- VS Gaitonde
- Ram Kumar
- Akbar Padamsee
- Amrita Sher-Gil
- Vanita Gupta
- Smita Kinkale
- Ratnadeep Adivrekar
- Tathi Premchand
- Nilesh Kinkale
- Prabhakar Kolte
- Chintan Upadhyay
- Prabhakar Barwe
- Shankar Palsikar
- Yashwant Deshmukh
- Prabhakar Kolte
- Sanchita Sharma
- Prakash Waghmare
- Ranjit Hoskote
- Premjish Achari
- Pankaja JK
- Contact
Monday, 15 September 2014
Friday, 5 September 2014
Own individual identity with different impressions and their expression- “ Five fingers “
“ Five
fingers “ a word define five
important elements of Visual art like Expression, Emotions, Compositions,
Concept and Surface.
Harshil Patel, Prexa Kapadia, Rakesh Patel,
Roma Patel and Vipul Prajapati, each artist have their own individual identity
with different impressions and their expression. We develop our own language in
Indian art scene, how ever we are growing
together and doing practice in same time and place with an individual
process with signature style of our own work.
Rakesh patel:
Emotions, the
most important feeling that connects us and brings us close to one and all. My
recent series of work involves around these emotions that I have mainly tried
to capture specially in children. The innocence and purity in their emotions is
what appeals me the most. Every character of the child in my work has a story
that somewhere reveals their life especially their surroundings. As I travelled
extensively to explore what actually is the reason for them being so happy in
spite of not having any luxuries of life which we generally connect happiness
to, and the reason I found is that it is the real “CHILDLIKENESS” that somewhere
bounces and reflects in their character, though necessary they don’t need any
material things to be happy. While working I have not only taken the portraits
but also created interesting backgrounds focusing mainly on their environment
the kind of job or work they do and their interaction in daily life and
transformed and amalgamated all these
element with the characters in my
work. The entire process is not only
interesting but also very interactive.
Roma patel :
Painting is to look at, to dream, to feel and
to enjoy. It creates an illusion that goes beyond sight since it strikes
reason, generates feelings and emotions, activates fantasy and brings the
spectator near the aesthetic enjoyment. To look at is not a simple act if what
one wants, just to see. In fact, to see is to exhaust the range of what the
eyes can reach, to overcome the limits of an image and go long way of
perception, understanding, grasp of knowledge and the discovery of spiritual
emotions. Painting is an experience to look at it calmly, quietly and
reverentially; it arouses a desire to understand, willingness to see, ambition
to comprehend in order to reach and feel the immense enjoyment of aesthetic
experience. Roma’s work is intense. She paints with rigor and order. She prefers ocher,
blue, white, and intensely cold colors and combines very light areas with dark
bodies that generate tension, reveals balance and give the composition a serene
dynamism. She introduces long and vigorous brushstrokes. She sometimes uses
cracking and, often introduces daring and expressive textures. She wants the
finish of the work to reinforce the expressive sense with exquisite visual and
tactile sensory. Roma’s painting full of lyricism and
subtleties reflects youth, vigor, experience and maturity seasoned with the
characteristic simplicity of the people who make art and culture the essential
part of their lives. Her work is thought to surprise and move spectator, to
arouse feeling and transmit emotions. Her paintings drive to contemplation,
meditation and introspection. Roma’s painting is solid, rigorous, sincere, warm
and suggesting. It arrests the spectators’ attention and captivates their look
and speech.
Harshil Patel :
The latest series of artworks is result of amalgamation of three
different theories, ideology and philosophy of Hinduism and materialism with
visual popular culture of world . The concept I have introduced in my artwork
is that you can touch, feel, listen, smell, express, and interact with the
piece; it is highly simplified through visual communicative language and
intimate through its intellectual esthetics. I have tried to play the symphony between the contemporary
painting and sculpture in my artwork, by applying natural sacred elements,
additionally added sound and fragrance which shall enhance the appeal of
atmospheric art. I like to merge different ideologies in my artworks . The deep
philosophy of Hinduism and pop-cult, The extravagant way of materialistic
window display at high streets like London, Florence, and Paris is highly
contemporary in accordance with the glamorous western style of displaying
objects on window display as comparable way at Hindu temple. I have used
repetition of nonliving object form as a rhythmic way for creating world
of live objects which posses give liveliness such as chanting mantra in
Hinduisam. Use of sacred natural medium such as like, charcoal(black),
turmeric powder(yellow),
gulaal(pink)),sandalwood( brown),crimson(red),abil( white), sindoor(orange),
lime, silver and golden leaf, betel nut, sacred thread, skin of tree, cow dung,
and Silver foils which are considered to be auspicious and used to decorate
deity as an important gesture, is the uniqueness of the series.
Through this series, I have tried to reduce the gap between
common people and intellectual art community. According to me, an
intellectual may say a simple thing in a complex manner while an artist
communicates a complex vision in a simple way.
A painting is meant to be a revelation of the
artist's authentic identity. The
gesture, the artist's "signature", is evidence of the actual process
of the work's creation.
Gestural
line or mark-making, unique textures, and dense layering create the illusion of
energy, movement, and compressed space-time. Grids, biomorphic and abstract
forms imply structure or order within the composition. Painting are made on
paper and canvas and explore a variety of shape, size and techniques. Abstract painting is a physical manifestation
of a journey depicted in form, texture, color, signs or symbols that has
specific meaning and are part of her life. Having always been fascinated with
the symbols, color of galaxy, and astronomy, they appear intuitively in her
works.
Scraping away, repainting, pouring colors,
whipping, dripping.... creative work is an inexplicable process and she try all
possibilities of what can be done with color on canvas to embrace
spirituality. Prexa,
in her new serious of art works is trying to create an art expressing mood. She
not go beyond the state of mind and a series of expressive colors and shapes,
independent of things. The Mood in the second case is very different from the
first mood. A mood which is partly identified with the conditioning object, a
mood dominated by clear images of detailed objects and situations, and capable
of being revived and communicated to others through these paintings, is
different in feeling tone, in relation to self-consciousness, attentiveness and
potential activity, from a mood that is independent of an awareness of fixed,
external objects, but sustained by random flow of private and incommunicable
associations.
Vipul Prajapati is a very promising young artist doing
noteworthy, experimental, creative work in mixed media.After
completing his Diploma in Painting & Drawing from C.N.College of Fine Arts
in Ahmedabad, two year ago, Vipul has been experimenting very seriously and
with deep understanding with varied mediums like course cloth, wood, paper and
canvas. He employs Black Japan on wood to create drawing and compositions. He
has sparingly used colures when necessary. With dry brush he has created
drawings in his paintings as well as graphic effects. In a few paintings he has
fixed real nails, which go very well with the demand of the subject. The
surface of the wood creates its own environment, beauty, and texture. He has
artistically and creatively used his own photography of Veraval, a port near
Somnath and also the main subject of most of his paintings. During
his student life Vipul used to go to Veraval to do sketching of the port and
catch its environment as this busy place fascinated him with its renovation and
making of small and big ships worker and fishermen. He interested with them in
order to know their feelings and also the drudgery of their work and life. He
also found interest in the physical appearance of them, particularly their body
structure and interesting portraits. In one of his paintings he has shown nails
and bolts all over his body, because this person does only work of nails and
bolts and as a result he himself has turned into a figure of nails and
bolts. What
Vipul has so closely observed and felt at Veraval has been very artistically
and aesthetically integrated in the interesting compositions of his paintings.
Really these innovative and experimental images of Vipul have created their own
unique environment and space of the world of the activities and life at Veraval
in various prospective.
Jahangir art gallery during 8th Sep to 14thSep 2014.
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Similar feelings were inspired during my earlier visits to Varanasi in India -Asit Poddar
My travels in India and abroad opened my
eyes to the synergy of art and architecture. In
2010, during a visit to Vienna and Salzburg in Austria, the classical city of
Praha in the Czech republic, Bratislava on the river Danube in neighbouring Slovakia and Budapest in Hungary, I was
struck by the medieval cathedrals, old museum buildings, quaint bridges
spanning rivers, the broad boulevards that grace old Europe. Two thousand long
years of history are condensed within its splendid architecture, yet they have
not left an impression of fatigue or decay.
Similar
feelings were inspired during my earlier visits to Varanasi in India. Located
on the left bank of the river Ganges, Varanasi is the holiest city for Hindus.
From time immemorial it has been a center for pilgrimage with pilgrims arriving
from all over the world. Claimed to be the oldest city in the world, it dates
back to the time of Babylon and Nineveh in ancient Abyssinia. With its array of
shrines, temples, Ghats and palaces rising in several tiers from the rivers
edge, it is one of the most picturesque cities in the East.
Bronze on Architecture by Asit Poddar |
This
series of paintings express the idea that architecture is the aesthetic
manifestation of civilization.
Sunday, 24 August 2014
Tapping the traditional roots - Warli paintings by Jiva Soma Mhase.
Jiva Soma Mhase. |
On this auspicious occasion of Independence Celebration week, I
felt like tapping the very roots of Indian Art’s tradition and culture. Hailing
from Mumbai, situated in Western India, I tapped the very old folk art of painting-
Warli paintings. Warli art is purely tribal art, painted by tribesmen living at
Thane, Dahanu and other areas at close proximity to Mumbai. Close proximity to
urbanized society has not affected the style of Warli painting, though some
development has been incorporated. Since Warli painting is commonly found
paintings on walls and in courtyards of tribesmen who were illiterates, there
are no records of the exact origin. But it was discovered in early seventies.
(Strictly for illustrative purpose only) |
The style of Warli painting in original form is unique. In the
sense, it is especially done on austere mud base using one color, white, with
occasional dots in red and yellow. This color is obtained from grounding rice
into white powder.
Though devout Warli artists prefer to adhere to traditional
images, artists like Jiva Soma Mhase understands the value of bringing in new
knowledge and ideas in Warli painting and thus we find tradition blended with
upgraded knowledge and conflicts of these tribal for survival due to
modernization.
Truly, Warli style murals and paintings look more effective on
walls, but as a part of development, they have started spreading their art to
non-Warli communities. And now it is often done on paper and cloth
incorporating traditional decorative Warli motifs with modern elements, and
even these are fast becoming popular.
All the traditional inclined art lovers can always approach this
non-arrogant, simple and rustic artist for more interesting facts of this tribe
and its art.
by Pankaja JK
ONLY IMAGE :http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jivya_Soma_Mashe
Monday, 18 August 2014
ART TALK by Priti Tamot, 23rd August 5.30 at Art Gate Gallery
When Nature is resurgently splendid amid decay :Pirti Tamot
( Pirti Tamot working in studio ) |
As one gazes at the prints on display at an exhibition of Priti Tamot’s work at the Kala Parishad one is struck, first of all, by the literal and visual highpoints. As a child the artist was fascinated by a passage from kalidasa’s ‘Meghdootam’ where Megha, the cloud was told by the Yaksha that a hill from on high would resemble a woman’s breast (shades of the tortured priest in Maugham’s ‘Rain’?). This lending of a whole new perspective by a change in the observer’s position stayed with her and the ‘birds-eye view’ is the predominant perspective in her creations.
PT: The future isn’t very bright for the simple reasons that people here do not understand graphics. Most of my work is purchased by foreigners. The only thing that people in India are interested in is canvas as there is a misconception that prints (which are published on paper) do not last. I would like to say here mat a print if conversed by glass and taken reasonable care of can easily last 70-80 years. What further confounds the public is the printing of Xeroxes of printings of who wonder why they should pay, say RS 10,000, for a print when they can get a copy for a pittance. They should understand that a print is the original, not a copy.
Upon closer inspection one notices the recurrent themes of erosion and dilapidation. Of palaces and forts fallen prey to the ravages of time. These harbingers of a glorious era reclaimed by nature. The melting together of stone and creeper in such a manner they are not separate entities anymore but part of the same continuum. It is not so much nature run amok as returning to stake its claim as the rightful owner after a brief interlude by pretenders to the throne. And one can’t help but think of the magnificent monuments as interlopers. An oberration, no less so for having been cast in stone. The annexation, however, is from any element of coercion.the undulating vines slowly seducing the arches while moss plays footsie with the courtyard; a testimony to the wiles adopted by nature.
(Rare Prints by Priti Tamot) |
When one is finally face-to-face with the artiste one scrutinies the forty-something lady seated across the table to discern any traces of inner turmoil or a vestigial loneliness that find expression in her work, of which decay and depredation is the leitmotif. One may as well look for meaning in an Aditya Chopra flick. Comfortably ensconced in her beautifully constructed house the lady exudes serenity and a quiet confidence. Dressed in a printed sari with her hair pulled back in a no-frills bun she seems the archetypal Hausdorff whose worst nightmares would comprise a dust- speckled mantelpiece or God forbid, roaches in the kitchen.
Meet Priti Tamot; graphic artiste extraordinaire. Honoured with a national fellowship by the government of India and winner of the 71 st annual All India Art Exhibition (AIFACS 2000) as well as the all India Art Exhibition, 2001 Tamot was the recipient of the MP state Award in 1999. Success rests lightly on the shoulders of this diminutive woman who has exhibited her works at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi, Jehangir and Zen galleries in Mumbai, Bharat Bhavan, Alliannce Francaise Bhopal as well as in Europe. When asked about future plans, with touching modesty she expresses a desire to’improve’.
Born academically in lnelined parents (her father was a sanakrit professor and Amateur painter) she did her BSc and followed it up with an MA in Fine Arts from Vikram University, Ujjain. Marriage and looking after her children kept her away from her avocation initially but it wasn’t long before she succumbed to the muse. She joined the Bharat Bhavan workshop in 1988 and hasn’t looked back since.
During a lengthy chat with the Central Chronicle, interspersed with frequent trips to the kitchen for cups of steaming tea, Priti Tamot revealed many shades of her personality, the vibrancy of which is, perhaps, matched only by the hues of her palette. Excerpts from the interview:
Sk: When did you start painting?
PT: As far back as I can remember I have wanted to paint. When in Ujjain I took classes in art from Vishnu Sridhar Wakhandkar, who discovered the cave drawings at Bhimbetka. He was in the midst of his search in those days and the graphic descriptions he provided about his visits to Bhopal and surrounding areas resulted in an interest in architecture that lasts to this day
SK: were you inspired by any particular genre or artist?
PT: My role model among contemporary painters was Almelkarji who was a master at creating a plethora of details with the repetitive stroke. Detailed work has always attracted me and so jain miniatures as well as the figures of Ajanta hold a special place in my heart.
SK: Any western painters?
PT: No, not really.
SK: What made you shift from painting to graphics?
PT: First of all, it was a new medium and that is always alluring. Lots of detail in what I create, like I said, has what I have always hankered for and graphics allowed me to pursue this much more than canvas did. Things I could only dream of while working on canvas were a tangible reality while doing graphics.
(Rare Prints by Priti Tamot) |
PT: I’m glad you brought this up. A few weeks ago I had given a detailed explanation to a gentleman from the vernacular press but he went ahead and wrote his own version. Graphic means ‘painted picture’. How it works is; drawings are made on a zinc plate with the aid of a nail polish like substance and the plate is then dipped in acid. That part of the picture, Which has been worked upon, is not dissolved when exposed to acid and further drawings are made after which the plate is again dipped in acid. This is done repeatedly with the result that those parts of the plate which have had prolonged exposure to acid acquire greater depth while those dipped only a few times remain lighter. When the plate is coloured using printing colour the hue permeates the most to the areas with the greatest depth while the lighter areas remain relatively unaffected. After this the plate is printed onto paper in the same way that is done in any printing press.
SK: Are the monuments in your pictures taken from real life?
PT: Let me say that the genesis of any print that I do lies in real life but by the time I remix it in my head it in my head it bears absolutely no resemblance to the original. You wont’s find the palaces depicted in my prints in Bhopal, or elsewhere. And this is how it should be.
SK:Any plans to marry painting with graphics in your quest for perfection?
PT: I am experimenting with something for a show to be held in japan soon. The thing is that if a graphic artiste works on canvas his artistic genealogy is immediately evident.
SK: what do you make of the recent trend to launch young artistes with gala openings followed by glitzy luncheons? Do you think their sales are based more on hype than on intrinsic value of their work?
PT: The publicity, bookings and all the promotional stuff is dealt with by the galleries who make 33 per cent on every sale and so I think it is unfair to blame the artiste for the ritzy openings. Then again times have changed and today everyone wants to have oodles of money so……(trails off).
SK: Painters like Hussain, Raza etc. command as tronomical prices…….
PT: (interrupts quickly) So what is wrong with that? People like Raza, Hussain, are ‘old masters’ to whom we are indebted for having gotten rid of the stigma that was attached to being an artiste. Before Hussain the general perception of a painter was that he was perennially penurious. In any art there are people who get critical acclaim and those who win popular acclaim with a tiny minority attaining both. Hussain is among this rare breed.
SK: You seem quite enamored of him
PT: on the contrary. Personally, I identify more with Raza’s paintings but Hussain’s contribution towards bettering the financial condition of artistes cannot be overstated. The way he has marketed himself is something from which all of us can learn.
SK: Have you?
PT: (A little taken aback) My material needs are very limited. Plus my husband is quite well-to-do and so I do not have to depend on the income from my work. So you could say that there is no pressure to do so.
SK: How do you see the future of graphics in India?
SK: Finally, as an artiste what do you look forward to?
PT: A time when I am better able to transfer my thoughts onto paper. What else? Perhaps getting international recognition to the same extent that I have received in India (smiles)
(Report courtesy Chronicle :Saturday Bhopal)
Friday, 15 August 2014
”ECHOES IN BLACK” by Satish Wavare
Sunday, 10 August 2014
‘Manas Kala’ and ‘Paintings are us’are the two branches of Art house
‘Manas Kala’ and ‘Paintings
are us’ are the two branches of Art house. As the connoisseurs of Art, we
shoulder the responsibility of inspiring and representing creativity of artists
from India. Our motto to promote them instigates from the thought, that they
(artists) are the historians of our culture and communities. They nurture
origins of culture through visual medium and truly signify Indian
civilization. May we continue in this
great work of presenting cultural and traditional heritage of India through
Painting Art.
On the onset of Independence Day celebration, from August 16, both
the Art Houses- ‘Manas Kala and ‘Paintings are us’ are jointly organizing
exhibition cum sale of works by a few well know as well as budding artists, who
have splashed the joy, and vibrancy of our cultural heritage on their canvas in
figurative or abstract forms.
India is the only unique land which has traditions and customs
associated with every element of nature, be it tress, animals or any other geographical
feature.. Every element is linked to human life, behavior and survival. Artist
G K Laxman has realistic
creations that capture Landscapes and Portrait in all medium. In this
exhibition he has shown beautiful visual of holy
river Ganga during dusk and the rituals that are carried on it. As the devotees
perform Ganga Aarti with lamps and let them float on the water the glimmer and
shine of river Ganga becomes more exuberant; this is but the physical
appearance. But there is more value added to it. Indians believe that every river is the
Goddess and each denotes purity. This staunch belief arises from the fact that India
is an agricultural country, water resources play important role in life of
people. Rivers are considered sacred as they are the main source of water in
India. Religious values are attached to rivers and treated with spiritual
importance. Praying and reverence of rivers is a way of showing respect to these
natural sources of life support. River are referred to as Mother, which itself
means life giver.
As
we move on from the association of natural elements with people, and
connotation of spiritual value added to them, we see that there is a delightful
painting by artist Ramesh Kharat, whose Figurative painting is on
display. One can feel the artist’s love to express through lavish use of
different shades of colors. The painting has meticulous details signifying deep
intensity. The intensity reverberated through the mind and thoughts of the
observer and one starts relating emotions and feelings in the painting with his
own life. Truly, a painting can be called a successful artwork only when it
brings out essence of life on lifeless canvas and make the observer one with
the creation. Artists Kharat is successful in invoking this feeling.
Artist
Bala introduces us to meditational aura through his Abstract paintings. Personally
he is mesmerized by the Buddha and specializes in relentlessly painting different
shades of abstract and the Buddha. The paintings in this exhibition are
abstract forms, and very close to meditational mood. Here too we find soft
earthy colors perched on the canvas. There is a tranquil and serene feeling in
each creation. A constant look at it swipes the viewer in the flow to the point
of being immersed in an unknown, mystical zone, where there is peace of mind
and calm heart.
As
mentioned earlier Art is a true representative of culture and traditions.
Speaking purely of India we find, nature of people is shaped according to their
association with their immediate surrounding and Nature. We can see these
influences not only on the behavioral pattern but even the variation in
ethnicity. Our Folk art truly
represents the ethnic uniqueness. Artist Kapil adores and
expresses his love for culture in folk art style. He follows Madhubani style of
painting. In this exhibition he displays a graceful, emotive, coy Indian rural
lady by using sketching style of pen on paper. This kind of fine line sketching
is one of the styles in Madhubani called ‘Kachni’ where delicate fine lines are
used instead of many colors. Madhubani style paintings seem divine blessing.
The woman here is one of the divine blessings and is a part of many a beautiful
creation by Almighty. This aesthetic creation represents tradition in most
coveted and art form of India.
Artists Bhavna’s
paintings show us the influence of nature on entire lifestyle of people. She
has used the most placid and barren land- the dessert in India and its effect.
The arid land makes the faces dry and wrinkled. The tiring heat and difficult mode
of survival show on the faces of the people living there. Their faces are
totally wrinkled. These wrinkled faces are live books defining and elaborating the
Survival of the Fittest concept. They
are most expressive faces. Bhavana captures these expressions in her paintings.
She deliberately paints faces in black and white and tops them with colorful
turban. Turbans are one of the necessary accessories in dressing. These
headgears save people from sandstorm and attack by the thief on these secluded
sandy paths. The black and white faces
(representing struggle) and colorful turbans hint us that the dry land of
Rajasthan seems to raise colorful hopes of life and survival through (turbans)
which have varied vibrant shades. To make it more intense, the artists has used
sketching style with medium of pencil and charcoal and acrylic color.
India can be simply
praised and admired for its variation in landscapes without associating them
with virtues and values. The visual treat of landscapes is presented by artist Jacob.
We
hope this exhibition will bring you closer to Indian Contemporary art and
artists. Truly, the busy life schedule has taken away our leisure time and
thoughts of appreciating beauty. But you will surely compensate this loss by
having blissful experience while watching this vibrant exhibition by artists
G K Laxman, Ramesh Kharat, Sunny Bhanusali, S. Bala, Kapil, Bhavana, Jacob and Sanchit Verma.The show begins
on 16th to 22nd continues at Art Gate Gallery Mumbai
Welcome to the show ‘Freedom of colour...
- Pankaja JK
16th to 22nd August : opening at 12 pm to 7pm Art Gate Gallery, Churchgate Mumbai
Art Gate Gallery can be contacted at:022 4213 8855
or emailed at artgate.sc@gmail.com
(Note : This PRESS RELEASE for all Indian news paper and Media, leading PR Agency and online social media, please share )
Art Gate Gallery can be contacted at:022 4213 8855
or emailed at artgate.sc@gmail.com
(Note : This PRESS RELEASE for all Indian news paper and Media, leading PR Agency and online social media, please share )
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