Tuesday, 31 March 2015

S.G.Vasudev


Artville Artist Of The Day 
S.G.Vasudev
Title: She,
Size: 123x154 cms,
Year: 2006

This morning I am at Vasudev’s studio in Bangalore, looking at an assorted collection of his work done over three decades. Paintings, drawings, copper relief, and tapestries on the muted grey walls spark an exciting kinesis. Sunlight streams into the room, lending it an opaque incandescence that seems to complement the luminosity of his work. The chronological and thematic jumble in the studio provides an opportunity for viewing his work without the controlled order that curators and galleries bring in.

The first thing that strikes you is that creative time is hardly impacted by the linear tick of the clock. Time, as it is measured in the flow of ideas, in the tides of the imagination, or in the seasons of the mind seems to be free from such tyranny. At a cursory glance so little seems to have changed; yet much has. There has been the slow, undulating motion of artistic growth. You notice subtle changes: the colours and tones have altered somewhat and even the ways of seeing have been transformed ever so gradually.

For Vasudev, 40-plus years of art have moved in a more or less unhurried flow. There have been no abrupt detours, no startling about-turns. Vasudev has always worked with an easy rhythm that emerges from self-assurance.
In the 1970s, when he first began working on his theme, Vriksha -- the Tree of Life, it was as if a carnival was unfolding. Vriksha, a metaphor for the primal forces in creation, simply inflames the canvas with its vibrant energy. Life is feted in an unabashed, pagan way. His Tree of Life appears to have a cavernous appetite that absorbs almost everything that enters the orbit of its vision: monkeys, alphabets and signs, birds, men and women and myriad motifs that he draws from folk and ancient lore. The colours he uses are warm and earthy: Mellow yellows, ochres, amber oranges and moss greens. The Vriksha keeps metamorphosing into new shapes and forms. Sometimes its roots morph into men and women in the act of love, unselfconscious and consumed by the moment. The women are daughters of the earth: sensual and erotic. Vasudev seems to stress the fact that, though the images and forms differ, the spirit remains constant.

This is further elaborated in Maithuna, another idea that Vasudev has explored for over three decades. Maithuna stands for the union between the female and the male principles -- the prakriti and the purusha -- that exist in nature, almost in a yin-yang fusion of being. Maithuna and Vriksha usually intertwine to create a kind of animated utopia in which an atmosphere of total abandon prevails.

In the late 1980s the festive mood dissipates into a deadened, inward-looking phase. The works of this period shock us with the near total eclipse of light. The early effervescence is lost to bleakness as nature appears to have vapourised into nothingness. Men and women with eyeless gazes, looking away from each other, are banished into a chilly dystopia. The colours are dark and swirling, thick daubs and bristly rough edges of cobalt, brisk grey-black strokes and morbid green smears. They echo the disembodied silence that prevails inside the canvas. This period in Vasudev’s art coincides with a tragic period in his personal life and seems to reflect his own sense of loss; it is at this point in time that he loses his artist wife to cancer.

The ‘Humanscapes’ series is almost like a sequel to the mood. Vasudev probes the labyrinthine streets of the mind and follows endless trails of darkness. At this juncture, the ‘actors’ -- for that is what his protagonists turn into -- seem to be more alienated than ever. Their eyes congeal into eerie, airless gazes. The colours he uses are menacingly dark and the canvas almost incarcerates every trace of light. In the Earthscapes series we see the deadness only getting more exaggerated through arid landscapes with clusters of amputated trees. Gone are the pastoral paradise of Vriksha and the naïve innocence of the Maithuna series.

This reverie of darkness is not very prolonged, however. It is almost as if Vasudev, with his natural predilection towards exuberance, cannot contain despair for too long. Packed under the skin of desolation is a need to surface for light once again. When he sheds that last shred of angst he surges ahead with a good deal of élan.

Although change is an important aspect of his work, it is always held tight by an inherent consistency. Change and stability -- the two collude and corroborate. Romantic and realist, dreamer and pragmatist, the creator and the spectator -- Vasudev revels in this pull of paradoxes. He enjoys the contradictions that characterise our world, perhaps because he understands better than many of us that duality is not opposed to harmony.

In the 1990s this is how we see him: taking a new look at things where the summery gaiety that once characterised the early years returns and plenty of sunny yellows, lime greens and pastels flood his canvas. In the He & She series, and in a new set of Earthscapes, there is a newfound playfulness and the darkness thaws considerably to let in a variety of luminous colours. A sinuous energy glides back into the work. All this, once again, coincides with events in his personal life.

Yet it is not as if he is returning to the arcadia of the Vriksha phase. Things have changed irretrievably. This is obvious in the ‘Theatre of Life’ series, where he returns to the business of life with the zeal of a new convert, but not without some restraint. He stands at the rim of his canvas, allowing it to mime the world outside -- its follies, its self-deception, its little vanities. He does a good parody on our performance on life’s stage, where we are sometimes able to pull off our act but, at other times, are caught literally in the act.

In a set of drawings called ‘Hayavadana,’ done in the early 1990s, he uses the mask of a horse to depict the absurdities of politics and the dishonesty that prevails in public life. Vasudev’s spry wit and gentle humour create great moments of laughter on paper but he never gets bitingly harsh. He looks at the societal morass with a non-judgmental eye, merely as an artist portraying what he sees. His ‘actors’ are seasoned veterans on the stage of life. They wear their masks well. The thick impasto strokes give a kabuki-like feel of theatre. Curtains, pleated folds, borders and frames enhance the theatricality of the canvas.

In his more recent work, the actor is relegated to the background while the spotlight is on the audience: the spectator in the act of watching. The stage becomes a metaphor not just for life but also for the mind. Who is the actor and who is the spectator? That is what the artist seems to be asking, slyly. It appears that he is having a little laugh at all of us who turn into narcissistic voyeurs of ourselves.

Vasudev’s themes often spill into one another and they reappear over and again, like old refrains. The Vriksha turns up to meld with the Earthscapes. The Maithuna and the Theatre of Life converge at some point. It is, therefore, no surprise that today Vasudev’s work is close to his work of the early 70s. He uses similar lyrical lines, the feathering out of images and the clear, brilliant colours that were used then. This merging of images and renewal of ideas give his work both freshness and familiarity. When you see a new Vasudev work, you recognise a familiar motif and yet there is always something new. The Vriksha never regains its guileless gaiety but it does acquire a new intensity. Vasudev recounts how years ago, at the time when he was starting out in his career in the early 70s, it was imperative to search deep into the past for new ideas. This paradox describes his idiom well.

Over the years Vasudev has also worked on a series of Ganeshas. Ganesha, the beloved elephant-headed god, possesses a form that is intriguing and mysterious even to his most steadfast devotee. The head of an elephant superimposed onto the body of a rotund, pot-bellied human seems, at first glance, a wacky anomaly. However, Hindu legend is replete with symbols and allegory. Nothing is as it seems, least of all external appearances. The Ganesha form is a symbol for Om -- the primordial sound that reverberates through the universe -- and is said to be the seed of intelligence. In the Hindu order of divinity, Ganesha is the first to be worshipped. He also signifies both worldly and spiritual success. The form of the elephant-headed god has always inspired artists in India. Ganesha is believed to be responsible for the awakening of artistic consciousness: the flowering of music, dance, art and literature.

Vasudev works on Ganesha from a purely artistic perspective. He moves along with this beautifully pliant form to create images that are unconventional and aesthetic. He uses copper, silk tapestry, ink on paper and oils on canvas to depict Ganesha. While he eschews the religious angle, his Ganesha images have a powerful visual impact that borders on spiritual intensity -- which is why, he says, he has discovered to his amazement that his Ganeshas are worshipped in many a collector’s home!

Working in copper, Vasudev makes good use of rich ornamentation. We see the ear of the Ganesha, large and fan-shaped, embellished with intricate relief work. The opulence of the metal gives these Ganeshas a look of grandeur and regality. In his paintings, Ganesha has a more ethereal look. The lines are fluid and free and the colours vivid. Ganesha is almost an esoteric idea on his canvas. In his silk tapestries, Vasudev uses the lushness of silk to create an impression of thickly layered images. This goes well with the essential concept of Ganesha: the metaphors that have sustained layers of meaning for centuries.

Throughout his career Vasudev has worked in several media at the same time. Most of his themes flow from one medium into another, usually following a chronological consistency. Often this creates interesting results. The He & She theme can be quite startling in a tapestry. The texture of the silk and the suppleness of the weave add a new dimension to the ideas he explores on canvas. The natural flamboyance of copper lends itself easily to drama and hence a theme like the ‘Theatre of Life’ pulsates with life on copper. The glow of copper articulates with deeper resonance a certain tone or a nuance of an idea. Interestingly, a painting often resembles a tapestry and a copper relief looks like a work on canvas.

Vasudev enjoys the collaborative experience of working with skilled craftsmen. For his tapestries he has worked with master weaver Subbarayulu for over a decade. For his copper relief work he relies on his partnership with V. Chandran, who has worked with him for over two decades. He enjoys the experience of team work and says the experience of sharing ideas with other creative minds has enriched the way he approaches his art.

This interest in collaboration has led to his borrowing from and contributing to other media and arts: literature, theatre, cinema and crafts. For example, in the 1970s, when Indian cinema was moving away from popular, formulaic, repetitive themes, Vasudev served as art director for a number of films belonging to the ‘new wave’ in Kannada cinema. A few years ago he did a set of line drawings (ink on paper) based on the work of A. K. Ramanujan, the renowned poet, linguist and folklorist who was also a close friend. “Every form of expression is interconnected and there are only thin lines between the various arts,” he says.

This morning, as I watch him arrange a collection of paintings for a forthcoming exhibition, waves of fern greens and lilacs, pale peaches and cobalt blues mingle with the sunlit glow of the room. In the past few years his work has gathered momentum, harnessed more energy and his colours have turned more sensuous and ebullient. Today this is what his work is about: light, energy, intensity and colour. At 66, Vasudev seems as driven by energy and enthusiasm as ever. It is almost as if he is able to draw inspiration from some secret perennial well-spring that he has exclusive access to.

Manju P. Pillai
courtesy: vasudevart

#art #painting #contemporary #artville #sgvasudev#artistoftheday

Saturday, 28 March 2015

Subodh Gupta


Artville Artist Of The Day
Subodh Gupta
Untitled 1 Serie Idol Thief
Year: 2006
Gupta's works are littered with references to past and present experiences. Swinging from significant information to seemingly irrelevant motifs, Gupta's constructions weave highly eccentric imaginings with public myths and rituals. Drawing mainly from everyday objects and scenarios, his aesthetic delineates the complex inter-relations of India's urban and rural communities. It shows the effects of consumerism and the modernization of traditional Indian society. Taking an ironic swipe at Capitalism's materialist ethic, Gupta nonetheless portrays the social and economic aspirations of rural communities and lower class Indians with an affectionate compassion.
courtesy:saffronart
‪#‎art‬ ‪#‎painting‬ ‪#‎contemporary‬ ‪#‎artville‬ ‪#‎subodhgupta‬ ‪#‎artistoftheday‬

Thursday, 26 March 2015

Vivek Vilasini


Artville Artist Of The Day
Vivek Vilasini,
Title: Between One Shore and Several Others (Potato Eaters after Van Gogh),
Year: 2008,
Medium: archival print on hahnemuhle photo rag bright white paper
Size: 55 x 67.0”
A Bachelor’s degree in Political Science from Kerala University, VivekVilasani learned art and studied sculpture from traditional Indian craftspeople. His works focus on social structures and issues of cultural identity. The choice of medium, ideologies, political issues, he uses in order to evoke the conscious among viewer. Representation of his ideas in photography is his forte; the panoramic views appear larger than life leaving the viewer in a quest of search.
courtesy:artsome
‪#‎art‬ ‪#‎photography‬ ‪#‎contemporary‬ ‪#‎artville‬ ‪#‎vivekvilasini‬ ‪#‎artistoftheday‬

Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Bose Krishnamachari

Artville Artist Of The Day
Bose Krishnamachari
UNTITLED (FIGURATIVE)
Year: 2005
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Size: 36 x 48 in.
Krishnamachari works in striking and dynamic abstracts, and with figures seen through saturated lenses. Even in his photography and multi-media installations, color is a dominant force. He says, "I refine my color to brightness. I have learnt this usage from the alternately subdued and lavish color codes of Indian ceremonies and ritual performances; the costumes, the gestures of enactment..."
In addition to being an artist, Krishnamachari curates exhibitions and projects. He is driven by a desire to support the younger generation of Indian artists.

Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Riyas Komu


Artville Artist Of The Day
Riyas Komu
Ground IV-(Iraq Project)
Year: 2008
Medium: Oil on canvas
Size: 60 x 48 in
Riyas Komu was born in 1971 in Kerala, and moved to Mumbai in 1992 to study literature. Dropping out during his final year, Komu eventually obtained his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Fine Art from the Sir J. J. School of Art in 1997 and 1999 respectively. Since his graduation, Komu has been constantly asserting and pushing himself with a strong body of work.
The artist’s oeuvre, spanning several different media and genres, is particularly noticed for its strong political overtones. His paintings, to put it in his own words, carry a protest symbol one way or the other. He has remarked, “I strongly feel it is my duty to be political. I believe that my paintings should look back at the viewer rather than just tell a story or hang on the wall.”
Influenced by his father’s political leanings and his own brief associations with political student groups, Komu is keen on using his work to “ring alarm bells” about the explosive urban situation he encountered in Mumbai. His body of work references the paradoxes of the urban situation, where on one hand, there is glamour, and on the other, abject poverty. Creating his pieces with equal doses of compassion and cynicism, Komu’s work reflects both hope and dejection – a tribute to the spirit of all those who continue to survive the city and its paradoxes.
courtesy:saffronart
‪#‎art‬ ‪#‎painting‬ ‪#‎contemporary‬ ‪#‎artville‬ ‪#‎riyaskomu‬ ‪#‎artistoftheday‬

Monday, 23 March 2015

Baiju Parthan


Artville Artist Of The Day
Baiju Parthan
TITLE: SOFT GRAFFITI-SPOTLIGHT
MEDIUM: ACRYLIC ON CANVAS
SIZE: 24" X 72"
Parthan is known as a pioneer of intermedia art in India. While elaborating the workings of a mysterious inner universe through his paintings, he has combined his painterly concerns with his explorations of cyberspace to produce a series of provocative, richly textured installations.
Parthan began as an engineer, but was drawn into art in 1974, where he became familiar with the movements of Impressionism, Expressionism, etc. He began to study Indian mystical arts, exploring tantra, ritual arts, and Indian mythology. In the early 80’s he worked as a writer and illustrator. 1995 saw him studying computers, learning hardware engineering, building his own machine, and creating programs. Parthan has shown extensively nationally and internationally and his works are in prestigious collections, private and public throughout the world. He lives and works in Mumbai, India.
courtesy:sumukha

Sunday, 22 March 2015

Bharti Kher


Artville Artist Of The Day
Bharti Kher
Symphony
Bharti Kher's work encompasses painting, sculpture and installation. Among her signature materials, she uses ready-made, colored vinyl bindis to create spectacularly vibrant paintings. The bindi takes its name from the Sanskrit word “bindu,” or dot. Since first appearing in her work in 1995, the bindi has telegraphed aesthetic and cultural duality, and a means to mix the superficial with the sublime. "Many people believe it's a traditional symbol of marriage while others, in the West particularly, see it as a fashion accessory," Kher has explained. "But actually the bindi is meant to represent a third eye – one that forges a link between the real and the spiritual-conceptual worlds."
In Symphony the thousands of differently coloured bindis form fireworks and swirls of movement, which vibrate in the eyes of the viewer.
courtesy:seditionart
‪#‎art‬ ‪#‎installation‬ ‪#‎contemporary‬ ‪#‎bhartikher‬ ‪#‎artville‬ ‪#‎artistoftheday‬

Saturday, 21 March 2015

Jitish Kallat


Artville Artist Of Day
Jitish Kallat,
Title: 14 Lives,
Year: 2011,
Medium: Acrylic on canvas, 1 bronze sculpture, Size: 175,26 x 254 cm | 69 x 100 in
"My art is more like a researcher's project who uses quotes rather than an essay,with each painting necessitating a bibliography," Jitish Kallat, while defining his art. His obsessive use of the self image in his paintings as the main protagonist makes his works autobiographical. The autobiography addresses personal relations as well as the ones he has with his ancestory, time, death...
He chooses a method that is a very economical, nearly abstract , form of narrative. Images float around the protagonist, like icons on a computer screen, creating a webwork. The sources are "any visual material relevant to me." Images of the print media are photocopied, transferred on to the surface, hence 'real', as against the painted which he considers fictional. The images are like a picture puzzle, which the viewer has to decode and conclude upon. The treatment of the picture plane is like a battered wall, and refers to the duality in his painting.
The use of text, for titles, which are very important to Jitish, infuse the paintings with a sense of humour. An emblematic , which actually began as a joke on his classmates while at the Sir J.J. School of Art, is ironical for him. "It is like copyrighting an artwork which itself has been appropriated from so many histories, people, collaborations .." It acknowledges an acceptance as well as his critique of the modernist concept of authorship in which he revels.
courtesy:saffronart

Thursday, 19 March 2015

Jatin Das


Artville Artist Of The Day
Jatin Das
Title: Man-Woman
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Size: 103" x 63"
Year: 1982
A tirelessly innovative explorer of dynamic human figures in terms of linear structuration and breezy brushwork, Jatin Das focuses mainly on man-woman relationships in varying moments of crises, contacts, revelation, and emotional tension. There is a monumentality in his treatment of human forms, which is retained even when the forms are energized by way of rhythmic discontinuities of color-planes and rushing lines. A sensitive colorist who refuses to treat his imagery in 3-D volumes, Jatin charges his palette with emotional nuances.
courtesy:contemporaryindianart

Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Takashi Murakami


Artville Artist Of The Day
Takashi Murakami (Japanese, 1962-)
Red Demon and Blue Demon with 48 Arhats, 2013
Acrylic, gold and platinum leaf on canvas mounted on board
3000 x 5000 mm
Courtesy Blum & Poe, Los Angeles
(c)2013 Takashi Murakami/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Takashi Murakami, born February 1, 1962) is an internationally prolific contemporary Japanese artist. He works in fine arts media—such as painting and sculpture—as well as what is conventionally considered commercial media —fashion, merchandise, and animation— and is known for blurring the line between high and low arts. He coined the term superflat, which describes both the aesthetic characteristics of the Japanese artistic tradition and the nature of post-war Japanese culture and society. Superflat is also used as a moniker to describe Murakami’s own artistic style and that of other Japanese artists he has influenced.
courtesy:wikipedia

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

k.P.Reji


Artville Artist Of The Day
K.P.Reji
Title: To Move the Mountain
Year: 2008
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Size: 60 x 60 inches
Reji's paintings exude a matter of fact quality. His use of bold, slightly rounded figuration constructs a naïve style reminiscent of Gauguin. Despite - or perhaps because of - their apparent simplicity, his paintings are enigmatic and the motifs he engenders are difficult to decipher. His work is multifaceted and complex in its analysis of the individual's relationship to his external environment. Often political in inflection, his canvases explore the connection between psychological states of mind and socio-political behavior.
courtesy:saffronart

Monday, 16 March 2015

Anish Kappor




Artville Artist Of The Day
Anish Kapoor
Title: Leviathan,
Year: 2011
PVC
In situ, Monumenta 2011, Grand Palais, Paris
Size: 33.6 x 99.89 x 72.23 Metres
Anish Kapoor is one of the most influential sculptors of his generation. Perhaps most famous for public sculptures that are both adventures in form and feats of engineering, he manoeuvres between vastly different scales, across numerous series of work. Immense PVC skins, stretched or deflated; concave or convex mirrors whose reflections attract and swallow the viewer; recesses carved in stone and pigmented so as to disappear: these voids and protrusions summon up deep-felt metaphysical polarities of presence and absence, concealment and revelation. Forms turn themselves inside out, womb-like, and materials are not painted but impregnated with colour, as if to negate the idea of an outer surface, inviting the viewer to the inner reaches of the imagination. Kapoor’s geometric forms from the early 1980s, for example, rise up from the floor and appear to be made of pure pigment, while the viscous, blood-red wax sculptures from the last ten years – kinetic and self-generating – ravage their own surfaces and explode the quiet of the gallery environment. There are resonances with mythologies of the ancient world – Indian, Egyptian, Greek and Roman – and with modern times, where 20th century events loom large.
Courtesy:lissongallery
‪#‎art‬ ‪#‎scuplture‬ ‪#‎anishkapoor‬ ‪#‎contemporary‬ ‪#‎artville‬ ‪#‎artgallery‬‪#‎artistoftheday‬

Sunday, 15 March 2015

Jeff Koons


Artville Artist Of The Day
Title: Party Hat
Medium: Oil on canvas
Size: 114 3/8 x 127 5/8 inches
© Jeff Koons
Size: 1995–1997

Jeff Koons was born in York, Pennsylvania in 1955. He studied at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He received a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art in 1976. Koons lives and works in New York City.
Since his first solo exhibition in 1980, Koons’s work has been shown in major galleries and institutions throughout the world. His Celebration sculptures were the subject of exhibitions on the rooftop of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and at the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin. Château de Versailles opened its doors to a living artist for the first time with Jeff Koons: Versailles, where a selection of his works were presented within the Grand Apartments. The Whitney Museum of American Art is presenting the most comprehensive survey of Koons’s career to date, Jeff Koons: A Retrospective (through October 19, 2014), which will also travel to the Pompidou Centre Paris in November, and to the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in June 2015.
Koons earned renown for his public sculptures, such as the monumental floral sculpture Puppy (1992), shown at Rockefeller Center and permanently installed at the Guggenheim Bilbao. Another floral sculpture, Split-Rocker (2000), previously installed at the Papal Palace in Avignon, Château de Versailles, and Fondation Beyeler Basel, is currently on view at Rockefeller Center (through September 12, 2014).
Jeff Koons has received numerous awards and honors in recognition of his cultural achievements. Notably, Koons received the Governor’s Awards for the Arts “Distinguished Arts Award” from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts; President Jacques Chirac promoted Koons to Officier de la Legion d’Honneur; and most recently, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton honored Koons with the State Department’s Medal of the Arts for his outstanding commitment to the Art in Embassies Program and international cultural exchange. Koons has been a board member of The International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children (ICMEC) since 2002, and co-founded the Koons Family International Law and Policy Institute with ICMEC; for the purpose of combating global issues of child abduction and exploitation and to protect the world’s children.
courtesy:jeffkoons
‪#‎art‬ ‪#‎painting‬ ‪#‎contemporary‬ ‪#‎jeffkonns‬ ‪#‎artville‬ ‪#‎artgallery‬

Friday, 13 March 2015

Subodh Gupta


Artville Artist Of The Day
Subodh Gupta
Title: Cosmic Jewel,
Year: 2012
Medium:19 brass pots, rope, steel structure
Size: 118 1/2 x 92 1/2 x 41 3/8 in
Installation view, "Subodh Gupta. The imaginary order of things“, Centro de Arte Contemporáneo, 2013
As a painter and sculptor, Subodh Gupta uses the ubiquitous kitchen vessel as “the theme of India’s oscillation between urban and rural norms” (Dan Cameron, “Worldly Possessions”, Subodh Gupta, Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, 2008, pg.264). Negotiating the differences between a rapidly globalising India with its social and cultural peculiarities, Gupta’s vessels emerge as reminders of India’s cultural and ritualistic practices.
Throughout his artistic career, Gupta’s works have been layered with meaning. Bharti Kher’s observation of a previous body of work rings true for the current lot as well: “If we were to see materials as symbolic in Subodh’s work, carrying with them the power of multiple narratives—his and our own—the transient, lucid, latent experiences manifested into a moment of time; it is by restructuring these materials that he is able to change the course of memory or rearrange existing meaning.” (“When Soak Becomes Spill”, Subodh Gupta, Gallery Chemould Exhibition Catalogue, Mumbai, 1999)
The present lot shows what appear to be copper pots placed one above the other, outside a trader’s store or in a domestic setting. Rendered with photorealistic accuracy, Gupta beautifies and glorifies these simple kitchen vessels. The viewer is forced to question the notion of value and the unique ways in which it is translated from traditional to contemporary contexts. Peter Nagy observes that Subodh’s art “has taken the experience of India away from the dirty, crowded and noisy to the clean, sparse and sedate....While sharp and resolute, his works still feel organic and haphazard; while cold and clinical they still resemble and overbearing crush of humanity....Artifice as the basic tenet of all social interaction and all cultural production seems to be one of Subodh’s primary concerns.” (Peter Nagy, “Subodh Gupta: The Metaphorical Sublime”, Subodh Gupta, Bodhi Art Exhibition Catalogue, 2007, not paginated)
Courtesy: saffronart
‪#‎art‬ ‪#‎scuplture‬ ‪#‎subodhgupta‬ ‪#‎contemporary‬ ‪#‎artville‬ ‪#‎artgallery‬‪#‎artistoftheday‬

A Ramachandran



Artville Artist Of The Day
A Ramachandran
Ttile: The Monsoon Flowers
Medium: Oil on Canvas

A. Ramachandran was born in Kerala in 1935. He trained as a sculptor and muralist, creating works that incorporate traditional Indian aesthetics and possess a mythical surrealism. Nature has featured extensively in his works, especially in the past two decades. The latter years helped shape a far more vibrant artistic idiom in terms of his bright palette and graceful composition, while remnants of the preceding decades are to be found in his figurative structuring.

In the 1950s, when Ramachandran was beginning his career, ideas of what constituted “high art” in Kerala was limited to the photorealistic academicism set by the works of Raja Ravi Verma. This inertia prompted Ramachandran to search for inspiration elsewhere. He arrived at Santiniketan in 1957, where his interest in murals and sculpture was kindled through the works of Nandalal Bose, Binode Behari Mukherjee, and Ramkinkar Baij. While Santiniketan fuelled his creativity, he sought intellectual stimulation by exploring Calcutta, which helped him map his experiences. His initial works reflected the grim realities of the ‘50s and ‘60s: of poverty, insurgency, post-partition conflicts and the violence brought about through unrest. His preoccupation with violence and harshness continued into the ‘70s. Headless figures and mutilated bodies formed recurring motifs in works from these decades. Apart from the technical and intellectual sophistication of his subjects, the large, visually arresting format of the murals worked in his favour, and he achieved his major breakthrough in 1966. These initial years paved the way in succeeding decades for him to build a reputation. More importantly, his sensitivity to the pain and harshness around him were an asset to his understanding of the human figure and his rendering of it.

Over the course of these decades, Ramachandran’s travels and encounters with various indigenous arts and crafts led to a diminishing of politico-social stimuli and gave way to more sensual, rhythmic renderings: the nascent stages of a new direction in his art. Santhal women were a muse for the artist; many of his preparatory sketches featuring Santhal women display his attention to detail and exploration of adopting the figure to his idiom. He had also developed a preference for murals and his works were replete with intricate detailing, Baroque excesses and a gripping command over light and shadow. His encounters with Mughal miniature, Jain and Bahsoli paintings drew his attention not just to detailing, but to the nuances of storytelling through visuals. He would work with his panels set vertically, gradually building up the scene, giving life to the narrative. Nature began featuring in his works post the 1980s: lotus motifs he had encountered in the decorative murals of Ajanta had become a metaphor for the world. In terms of composition, palette, structure and narrative, his works from the 1990s and 2000s were far more vibrant and displayed an inherent luminosity.
courtesy:saffronart

#art #painting #contemporary #aramachandran#artville #artgallery

Thursday, 12 March 2015

Azis TM


Artville Artist Of The Day
Azis TM
Untitled
Medium: Oil on canvas
Size: 48 x 48 in
Year: 2005
I have never been particular about maintaining a style. I realize that experiences change with time. I accept the new environment, people and also like to adapt new techniques and colors".Azis allows himself to be influenced by places around him and situations that he encounters. The paintings do not project a grand décor, and even with its simplicity there is a certain magic and lightness about it. It possesses a child like innocence at the same time make a response to our time truly individualistic and uncompromising manner.Images from our day to day life get a twist and turn to a shocking absurdity at times. At times it express itself as witty satire. Or reveals as a playful riddle with sharp contrasting light and shade. Subjects of his paintings engage with the surroundings and make a celebration of their existence. A graduate in painting from the Trivandrum Art College, he went further on to study at the Jamia Mila Islamia University in Delhi. He had his first show in the late 80’s and since then has held a number of solo exhibitions. He has also participated in several group shows in Bangalore, Bombay and Delhi and been a part of numerous camps held across the country.Azis presently lives and works in Bangalore.
courtesy: theartstrust

Tuesday, 10 March 2015

Gigi Scaria


Artville Artist Of The Day
Gigi Scaria
Title: Unbearable heaviness of being
Medium: water color on paper
Size: 72 x 48 inches 
Year: 2010

Ever since civilization was formed and nurtured, the city has become a fascinating phenomenon. The world started to live up to the expectations of the city and the city continuously demanded a space, character and logic of its own, in order to fulfil the aspirations of an urban nomad. Notions of politics, identity, nationalism, industrialization, modernism, lifestyle, crime, madness, spirituality and anything and everything that the human being has been proud to assert as his/her own are constantly produced and consumed by the city.
Indulging in the core of urban life made the urbanite think of himself/herself as a romantic outsider to the system that they deeply inhaled. They wanted to get out of the clutches of the system. Many who went to the wilderness of nature never returned. Many ran away from all that they belonged to, but failing to conform with the 'outside', came back with much more intensity and conviction that urbanism is the spiritual condition of modern man.
courtesy: http://www.gigiscaria.in/


Monday, 9 March 2015

Murali Cheeroth


Artville Artist Of The Day
Murali Cheeroth
Title: Unmarked 9
Year: 2009
Medium: Oil on canvas
img courtesy: api.aptglobal
..my working process is a kind of extraction system, that draws on tiny concerns about uber urbanization, frenzied globalization and the visual/virtual stimulation therein, and folds and unfolds them into another reality to simplify their characteristics and relationships in order to build a new visual experience that is clear and vivid.
Murali Cheeroth