested by a pair of
hanging trousers. However this is no
ordinary trouser, as closer
examination will reveal. The entire
surface of the trouser serves as a
small ecosystem, where every animal
thrives and inhabits this realm. From
a whooping baboon to a scaly green
lizard, a whale to an elephant, there
are many animals to be spotted within
the weave and weft of the fabric.
Outside
this picture, exists another world,
briefly touched by reality, there is a
room with a small window, a switch
board and on the wall is a picture of
a demon wrestling with a tiger. The
experience is almost complete when
once more Mondal pushes his viewers
back into the world of make-believe,
where a belt morphs into a green
fanged creature. A green parrot sits
atop this dream world a mute
spectator.
Prasnta
Sahu:
Man asleep
with giant flies hovering over him.
Red back ground with figures
delineated through white outlines. The
flies are textured, their wings
transparent and veined. Is there a
deeper metaphor in this mundane
everyday incident? One can read
various metaphors, since flies are
considered pestilence, perhaps as
unwanted as other creatures that fall
under the same label. It can be seen
as a playful work with deeper
undertones. It is a message of
coexistence and sharing the planet
with other creatures.
Like his
colleagues in this exhibition, Sahu
has also been down the path of
studying at Engineering College in
Orissa, turning to art in the late 90s
and then following his passion at both
Santiniketan and Baroda.
Despite
being exposed to highly figurative
styles in both schools of art, Sahu
has developed a highly cryptic manner
of presenting his thoughts, in that
respect it borders on abstract
symbolism. A narrative is not what he
is driving after, instead he presents
a situation, with clues that his
audience must unravel to come to their
own readings of his work. His subtle
sense of humor pervades the canvas
while his bold colours and restrained
style imbues his canvas with a quiet
power, which is neither verbose nor
highhanded.
Pratul
Dash:
The artist
creates grids with coloured lines and
fills them patches of colour that
resemble, squares, triangles and
rectangles. Is this is a tribute to
Piet Mondrian’s Broadway Boogie Woogie?
Perhaps, one can connote a mild
resemblance however these lines have
been used not as an abstracting but to
allude to the grid of science.
Only half visible is a brown sheep, a
subject of much scientific
experimentation. Dolly the first clone
was created from a sheep, and this
half disappearing mammal refers to
Dolly. Dash hints to another
interpretation, in the far left is a
white lamb, a symbol of Christ—the
Lamb of God who cleanses the sins of
mankind.
To
accentuate the divine nature of this
sheep, Dash has outlined a spidery
apparition of golden wings sprouting
out of its back. Brining two
interpretations of the sheep and the
lamb into the same frame Dash
initiates a dialogue on science and
religion.
The second
work is far more playful and picks on
another domestic creature as
protagonist—a hen. An egg laying
machine that children are introduced
to in poetry and fairytales, appears
in Dash’s canvas as recurring motif
between other strands of the
narrative.
A large
vertebra is inset with a cutout of an
ape alluding to evolution. However
there is no clear story being told
here. The vertebra simply floats among
other popular images of flowers,
hearts and comic book characters. A
little girl, a cat and a rooster—the
interpretations can be many or one
simply enjoy the visual feast laid
before the eyes.
Rajibalochan Pani:
The city
as a muse is a recurring theme in this
exhibition, and Rajibalochan, has
chosen to represent his muse as a
fragmented Lego game. In the two
canvases that he presents for this
exhibition, the city or even town is a
series of pale buildings and huts
knitted tightly together. In the first
canvas the street dog is the purveyor
of the city, the dog is often an
emblem for the indomitable survival
instinct that makes the metropolis
tick. In the next canvas an old man’s
walking stick takes centre stage as
the old man himself can be seen in the
distance balancing on the leaves of a
delicate golden creeper that has wound
its way around the stick. The old man
is covered with a shawl and is
standing quite upright looking into
the sky. Bruised red flower buds at
various stages of opening cut across
the canvas in a straight horizontal
line, the flowers serve as a metaphor
for life, while also indicating the
gentler, humane side of the big bad
city.
Ramakant
Samantray:
The artist
paints a dark picture, with a limited
palette of, grey-black and yellow. He
chooses a vertical canvas upon which
he renders a small boy appears
stranded in a low valley surrounded by
a precipice of insurmountable rocks.
The situation is made perilous by the
presence of ominous yellow spiders the
size of a house cat. The spiders have
surrounded the child from all four
sides, and should he by some miracle
climb out; the spiders are prepared
for a confrontation. In the distance
an asphalt road with its black and
yellow sidings, appears like a ribbon
of hope, a road that may lead to
safety and home. The child for now
appears to be trapped and doomed.
The second
canvas chooses a mythological, though
it is set in a similar bleak
landscape. The red earth that shrouds
the plateau that appears to be
rendered in a style reminiscent of the
Miniatures. There are stylized
figures, of Lord Ram chasing the
golden deer with his bow and arrow
placed at the centre of the canvas
albeit in the distance. A pile of
broken and rusted vehicles and rubble
lies at the bottom of this plateau.
On another
plateau, Ram and Sita sit under a
small tree engaged in intimate
dialogue. On the third is a holy man
on a tiger skin preaching to no one in
particular. In the foreground of the
canvas is a large plantain leaf filled
with rice lentils and pickle. Perhaps
the artist alludes to the survival of
tradition and the breaking down of
Modern society.
Sharmi
Choudhury:
Moving
slightly away from the mankind and
nature theme that seems to prevail in
this exhibition, Choudhury, picks up
another strand of the web. She looks
at human relations that move from the
family to society. Having studied in
Santiniketan and Baroda, Choudhury has
a rich vocabulary to pick her style
from. She chooses a language removed
from Academic Realism or a simple
narrative style. She chooses instead
elongated and stylized figures, laying
them out in the simultaneous narrative
seen in the miniatures.
In single
canvas that she displays in this show,
is a large horizontal work with a
rather tragic centerpiece. A prominent
female figure strides across a railway
track, where several people seem to
have laid down or fallen. In her bag
the central figures carries a small
man, a character from Binod Bihari
Mukhrerjee, one of the central
fountainheads of creativity and
learning at Santiniketan, Bengal. Here
perhaps the artist is referring to her
artistic baggage. A little ahead of
the woman stands a cow that appears to
have stopped the train in its tracks.
The drama of the center is surrounded
by a mise en scene of artistic
references from Rabin Mondal to Pieter
Bruegel the Elder.
Her colour
palette is dominated by reds in this
canvas but the others seem to a wash
of several colours coalescing and
mingling together in a fog. It is
said that Choudhury’s mood is often
denoted by her colour palette, hence
in this work there is an air of
nostalgia and reverie.
Shivani
Bhalla:
With
strains of Delhi School of art and
Baroda, in her veins, Bhalla has a
strong sense of figuration and a
predilection of objects of beauty. Her
canvases possess a dreamlike quality
and narrate a story that is not unlike
a fairytale. Looking for the innocent
and vulnerable, Bhalla often prefers
children and sleeping people as her
subjects, and has moved from large to
smaller formats.
In the two
canvases that feature in this
exhibition, Bhalla, displays her love
for gold and rich colours while
rendering her favourite subject, a
little boy. The boy afloat on a pink
inflatable has an encounter with a
knight in armour that seems to have
risen from the waters. The night looks
neither menacing, nor benign and has a
faraway look in his eyes as his hand
hovers over the child’s head. The
artist clearly conveys a sense of
adventure without resorting to the
usual devices of action comics. Her
characters appear to float in the
neither world. The rest of the
composition is surrounded by rain
clouds and water lilies.
The second
canvas is equally rich in colour and
metaphor, as a two children stand
facing the viewer. One with his back
to us, where we see his heart opened
with a tiny man inside. The other
faces viewers with a circular hole in
his chest exposing a vague patch of
red and brown. The cherubic face of
the second boy is reminiscent of the
attendant angels that flutter over
baby Jesus, though the artist has not
really made any direct references to a
religious theme.
Susant
Panda:
Born into
a family of high caste Brahmins, Panda
chooses to question caste privileges
and social hierarchy. After studying
in Orissa at Collage of art and Craft,
the artist moved to Baroda and studied
at MSU. With a strong figurative
style, Panda prefers the using the
head study as his main vehicle of
expression.
In this
particular work the artist has
rendered the face of a high caste
Brahmin, replete with the vermillion
teeka and face ornamentation, this may
even be a self portrait, rendered in
soft flesh tones. At the centre of the
eight similar portraits, is a figure
of Arjuna, one of the Pandavas and a
mighty warrior. By caste Arjuna is
meant to be a Brahmin but due to the
custom, actors and performers are
usually Dalits the untouchable class
whose lives are wrought with
discrimination while they struggle
against social taboos. The paradox is
that in most plays in Orissa, the role
of Arjuna is essayed by a Dalit actor,
and this paradox speaks of society’s
hypocrisy.
The other
canvas is a sea of faces, of heroes
from Bollywood, the Indian film
industry and dream machine. The stigma
of acting is no longer operational in
the urban film industry and many of
these actors are high caste Brahmins.
In the centre of these poster boys, is
a dog with many arrows in its mouth.
This, another mythological reference
from the Mahabharata, is of the dog
shot by Ekalavya, who was a tribal,
low caste, but an undefeatable
marksman with the bow and arrow.
Ekalavya
made Dronacharya his guru (teacher)
and became famous after this feat.
However Dronnacharya, who wanted
Arjuna the high caste Brahmin to be
the best marksman with no competition,
asked for Ekalavya’s thumb for his
gurudakshana (teacher’s fee).
With this tragic tale, Panda laces his
canvas with the bitter irony of life.
Vinod
Patel:
This
artist is a sculptor, which is no
wonder that even his paintings have
use world famous sculptures as icons
that tell a tale of forgotten glories.
Having
trained at Baroda and Orissa, Patel
instills in his canvases the texture
of weathered rock, and ancient
history, both canvases are rendered
with a textured almost photographic
quality. In these works, Patel has
featured the stone heads of Rapa Nui
the ancient statues of Easter Island
Polynesia.
This
island was colonized and its resources
pilfered until its ecosystem
collapsed. The Mo’ai, as the statues
are referred, is monumental sculptures
of ancestor spirits that the Rapas
worshipped.
By
recalling the past, Patel has invoked
a loaded metaphor, one which refers to
the greed of capitalism and the
destruction of indigenous culture.
In his
other canvas, there is an ancient
statue from Bali that the artist digs
out from shadowy caves, forgotten in
the past.
While
conservation teams are now beginning
to value the past with efforts to
rescue these relics from the brink of
‘extinction’ too many years have
slipped by before it was salvaged.
Patel grew up in Rourkela the city of
steel mills and junk yards in Orissa,
and has always had a penchant for
forgotten and discarded things. He has
always preferred objects over actual
people in his canvases, drawing
attention to seemingly
inconsequential.