A space of speculative thinking that transcends physical
boundaries through imaginative exploration, 'I remember you from
tomorrow,' is an amalgam of transitioning, fragmented realities. In the
socio-politically charged yet fragmented society, saturated with an opulence of
images signifying radical modernist utopias, Ratnadeep assumes the role of an
archivist. Deconstructing and reinterpreting visuals, he pieces them within the
realms of his personal experiences, which then reveal connections between philosophy,
selfhood, world and time.
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Artist: Ratnadeep G Adivrekar |
Time, central to his practice, is approached not as a linear
progression but as a cyclical and layered phenomenon that shapes memory and
identity. Drawing on the Atharva
Veda, he invokes the concept of time as Aswa—a timeless continuity
without past or future; exploring how our perception of time shapes our
understanding of events, wherein proximity sharpens clarity, while distance
invites reinterpretation. Bridging historical and future timelines, the
artworks enable reflection as a vessel for memory, creating a tangible
manifestation of intangible experiences.
Here, we see snapshots of his movement through time,
combining historical references with objects, interiors, stories, and people
that define his life. Translating the three-dimensional world into colour and
line, his paintings confound expectations of scale and vantage point, creating
moments of conjecture and contemplation. His bricolage approach involves
splicing photographic fragments from his life, vintage magazines, and art
history into his canvases. These elements are then transformed through processes
that oscillate between abstraction and representation.

'I remember you from tomorrow,' posits itself within the
meta-modern framework, where Ratnadeep assumes the role of the creator and
summoner, bringing together images and objects into the material, and here, the
viewer dawns the role of the participant and interpreter. The meta-narratives
embedded in his works—conceptual models that organise knowledge and
experience—function as avatars of creativity, traversing time and space.
Finding inspiration across diverse sources, from ancient Hindu mythology, such
as Vishnu (preserver of time), to more contemporary acts like John
Cage’s experimental 'Prepared Piano' and George Brecht’s 'Drip Music,'
Ratnadeep seamlessly blends literary and art-historical influences, forming an
interconnected web of memory, perception, and emotion. His works and methodology merge abstraction and figuration
through a richly coloured, illustrative style. Vibrant, discordant palettes and
off-kilter compositions evoke emotional intensity and complexity, while the
balance between chaos and order reflects a dynamic tension. His art re-imagines
traditional painting methods, offering layered narratives and diverse
approaches to contemporary storytelling. Ratnadeep’s skepticism toward grand
narratives emerges in his refusal to offer singular interpretations, reflecting
the fluidity and multiplicity of meaning, embracing disorientation and
uncertainty. This fragmented approach mirrors the postmodern condition,
highlighting the ephemeral and interconnected nature of the world. By weaving
together history, mythology, and personal memory, Ratnadeep Adivrekar’s 'I
remember you from tomorrow' re-imagines the act of storytelling, creating a
space for reflection on time, identity, and the richness of narrative in
contemporary art.
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Ratnadeep begins by noting the
deliberate paradox of his title, the central thesis that the continuity of time
and each moment contains all eternity. The title, he notes, is his way of
illustrating that our language is so saturated and animated by time. With his
characteristic self-effacing paintings Ratnadeep cautions that they might be the
artifice of a viewer lost in the maze of metaphysics and then he proceeds to
deliver a masterwork of rhetoric and reason, carried on the wings of uncommon
poetic beauty illustrating Octavio Paz’s Sunstone an epic poem concerned with a
complete change in appearance or form. The work is emphasis on spontaneous,
automatic and subconscious.
In painting the sextant Ratnadeep ends by returning to
the beginning, to the raw material of his title and arguably, of his entire
body of work, of his very self: paradox. He paints temporal succession, the
self, the astronomical universe, and apparent desperations and secret
consolations. Our destiny is not frightful by being unreal; it is frightful
because it is irreversible and iron-clad. Time is the substance we are made of.
The image is from performance Ikiru by Tadashi Endo - Hommage Á Pina Bausch
(“Ikiru,” meaning “to live” in Japanese) but it is manipulated by repetition to
look like the norns. The Norns were the Norse goddesses of fate, represented as
three sisters. They lived underneath the world tree, where they wove the tapestry
of fate. Here they are holding continuous a rope loop.
Through George Brecht’s 'Drip
Music,' of performance art, collecting paint sounds in a bucket Ratnadeep
unleashes it onto his canvas reliving the moment of sound and the act. The work
is resolution between choice and chance. The first performer on a tall ladder
pours water from a pitcher very slowly down into the bell of a French horn or
tuba held in the playing position by a second performer at floor level. So
looking at documentation photographed. It doesn’t represent but rather presents
and the idea of time present in the photograph. In connection with art, and the
affective image, we shall indicate two aspects of chance, one where the origin
of images is unknown because it lies in deeper than conscious levels of the
mind, and the second where images derive from mechanical processes not under
the artist’s control. On the top is Sphinx drawing borrowed from the first
edition of book cover of The Time Machine by H.G.Wells. The presence of Sphinx
suggests that there must be puzzle which the time traveler should solve.
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Mohit Jain - Dhoomimal Art Centre, Delhi
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Space and time are not drawn
from experience but are presupposed in experience. They are never observed as
such, but they constitute that context within which all events observed. They
cannot be known to exist in nature independently of the mind, but the world
cannot be known by the mind without them. Space and time therefore cannot be
said to be characteristic of the world in itself, for they are contributed in
the act of human observation. The 3 hands denote seeing time in past, present
and future but the watches don’t have hands, while the red lines represent
branching out possibilities through fractured time. The word for ‘occur’ in
German is GESCHIEHT (Present tense)- GESCHAH (Past tense) – ISTGESCHEMEN
(Present Perfect tense) - GESCHEN (infinitive tense)...fourth one for infinitive.
What is the relationship between word and picture? For if the word is to be of
duration, it must be linked to script, which in turn derives from the linear possibilities
of drawing, while being itself a sign. When exactly does a drawing become a
sign? And what about its ambivalence? To what extent does the legibility of
signs depend on cultural consensus bound up with a time and space? Through the
flow of occurrence subjective experiences Ratnadeep perceives an external
reality of himself demarcated from it.
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Making his way through the
maze of philosophy, Ratnadeep maps what he calls the world of the mind in
relation to time. He illustrates this paradox of the present moment by painting
moment familiar from literature, art history, music, myth and architecture.
This simultaneity of all events has immense implications as a sort of
humanitarian manifesto for the commonness of human experience, which Ratnadeep
captures beautifully in his paintings.
Abhijeet Gondkar
(Abhijeet Gondkar is an independent writer and curator based in Mumbai. The above excerpts are from Ratnadeep Adivrekar’s solo show “I remember you from tomorrow.”
Solo exhibition
by Ratnadeep Gopal Adivrekar
3 – 28 February
2025
Dhoomimal Art
Centre, Delhi