Saturday, 15 March 2025

Craft, Migration and the Weight of Memory

Craft, Migration and the Weight of Memory Design, Crafts, Meritocracy, Experiential design, Archival materiality, memory In the narrow lanes of old markets, among the fading signboards and the old shutters half-covered with layers of political posters, stories are embedded in objects. They are woven into textiles, etched on the stones, and molded into fluffy breads. 

 Pratishtha Mishra

Crafts are not just artifacts but archives of movement, adaptation, and survival. What we call crafts today have historically been utilitarian products for local consumption. Migration, whether forced, voluntary, or cyclical, has shaped how materials are chosen or stories are carried forward. Yet, in a world that increasingly values speed and scalability, these traditions often go unnoticed, their practitioners left to navigate an economy that does not account for memory. 

Movements have participated in defining crafts. The migration of Persian artisans to India brought the intricate techniques of Bidriware, which evolved uniquely in the Deccan, while the Mughal patronage of stone marble inlay work saw artisans reinterpreting Persian aesthetics within Indian architectural traditions. These journeys, whether due to royal commissions, trade, or displacement, shaped the material artisans chose, the patterns they imprinted, and the hybrid techniques that emerged. Archival materiality makes it evident here that crafts are not just products but living documents, preserving histories that might otherwise be erased. 

Craft, in many ways, is an act of rebellion against loss and against forgetting. Objects made with human hands hold an emotional and cultural residue that factory-produced goods cannot replicate. But whose work is considered worthy of preservation? Meritocracy in the crafts sector becomes evident here. Recognition is often dictated by access to who gets institutional validation, whose work is archived, and whose skills remain on the margins of artistic recognition. Street-side sign painters, vernacular typography artists, and roadside pot makers rarely enter curated museum spaces, even though their work tells stories of deep-rooted cultural shifts. 

Today, artisans must navigate shifting landscapes with material scarcity and urban gentrification. Formal economies prioritise visibility over authenticity, while the informal economy thrives on resourcefulness and frugality, often overlooked in conventional artistic merit. For those working within the informal economy, JUGAAD, bricolage, and frugal innovation are not just creative strategies but essential tools for survival. Though they lack formal education, artisans create solutions that are deeply rooted in the context of their culture and environment, yet these solutions remain invisible in contemporary creative 

dialogues. At the same time, some crafts are adapting and being reinterpreted into digital media and modern aesthetics to meet the needs of the market. But adaptation comes at a cost: what is lost when a craft is forced to conform to commercial viability? 

Crafts remain a testament to identity and survival but are also fragile, like other tacit knowledge-based practices. If value is dictated by institutional recognition and an expectation to fit in neatly in the categorised art world narratives, where does it leave these invisible practitioners? 

As artists, researchers, and curators, the challenge is not just preservation but rethinking merit, visibility, and access. Perhaps the answer lies in expanding archives beyond institutions, in creating new storytelling methods that allow these crafts to breathe and shift 

on their terms. The question remains: who gets remembered, and who gets left behind? 


6th March / Mishra P. 

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Artblogazine Team @ 2025 

Saju Kunhan's presented series titled ‘11th May 1980 Wedding Day’

 


Saju Kunhan's presented series titled ‘11th May 1980 Wedding Day’ delves specifically into familial archives and ancestral histories. They feature black and white family photographs taken from a wedding album, the frozen stillness of which is animated by adding a layer of painted colour which in the artist’s words is to “try to add some colour to their existence.”


Please click here to read more and explore images of the works. 


We look forward to seeing you there! Please reach out to us if there are any questions or additional requests.

Regards,

Hena Kapadia


Gallery Director


w: www.tarq.in


a: KK Chambers, Ground Floor, 39B AK Nayak Marg, Fort, Mumbai 400001

o: +91 22 6615 0424 | +91 22 66150069

m: +91 9821332108

e: hena@tarq.in

Friday, 28 February 2025

… Interpretation of Dreams

Nilesh Shilkar’s artistic mission has been no less ambitious than an attempt to represent the structures of knowledge and belief that we use to understand and visualize it. Shilkar’s works are continually expanding and evolving and stems from his imagination, and is catalogued in a conceptual chart replete with allusions drawn from occult practices, traditions, and scientific elements and principles. The works delineate the universe’s formation as well as the attempts and limits of human consciousness to comprehend its vastness. His work deals explicitly with the idea of information being on the surface and information the subject of his work. Shilkar creates works on canvas, texturing it for three-dimensionality which ties the sprawling works together into a narrative structure. Offering a fresh perspective on the fusion of cultures, practices, and aesthetics, Shilkar’s key to understanding his work, draws attention to forms of culture on the fringes of the mainstream and reveals hidden personal histories within the context of what he himself has experienced. He was brought up in Shil near Ratnagiri, where he still lives. 

Shilkar's talent lies in examining his surroundings in an almost anthropological fashion. Many of his installations reflect how communities in Mumbai have appropriated elements of mainstream culture and mimicked, altered, and even parodied it to make it their own. For "Projekt Thibaw," an exhibition on view at the Thibaw Palace, Shilkar pasted a large world map and inserted with a large trowel at the centre. The piece is now part of Thebaw collection; but the earlier projects, such as Mumbai Shanghai, and Complimentary Dish, make clear the link between Shikar's incisive analyses of contemporary culture and conceptual political art more generally, often resulting in humorous and insightful observations on the hierarchies of art and life.

This impression is due to the stratification of compositional levels: layers of large and regular chromatic planes studded by small drawings and by digressions in calligraphic style are overlaid with miniature figurative openings and sinuous abstract drawings are added. The accumulation of overlapping layers, colors, and images uniformly covers the surface, becoming indifferent to the boundary with the pictorial stratification conferring depth to the paper, the various elements that make up the work appear to occupy a volumetric space, while the images and colors seems to be the result expressed in three-dimensions. The pictorial density, in which the figurative elements are interwoven and mingle, and sometimes are superimposed upon others, is thus revealed as an expression of the artist's cultural condition. 

The initial impression of a chaotic and uniform density is substituted by a curiosity that leads the viewer to the exploration of three-dimensionality as a visual translation of memory and time. A three-dimensionality in which the stratification corresponds to the intersecting or the melting in one's mind of memories more or less recent, to the battle between the urgency of the present and the evocative force of the past. Elbowing for space on paper are pictorial styles and visual data mediated by tradition, as one can make out in the tiny landscapes that invade at several points, iconography or personal memories seen with the eye of the artist's original culture. The compositional hierarchy: the figuration uniformly supports, and the material has evidently undergone a strong selection by the artist, allowing some elements to take precedence. For this reason, the works appear as a more evolved emotional form where memory, no longer obsessive, seems to be driven into a structure and a defined meaning

In his painting there is no insistence on reinventing time, nor is there an attempt to make the past present, for past and present are shown completely. Memories shift among nostalgic motivations; they are mirrors of ourselves that envelop us like whirlwinds. Nilesh Shilkar has the ability to show coherence and freshness in painting based on the symbolic elements of a historical reality. Freeing himself of the imposing and limiting sense of a mere transposition of images and symbols, he realizes a subversion of the imagination stemming from the inheritance manifested in the implicit power relations. Subversion often begins through references that extend inside or outside the space of the canvas. The artist gives a new dimension to painting as he approaches or distances himself from the two-dimensional plane the images decompose into a dissociating effect that transforms the pictorial matter into intoxicating condensations, into contractions, and into impulses. The artist offers us a rich game of semantic suggestions where the course of history is no longer delineated as before. The autonomy of the symbol engenders a reality gathered from the material itself. He thus procures to rescue memory, not as the actualization of the past, but rather as its prolongation into the present, for the present depends on the past in order to manifest itself. Nilesh Shilkar's work is a release transposed with rare mastery for the world of painting. Through a powerful and free transfiguration, he evokes testimonies of memories and of the present, made of matter and rebellion, dream and reality.







 

Abhijeet Gondkar

February 2025


Nilesh Shilkar
Solo show
Curated by Abhijeet Gondkar @abhijeet.gondkar
Preview: 25th February, 5.30 pm onwards
Exhibition continues till 1st March 2025.
Daily between 3 pm and 7pm

Gallery Nippon 30/32, 2nd Floor, Deval Chambers, Nana Bhai Lane, Flora Fountain, Fort, Mumbai - 400 001
Open on Public Holidays, Appointment only

Monday, 24 February 2025

"INNOCENCE TO INNOVATION" An Exhibition of Paintings by well-known artist Jasbinder Singh in Jehangir

Our lives are woven from stories—memories of childhood, moments of solitude, and an ever-evolving world. Growing up in Rourkela, my days were filled with nature’s simplicity. My father, a pattern maker at a steel plant, built me a small wooden chair and asked what color I wanted. Without hesitation, I chose Gulabi (pink)—perhaps drawn from the roses in our garden. That chair became my throne of imagination, where I played fearlessly with earthworms and dreamed of becoming a fighter pilot.


Artist: Jasbinder Singh

During the stillness of the COVID-19 lockdown, memories of that pink chair resurfaced. The world was confined—thinking, waiting, adapting—while outside, animals roamed free. This contrast inspired my hybrid beings, part human, part animal, seated on symbolic chairs. The chair became more than an object; it embodied authority, longing, and transformation.

Over the years, I have witnessed a dramatic shift—from an era without television or computers to a world shaped by artificial intelligence. As we embrace technology, we drift from innocence, becoming mechanical, detached from nature. My art captures this transition, juxtaposing childhood purity with a surreal, hybrid future. In my work, the chair is not just furniture—it is an observer, absorbing the essence of those who sit on it, whether a child, teacher, businessman, or leader. It reflects power, vulnerability, greed, and wisdom. Art, design, and technology must coexist with nature in balance. As we move forward, I ask: Who truly holds the power—the person sitting on the chair, or the chair itself?



From: 25th February to 3rd March 2025

"INNOCENCE TO INNOVATION"

An Exhibition of Paintings by well-known artist Jasbinder Singh

 

VENUE:

Jehangir Art Gallery

161-B, M.G. Road,

Kala Ghoda, Mumbai 400 001

11am to 7pm

Contact: +91 98927 91403

Friday, 21 February 2025

I remember you from tomorrow - Abhijeet Gondkar

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. 

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.

 

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.

Mohit Jain - Dhoomimal Art Centre, Delhi

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.



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

Gnosis (Bhikshu) Nippon Solo show - 2025

Does Buddhism and creativity have anything in common? May be, Yes. Buddhism is all about exploring self and attaining the power of mind over body, self realization and self- control. Creativity adopts or follows some methods of Buddhism, where in creator becomes meditative as he goes in creating and concentrating on exploring the depth of theme, thus, gaining a meditative hold over the physical appearance of the painting. Both, Buddhism and Creativity, cultivate our real and cryptic nature.

Artist: Umakant Tawde

There is rise of ‘Consciousness’ in both. Meditation is not an easy process and when you sit to meditate you have more diversions of thought than ever before; there is not a single moment when you feel stable at soul. It is probing into unpredictable nature. Creativity follows same ebb of finding stability amongst chaos and move with the tranquil flow.

Artist Umakant has been working on the concepts and figures of the Buddha since last many years. Gnosis/ Bhikus is one further step in his creation of thought involving Buddha and Buddhism. . Here he directly paints the representatives of the Buddha- the Monks. Along with Dalai Lama, there are novice monks. We find that these novice monks’ expressions are not serene and meditative but seem to be at the infantile stage of becoming Monks, they have childish innocence on their face. They are allowed to explore their physical world and with the aid of Buddhist preaching they slowly develop self awareness.

Process of creativity is like these novice monks, a process of becoming self aware and breaking free from of influence from others. Without imposing grueling knowledge and letting them be of their age; this natural way of growing and side-by-side acquiring knowledge in a systematic way would turn them into serene and self-controlled Monks.

To show this initial stage of proceeding to be a true monks, Umakant has made use of colorful background and not as expected of Buddhism (and taken for granted) the association of the subtle shades. The innocence and radiance of novice monks is reverberated in these colors. These photographic style representations have characteristic colorful abstract backgrounds, devoid of figurative, mysterious mist. Lastly, not to ignore the painting of The Dalai Lama who displays courage and humility. Like him artist should also have both. Courage to discard all that which is troublesome and hurdle in finding inner vision. Humility, a spiritual nature to accept criticism without disquiet and gain highest level of spirituality.

These paintings are unique in the sense that the images are well-known but they are metaphoric representation of real creativity and shows us that path to spiritual growth; be it by following Buddhism as by Buddhist monks or by being creative person. The path is difficult and main hurdle is mind and soul and development of self awareness. Self awareness by Monks or by artist, would surely lead to spiritual upliftment. The show is worth watching as imparting knowledge through visual means.

Exhibition Details:
Date: 18th February 2025
Get-Together Time: 4:00 pm
And Public Viewing: start 5:30 pm, Artists and art lover welcome🎉
Dates: 18th - 22nd February 2025
Time: 3:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Venue:
Nippon Gallery, Kala Ghoda, Fort - 400001
Gallery Timings:
Tuesday to Saturday: 3:00 pm - 8:00 pm
RSVP:
Open on public holidays, appointment only
Email: nipponbombay@gmail.com
Address: 30/32, 2nd Floor, Deval Chambers, Nana Bhai Lane, Flora Fountain, Fort, Mumbai - 400 001
We look forward to seeing you there!