Yet the search
continued, she discovered that to work with popular imagery she needed to
re-present them with greater conceptual layering. The gestural modernist within her can only be
deconstructed through a practice connected with tradition and discipline. Her
(re) discovery of Raghurajpur folk painting tradition finally leadsto this search
finding a resting place from where she can explore future directions. How do
craft, storytelling and meditative practice become carriers of contemporary
concepts? This body of work ‘The Story Tellers’ marks an
important turning point in her journey, specially reflecting a sustained
engagement with technique, inspiration and concept.
Odishahas been a part of
the artist’s childhood, and that nostalgia has played an important role in
Dasgupta being able to culturally respond to it’s artistic tradition. The
Raghurajpur folk painting tradition also offered her adifferent access to the
‘popular’, a ‘popular’ that was deeplyentrenched in a disciplined and controlled
approach to art. This art making is robust, colorful and yet deeply in dialogue
with the culture of contemporaneity. The philosophy of craftsmanship attracted
her deeply along with its notions of detailing, precision and the ‘handmade’. Moreover,
Raghurajpur offered her an escape from the noise of mainstream popular culture
as well as an alternative understanding of the narrative possibilities of art
making. Since her (re) visit to Raghurajpur about three years ago, newer pictorial
style and artistic practice slowly began to find space in her works. Initially
it was just motifs coming into the borders of her paintings depicting Bollywood
and popular personalities...and slowly it entered deep, deep into the artwork
itself.
The encounter with
Raghurajpur did not lead her throw away her personal love for the urban popular
traditions, instead what resulted is a complex layering of both. Taking
photographs of the Raghurajpur paintings,the artist painstakinglymakesnumerous
canvas rolls and usesthem to make portraits of painters, performers and story
tellersto make her world. Paint is given at a final layer of detailing that
helps the artist to develop a language that challenges the boundaries of
painting. This merging of boundaries makes her a child of postmodern
eclecticism and also gives her meditative therapy of craftmanship that her soul
has been looking for.
Apart from the artist’s
natural flair for figuration and an ability to strike a chord with portraiture, what makes her current body of works significant
is the possibilities of enquiries that they open and the complex layering of
folk and urban they embody. This layering of folk and urban also mirrors the
zone between art and craft that mark the physicality of her works. The inspiration
behind these rolls has been earrings she discovered where in Coke and Fanta
cans were cut and rolled. This dismembering and creation of a new identity
opened up the possibilities for Dasgupta to assimilate the Raghurajpur
paintings into her works and yet mask them. Over the last two years apart from
the painters and performers of Raghurajpur, other prominent personalities have
come in her artworks...almost as a continuation of her earlier subject matter.
However even though sometimes these popular mainstream icons enter her work,
their representation has completely changed. There is a fragmentation and
realignment that happens, this breaks their iconicity and positions them within
the vulnerability
of popular storytelling.
As
she moves deeper into understanding and practicing this direction in her
practice, she is also beginning to realize that within this idiom there is a
great possibility of conceptual fine-tuning and experimentation. These works
have captured the imagination of viewers, yet the artist is looking for more, eager
to walk a tightrope between making her practice more deeply personal, and
universal. The journey is to entrench her works deep into the dialog of
contemporary, yet go deeper into her love for craft and the handmade. The
Storytellers is standing on the edge, rooted and yet ready to take off.
Rahul
Bhattacharya
Curator
and Writer
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Thanks for comment JK