jitesh Kallat - Indian Art News https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com News on Modern and Contemporary Indian Art presented by Visions Art Sat, 06 Sep 2014 05:41:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://i0.wp.com/indianartnews.visionsarts.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/cropped-Visions-Art.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 jitesh Kallat - Indian Art News https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com 32 32 136536861 Preparations Under Way for the Kochi Biennale https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/preparations-under-way-for-the-kochi-biennale/ https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/preparations-under-way-for-the-kochi-biennale/#respond Sat, 06 Sep 2014 05:41:00 +0000 http://indianartnews.info/preparations-under-way-for-the-kochi-biennale/ KOCHI: Preparations are in full swing as the city gears up to host the second edition of Kochi-Muziris Biennale, the 108-day mega art event, starting December 12. Jitish Kallat, …

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KOCHI: Preparations are in full swing as the city gears up to host the second edition of Kochi-Muziris Biennale, the 108-day mega art event, starting December 12.
Jitish Kallat, curator and art director for the biennale, said the second edition would feature around 85 artists from over 28 countries. Some of the key artists have already made site visits. They include Franceso Clemente, Anish Kapoor, Christian Waldvogel, K G Subramanyan, Sudhir Patwardhan, Ghulam Mohammed Sheikh and Namboodiri.
Kallat said it was a rewarding moment for him when talks with artist-colleagues are getting translated into projects in Kochi.The embryonic form of the project is taking shape, he noted.
“The exhibition brings together art works that picture versions of the world referencing history, geography, astronomy, time and myth, interlacing the terrestrial with the celestial.” The full list of artists will be announced in a few weeks. Kallat had been engaged in a year-long research trip to select the artists for the much-awaited second edition.
Venues for the second edition are getting ready and the artists have already started working on site. KBF president Bose Krishnamachari said the foundation has retained most of the venues of last time.
“But this time we will have additional venues and projects in a few public spaces. We are looking forward to an engaging project put up by Kallat,” he said.  The KBF has been organising several talks and cultural programmes in the run-up to the Biennale. 
Riyas Komu, director of programmes, said the KBF has always been mindful of the larger participation of the people to engage them with contemporary art.
“This time we will be having several programmes including the students’ biennale, children’s biennale, Artists’ Cinema Project and various cultural programmes that will run parallel to the biennale,” he said.
The mega art festival is slated to conclude on March 29, 2015.
Credits
By Express News Service
Published: 04th September 2014 06:00 AM

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10 Indian artists who shaped the noughties https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/10-indian-artists-who-shaped-the-noughties/ https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/10-indian-artists-who-shaped-the-noughties/#respond Thu, 07 Jan 2010 13:56:00 +0000 http://indianartnews.info/10-indian-artists-who-shaped-the-noughties/ Tyeb Mehta The man who celebrated Mahishasura and torched a new high at Christie’s with Times of India’s Celebration. Celebration, like the Shantiniketan triptych done a decade earlier, drew …

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Tyeb Mehta

The man who celebrated Mahishasura and torched a new high at Christie’s with Times of India’s Celebration. Celebration, like the Shantiniketan triptych done a decade earlier, drew inspiration from the Charak festival, the spring festival of the Santhals. However, unlike the Santiniketan triptych that juxtaposes life and death, the work focused on the celebratory aspects of the festival and life itself.

The painting did not mark so much of a shift in emphasis, but a culmination of an experience. Images of torture and carnage, while not forgotten were instead transcended. They form the very stuff from which this Celebration derived meaning: as in alchemy, the dross had become gold. Celebration fetched a high of $317,500, in 2002—therein beginning Tyeb’s tryst with destiny, in the world of auctions.

M F Husain

The face of Indian contemporary art, living in exile since 2006, after his Bharat Mata bombed at an exhibition in Delhi. Yet, Husain’s best period was his early and middle ones. His Mahabharata, Ganesha and Mahabali series being the fountainhead of contemporary reality. Often using the presence of a group of women and elephants to heighten the importance of the central figure, the structure of the grouping accentuated the monumental character of the individual figures he chose to represent.

While surrealistic juxtaposition and displacement of associated symbols heightened the ambiguity of his pictorial world, Husain frequently invested the human form with an archaic and timeless feeling. He depicts them as if abstracted from time and renders them along with the signs and symbols. However, what arrests the eye is the nature of sensual reality he transformed with zeal. Sex, if seen as a final analysis, took an abstract form, viewed as an element within the equation — an instrumentation for seeking and establishing identity.

Bose Krishnamchari (Artist curator)

HE is India’s Vik Munz. His ideas are simple—as an artist curator-he goes wild, picking and choosing from the nation’s artist’s studios—and in every endeavour he tries to reflect his process of discovery and an eclectic elegance. Curating for Bose Krishnamachari is about a sense of play and a cohesive focus-in which one work reverberates into the next, to create “a residual effect.”

Guest curator at ARCO Madrid, with 20 years of work behind him, Bose handles crating in the context of a philatelic feel. Straightforward, forthright and now a face of BMB Gallery in Mumbai, his shows like Double Enders and National Highway have proved that curating is not merely gathering works to reflect a bazaar, but discovering and reflecting resonances beyond the obvious.

T V Santosh

Known as India’s Zen monk, Santhosh’s untiring search for an understanding of the state of world politics, war and media is expressed most effectively in his paintings and installations. Reconstructing ideas from a science fiction film, the evocative Last Supper or even Hitler’s dogs, Santos uses his signature style of turning a positive photographic image into its negative and creating paintings and installations that have an eerily surreal quality.

In his paintings, he deliberately eliminates the details of anything specific or local in the image and the subject takes on a much grander scale and, like most of his recent works, addresses the universal concerns of war, terrorism and violence.

His art leaves a lasting impression on its viewer and implores the audience to re-evaluate the politics of war and terrorism — a plea to identify the real enemy.

S H Raza

The abstractionist who lives in Paris and has recently finished a show in London. “The English name they’ve given my show is The Five Rays of Raza, But for me, my work represents ‘panchtatva’ or the five elements’.” It was in the 1970’s that Raza began his sojourn into the world of the Bindu.

In a strictly formal sense, Raza’s style seems to bear some relation to the Abstract Expressionist work of Frank Stella and Jasper Johns. However, while these artists were part of a theoretical discussion on the Formalist movement, Raza’s work addresses a more spiritual context.

The circle becomes less of a graphical component and more of a focal point representing concentrated energy. This concept has age-old precedents in meditative aids such as yantras and mandalas. And age has caught up with Raza, in a quaint departure from his usual. Raza confessed to Muzaffar Ali, at his birthday bash at Taj Mahal Hotel in Delhi, two years ago, that he wanted to marry a 19-year-old Bengali girl.

Jogen Chowdhury

The master of the contour. The most successful practitioner from the Bengal School. The satirist who creates folds out of skin. Jogen Chowdhury smiles as he creates and viewers can sense that his mood is lighthearted, even as he plays with the human figure. His lines are bold and free and his canvases in particular show a simplification of composition with a deceptive depth in textural terrain. The brilliant colours associated with the rural folk art traditions of Bengal appear in his work as two-dimensional linear forms set as bold planes of background colour replace his earlier sculpted human forms. Characterized by his elongated, caricature figures and preference for highly decorative surfaces, Jogen’s art draws equally from the natural and the psychological.

Sometimes a work can be a curious mix of still life and movement that contributes to an almost hypnotic effect. Jogen had once said: “There is also a tremendous power in the stillness of an object. A force that is no less than apparently an object in great speed. Stillness is a form of a speed while not in force. It has the possibility of the force in a different form.”

Sumedh Rajendran

Most intriguing was his show Chemical Smuggle at Vadehras in Delhi. He combines materials and compositions with an intricate élan. At the Christie’s Asian Contemporary and Chinese Art Auction, Hong Kong, 2008, his work went for a whopping HK$271,500 / ($34,955).Titled Promised and Them, the two wooden and steel sculptures had about them an elegant restraint as well as a gravitas of metaphoric moorings.

Deeply philosophic and equally at ease with literary contexts, it was his project for Khoj entitled Pseudo Homelands exhibited at Lahore, which made people sit up and take notice. His explanation ranked of wit and the insight of T.S. Eliot. “In landscapes marginalized by the hierarchy of power structure, negotiation is a mere theatre. In this maze of divisions and subjugations, that we tend to perceive as social harmony is only unexplained tragedies.” His titles too must be read in the context of what he wishes to state. But Sumedh becomes participant and observer. Betrayal Flush, More Dead Than Alive and Some Hard Hunger—each title is a personification of deep contemplative ideologies and thoughts.

Some Hard Hunger reflects a dog with an open jawline—the barrel shaped object that shapes the jawline is what entices the powerful relief sculpture, dealt with the phenomenon of a stifled and angst ridden urban existence—the paradoxes of patterns in the living and those who merely exist .

Subodh Gupta

He made Indian steel bartans fashionable. From his human skull called Very Hungry God to his Three Monkeys-Subbed Gupta invited viewers into his signature of vessels for Indian art. Almost like entering a vast Indian kitchen in perpetual, dizzying motion, his medium of towering tiffin bartans became the Subodh signature. His installations, typical of his deceptively simple works made of everyday objects, manages to refer to stereotypes of Indian life, rapidly changing routines in a global economy, and key historical cross-cultural exchanges.

International writers say Subodh Gupta’s post-modernist ideas channel far-ranging influences from Marcel Duchamp, Josef Beuys, Claes Oldenburg and Andy Warhol. However, his artistic vocabulary is firmly rooted in the vernacular of everyday India. Gupta – appropriation artist — ironically states, “I am the idol thief. I steal from the drama of Hindu life. Hindu kitchens are as important as prayer rooms. These pots are like something sacred, part of important rituals, and I buy them in a market. They think I have a shop, and I let them think it. I get them wholesale.”

Pushpamala

She is India’s most successful women artist for her ability to exploit the genre of her own portrait in her works. Her first solo (outside India) at Bose Pacia, New York was in 2004, before which she held her audiences with Phantom Lady or Kismet (1996-98). Shot mostly in night time Mumbai, the series has a rich, film-noir atmosphere and a surreal, Bollywood-style narrative structure that can be reshuffled for different showings. Pushpamala N. is chief actor as well as director, and she has a charismatic on-camera presence.

She played both the sisters in Phantom Lady with aplomb, and brought the same qualities to Golden Dreams (1998), a kind of woman-having-a-nervous-breakdown tale of romance and entrapment that concluded with the heroine holding an invisible opponent at gunpoint. She played with tints — the original black-and-white prints were hand coloured, giving them a slightly antique look, as was true of the 10 pictures in The Anguished Heart (2002), and a story of lost love that might have come straight from a Satyajit Ray film.

Jiten Thukral and Samir Tagra

The most happening duo on the auction scene-collaborating for the past 9 years. Jiten Thukral and Samir Tagra address issues in urban India through a variety of stylistic devices and media. Drawing from pop culture, history and street life, they present a graphic theatrical element in their works. Be it in the form of sculptures, paintings and installations, aesthetically speaking their works have a very ‘un-Indian’ and distinct leitmotif.

According to them their ‘un-Indian’ aesthetic has come naturally. When they look around everything is inspired, influenced and pursued with ‘un-Indian aesthetics’. They were trained as communication designers, their education being a mix of art and design principles. Observing and creating have become a part of their routine. The titles of their works have an edge of dramatis personae-Pscho Acoustics-01,Vector Classics,2005, Phone Now + 91 114174 0215- this is the reality of an urbanesque urge.

7 Jan 2010
Uma Nair
Economic Times

Aashu Maheshwari – One of the artists i would like to mention herein is “Jitesh Kallat” and his contribution to Indian Art.Also would mention Anju Dodiya and Atul Dodiya for their immence contribution to Indian Art.

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Indian contemporary art : the podium https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/indian-contemporary-art-the-podium/ https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/indian-contemporary-art-the-podium/#respond Wed, 16 Sep 2009 04:18:00 +0000 http://indianartnews.info/indian-contemporary-art-the-podium/ In the 1990s there was virtually no secondary art market in India. Between 2000 and 2008, the price index of Contemporary Art multiplied by seven! While Anish KAPOOR and …

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In the 1990s there was virtually no secondary art market in India. Between 2000 and 2008, the price index of Contemporary Art multiplied by seven! While Anish KAPOOR and Subodh GUPTA are among the world’s fifteen top-selling Contemporary artists with auction revenues of €11.2m and €10.7m respectively, the third top-selling Indian artist, TV SANTOSH, had a revenue total only one tenth of his peers’ (€1.2m).

Anish Kapoor
Anish KAPOOR (the older of the three), has an auction track record going back 20 years. His best sculptures that usually change hands for 6-figure sums have shown excellent resistance to the current crisis. On 5 February 2009 at Sotheby’s in London, an sans titre work in stainless steel (1996) actually fetched more than expected when it sold for £840,000 (c. €936,000) versus an upper estimate of £700,000. However, Kapoor has not had any 7-figure results over recent months and his most expensive works have all been bought in. On 11 November 2008, a splendid alabaster sculpture estimated at 2 to 3 million dollars went unsold at Sotheby’s. Before the crisis, the quality of the work would have almost certainly guaranteed a new record for the artist. Indeed, his current record was set on 1 July at Sotheby’s in London for another alabaster sculpture which fetched £1.72m (€2.17m or $3.42m). Kapoor experienced a further setback on 24 November 2008 when his monumental aluminium installation (5 metres wide) Mountain was bought in at Bonhams in Dubai.

Subodh Gupta
Subodh GUPTA perfectly illustrates the price explosion of Contemporary Indian art. Unknown to the international art market before 2005 when works he created in the 1990s could be acquired for between €4,000 and €10,000, one of his pieces (Before the Plunge ) quadrupled its price estimate the following year when it fetched the equivalent of €35,300 on 29 March 2006 at Sotheby’ in London. From that date on, demand for his work became so intense that not one single Subodh Gupta auction lot remained unsold … until the month of October 2008! Since then, eleven pieces have been bought in at all the major international auction venues including Paris, London, and New York? However Hong-Kong was where the first signs of unease first appeared when Sotheby’s bought in a 4-metre canvas by Gupta on 4 October. The following month, the failed sale of Vehicle for Seven Seas III at Christie’s New York (estimated $300,000 – $400,000) confirmed a sharp contraction. In fact, on 3 April 2008, a very similar work from the same series as Vehicle for Seven Seas tripled its lower estimate at Artcurial in Paris when it fetched €425,000. Subodh Gupta has a solid international reputation and his work has been acquired by a number of private and public collections. However, today collectors have neither the available cash nor the appetite for risk to bid two or three times over the published price estimates. On 30 June 2008, for example, the winning bidder at Christie’s in London invested £260,000 (€330,000) in a piece entitled Dubaï to Calcutta #19 . In October 2008, a very similar sculpture entitled Oman to Madras sold for considerably less at £115,000, (€148,000) at Phillips de Pury & Company in London.

Santosh T.V.
Demand for TV SANTOSH’s work accelerated in a matter of months. His very first painting to sell at a New York auction in March 2006 (for the equivalent of €11,600) doubled its estimated price. Entitled Who’s war is it?, this oil on canvas painted in 2005 is part of a series that also includes a larger version that fetched $38,000 (€28,500) on 21 March 2007. In September 2007, Santosh posted his first auction result above €100,000. The painting – Across an unresolved Story (2005) – more than quadruped its upper estimate when it sold for $180,000 (c. €130,000) at Christie’s in New York. In 2008, he crossed the €100,000 line on six other occasions… but not once in 2009. His best result so far this year has been HKD600,000 (€55,400) for an oil on canvas painted in 2005 entitled Hundred Square Feet of curses at Christie’s on 24 May.

Since the beginning of 2009, the price fall is harsh: around -45% between January and June 2009…

On the other hand, Modern Indian artists have been showing better resistance to the art market crisis. In fact they seem frankly immune to it! Jogen CHOWDHURY (born in 1939) and Francis Newton SOUZA (born in 1924) both tripled their estimates supplied by Sotheby’s at its Indian Art sale on 16 June 2009. Jogen Chowhury even signed his new record with a 1979 water-colour entitled Day Dreaming which fetched £310,000 (€364,000). According to some sources, the good results at this sale (where 69% of the lots found buyers) were linked to the morale-boosting effect of the May elections in India. The young Jitish KALLAT (born in 1974) may also have benefited from this effect at Christie’s Asian art sale on 24 May (eight days after the elections) when two of his works elicited very good results, notably, Rickshawpolis 9 which fetched twice its estimate at HKD1.3m (€105,000).

Source – artprice.com

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