Wednesday, 29 April 2015

New Art Hangout place Near Mandwa Alibaug Road, Alibaug The Guild

The Guild Collection II –  Outremer
Curated by Ranjit Hoskote

March 15 – May 15

Ranjit Hoskote

Image From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Guild is delighted to announce the opening of its new space at Alibaug, on the mainland. The move to Alibaug marks a new chapter in the trajectory of our practice. Alibaug is an old/new settlement, growing at an accelerating pace, with a vibrantecosystem that straddles the divides of village/town/farmhouse culture. This will allow us to explore new formats in exhibition and public engagement.
(Alibaug The Guild Gallery View)
  
Located 4 kms from Mandwa jetty, 20/45 minutes by speed boat/ferry from Gateway of India, the gallery will occupy 3000 sq ft of exhibition space spread over two levels and will include a sculpture garden in the spring and fall months. New programming will include education programs in collaboration with local schools, and public programs with curators, artists and academics. With this move The Guild envisions artistic excellence combined with place-making activities that will enable deeper artistic connections and interventions in public spaces and communities. 

The inaugural exhibition of The Guild in the new space will open with a non-commercial exhibition, the 2nd iteration of its Collection. This exhibition is  curated by cultural theorist, poet and independent curator Ranjit Hoskote  and  includes artists Sudhir PatwardhanGieve Patel,  A. Ramachandran,  Vivan Sundaram,  T. V. Santhosh,  Navjot Altaf,  Pooja Iranna, Shadi Ghadirian, Atul Dodiya,  Anju Dodiya,  Amit Ambalal,  Riyas Komu,  Bhupen Khakhar,  C. K. Rajan,  Gigi Scaria,  Jitish Kallat,  Akbar Padamsee,  Krishen Khanna,  K. G. Subramanyan,  Baiju Parthan,  G. R. Iranna, Vidya Kamat, Gulammohammed Sheikh,  K. P. Reji,  Rakhi Peswani,  Mehlli Gobhai, Himmat Shah.  

We look forward to welcoming you at The Guild, Alibaug.

Shalini Sawhney 
Team at The Guild
 

The Guild                                                                                  
1028, Ranjanpada                                                                       
Next to Sai Mandir                                                                      
Mandwa Alibaug Road                                                                  
Alibaug  - 402201                                                                        
Hours: Wednesday-Monday, 10-6.30pm                                        
+91 241 247847    

Friday, 17 April 2015

Enticing audio-visual expression of Vanita Gupta soon to be on deck of WRO Biennale!


Congratulations Vanita!!
Rocking success with ‘Balloon Trilogy’- Vanita Gupta


Artist: Vanita Gupta


Vanita Gupta is at a lead in marathon of recognition and achieving accolades for her excellent creative and progressive steps in the art field.


Vanita Gupta’s video ‘Balloon Trilogy’ is selected for 16th International Media Art Biennale 2015 of Wroclaw, Poland. It will be displayed as an audio-visual installation during the show, which opens in May 2015 and runs through till Sept. 2015 in Wroclaw, Poland.



 It is evident that she is rocking the world of Audio-Visual art by grabbing the attention of art galleries and curators with her distinct and innovative paintings and sculptures. Its commendable to be a part of WRO (Wizualnych Realizacji Okołomuzycznych) Art Center in Wroclaw, Poland, is that, its festivals are exclusively devoted to audiovisual art involving electronic media. We are not unaware of the great Polish culture which has given the greatest of film makers like Roman Polanski, Kieslowski, Zanussi. It inspires and recognizes artists actively working with new technologies and innovative approaches to image, sound and perception. Vanita has been actively involved in visual art since more than a decade and regenerating her art with innovative ideas. The video is her first audio-visual creation but effectively worthy of recognition.



    
Vanita created this balloon trilogy beginning in 2012 and finally the third part was conceived at her residency in Vermont studio center, USA in 2014.

The video is a brilliant work of creativity, diligence and beauty in simplicity.



- By Pankaja JK

Friday, 3 April 2015

' This Baby Is Not A Baby' - Sanjeev Khandekar.

Sanjeev Khandekar writes for Chintan Upadhyay 's grand show ahead this week in Istanbul


Chintan Upadhyay is one of the important contemporary Indian artists because he is one of those few artists who could blend the traditional Indian craft with the contemporary concerns and issues in the most pleasant artistic forms. Indian craft has a long sociopolitical history which has been evolving through crafts and art, over a period of thousand years. Art has always been a product of the history which is constructed by several points of political events that coerce and obligate marriages of cultures. Culture as a language translates into art and craft mirroring nothing but our own history.
Sanjeev Khandekar


Chintan's fundamental concern, and therefore interest is the language of art. Hence his art is often a product of his continued anxiety of and about the history. History of his people, history of his region, its geopolitics, and noesis of his own roots are his constant yearnings. He was born and brought up at Rajasthan, one of the regions known for its historical monuments rich in art & craft. From the local vesture to its architecture, and from food preparations to music recitations,Rajasthan is not only brightly colourful, but also displays a passion for a prominent exhibition of colour structures. The syntax and the cytoarchitectonics of his artistic compositions therefore consciously and unconsciously remind us of his regional concerns of local artefacts. 



He began his art career in early 90s, when the world was changing. The change was humongous. Politically it was being organised as a unipolar new world. Cold War was over and capitalism had reinvented itself into a new form of crony and carnivalised outlook. Philosophy had begun to think about non metaphysical and beyond human possibilities. Technology of information,digital and genetic invention had created another world within the human world , altering the concerns of body and mind. Virtual was replacing the Real silently. Economies were rebuilt, new money and new rich were appearing on the horizon. The shifting of Sociopolitical plates had begun a new tectonic movement .The world was metamorphosing in a way hitherto unseen by human history. Kafka or Dali, modern or post-modern ,Woodstock or Rage Against Machine were proving to be deficient and not helpful enough to explain the tensions of new world. 



Burden of the history and its awareness was reducing thinner,weightless, and blurred. Living in a space,where gravity cannot be felt is not easy. Lightness has become a new property of the emerging world. Chintan is a product of the generation of artists , writers and thinkers, activists,musicians and poets who began to produce in the periods where the weight began disappearing. 



Chintan has worked in variety of mediums. Drawings, painting ,sculptures, installations,performances, public art, printmaking, collaborations, - what not is left out? Initially intrigued by genetic revolutionary inventions, and feared by growing capitalistic consumerist never satiating desires, his expression chose to make designed babies, and remained his signature work.The local being threatened, be it be crops, or the food, he understood that the language of life is being uprooted. His computer programmed drawings of babies when became paintings or sculptures began wearing natural and human forms depicted in miniature paintings well known world over as Mughal paintings of Jaipur, Bikaner, Amber, Kishangarh, Ajmer and several such small Rajput States of Rajasthan. Miniatures became his moral choice, a kind of an immediate recluse for an artist to meditate upon. 



Dichotomy and duality is what contemporary times present before us again and again, as an identity of our existence, where virtual ‘ real’ presents itself as a real. ‘Real’ blurs or deforms. Not mere contradictions, but the dichotomies of present living in every aspects have been nightmarish blessings in disguise for the new man . He is torn and rebuilt by their repelling forces constantly . Chintan, like a few others of his contemporaries has realised it , his designer Babies, born out of some repetitive computer generated drawings 'avtared' with the skin of five hundred years old decorative miniatures. These miniatures though produced by humble artists & craftsmen had always remained stored in palaces of nobles ,Royals and aristocrats. They bear the signature of feudal past and an aesthetic of Mughal Power. Chintan uses them as a skin-strategically and intelligently almost like a decoy to lure the viewer, the way packaging and advertisements function in the society of consumerism. Many a times, therefore , when he is charged by a section of critics ,as a painter of decorations,I am sure he must be feeling happy inside and laughing mirthfully.Designer Baby, as he rightly calls it, is a saga, a narrative of an absurd repetition, a germination deliberately effected to achieve an effect of a rhetoric , a place to gain its special emphasis. He began his narrative in 2004, producing a few canvasses of these babies, and then till today his 'factory ' of making babies has not been shut down. He refers to his studio as a factory, not exactly in the same way how Andy Warhol called it ; may be something similar to what Hirst practices. The 'studio factory' has several craftsmen each possessing special skills, who work together to produce the design into a piece of art. He produced several hundreds of them in the form of paintings and sculptures in last ten years. 






The beauty of an art object is vested in several factors, one of them is its not being what it is called or what it is seen as. Placing a smoking pipe in front of you and not calling it a pipe is one of the extreme examples. Chintan employs the same principle in more dramatic way. Whenever we have encountered his Baby, the first response of the viewer is of that , it is not a baby. It does look like a baby however has been consciously deprived of its ‘baby’ness. So what we have before us is a baby, that does not read as a baby- A baby without a baby in it. 

First its supersize alienates it from its being a baby, then comes sometimes an army or a swarm of super-sized baby like objects coloured in bright gold or silver, bearing images of ancient miniature paintings showing animals, gods, goddesses, couples copulating, kings hunting, or women dancing so on and so forth. Each baby having an oversized head on its shoulders, busy doing some meaningless act , and wearing a cold, demonically beautiful and therefore a discomforting smile on its face greets the viewer to its world of wicked absurdities. His babies not just surprise you, they create a subtle sense of fear, ringing an alarm in your senses that something unnatural is on your way to meet you. Each baby is produced out of a calculated computer program, which facilitates artist's ability to bring about numerous and subtle anatomical changes without disturbing its overall appearance as a baby. Therefore the viewer experiences an aberrant and anomalous movement (in the baby as an art object before him,) which is capable of producing even a vicarious pleasure or a feeling of an urgent anxiety. Each movement is mechanical ,each gesture is coded with robotic appearance and each baby representing an alien extraterrestrial being, is what Chintan wants us to encounter with?

Artist : Chintan Upadhyay


Interestingly Chintan's each baby is a male child. It playfully brandishes its male genitals. Question is why does he not create a female form of baby? 

One of the explanations has its roots in Chintan's political position, and the other originates from the indian mythological traces that he might be carrying with him. Rajasthan, the region from where Chintan comes from is known for a high number of female foeticides. If a child is identified as a female while doing ultrasound tests many families abort the foetus itself. Many incidents are reported where new born baby daughters are destroyed by the families in most gruesome manner by drowning or poisoning. 



Chintan had devoted a separate large solo show coupled with a performance to underline the evils of patriarchy and female foeticides. In this sense of social practices , Chintan's emotional world has no place for a female (child ). The demand for a male child and its delivery through medical science and genetics by charging huge price in terms of money and in terms of resources might have made him create a beautifully ugly and mechanically insane unending narrative of a male Designer Baby. The second reason can be mythological. One of the most popular Indian Gods , across the castes, the creeds and classes, that has even crossed Indian borders to reach and spread in western world is Krishna. The popular household image of Krishna as a child, standing, creeping, crawling or dancing, killing, playing or suckling, swimming, jumping, stealing, or playing flute and even wearing a female clothing to look like a drag queen is found everywhere and all over in India. They are worshiped and celebrated forms. Krishna as a super child is an accepted cultural form. We do find its mirror images further deformed and reformed in the construction of the designer babies that he makes. 



Several gigantic and phantasmagoric or even pythonesque forms of gods and demons have been appearing in various Indian temples and shrines for last several hundreds of years. They are celebrated, masks of surreal faces are worn and dances are performed as rituals , supersize human forms are symbols for worship. Like any other Indian, Chintan too grew up with them. His creative urge and energy transformed them into various new objects, one of them is Designer Baby. 

by Sanjeev Khandekar 


(Sanjeev Khandekar is a well known Indian visual artist,Poet, & writer. He lives and works at Mumbai. )


Saturday, 14 March 2015

Vanita Gupta, has been awareded one of the most prestigiuos fellowship Grant to New York 2014-15, by Asian Cultural Foundation, supported John D. Rockefeller 3rd

Vanita Gupta- The Achiever’s Spirit! Woman power is proved yet again.

Vanita  Gupta, has been awarded one of the most prestigious fellowship Grant to New York 2014-15, by Asian Cultural Foundation, supported John D. Rockefeller 3rd. She has received this award for her further research in field of art. A very few profound visual artist like V.S.Gaitonde, Ram Kumar and Akbar Padamsee from India had the honor of receiving this Fellowship.
Artist Vanita  Gupta

Vanita Gupta has insatiable soul of an artist. Her style of working is quiet different from others. If she desires to form an image, she would make number of models of same and be at ease only when she has the desired effect. For her painting is not a factory production, so one cannot produce hundreds in a day. There are times when she does not create but just think and contemplate. 
   
Probing into details of Vanita’s artistic progression leaves us with awe and wonder at the way her creativity and research takes shape. Basically, Vanita has been dedicatedly painting only in black since 10 years. Generally the paintings give an impression of being under the influence of a Zen Buddhist philosophy. But as I spoke to her and tried to know her reason for painting only in black, it was clear that she is not under the influence of any philosophy. It is her freedom of choice, willingness to stick to black and she has some strong reasons for it.

According to her black color has intense character. It is the only color that has authority over light. It projects the visual impression of having no visible light, but meticulous observation shows that black is combination of multiple colors of pigment. Unlike in other colors there is dispersion of color that makes the creation complete. But black is a bet to all the colors including white, as it conveys the right creative purpose. Vanita is intuitive and connect with the idea in one go. Due to this spontaneity the idea that strikes her at the particular time and moment shapes out as her painting. Her paintings are completely contemplative. It would be apt to say she lives and breathes her Black. She also leaves lot of empty space around her painting, the white space and background gives creations more depth.
Vanita Gupta recent work gallery view at "Art Heritage Gallery"
Note: We are delighted to extend the exhibition of Vanita Gupta at our gallery premise at ''Art Heritage" till 30th march 2015

Why does Vanita use black, is crystal clear, but it is very interesting to know about her development from being a painter to being a sculptor to creating video installations. Since last five years along with painting, she has been working in metal and creating sculptures. Her sculptures are the extensions of her paintings. She wanted her creations to breathe in vast space. On paper the black image is flat and devoid of any spectrum of light but she felt the need to create that vacuum, remove all the space, be alive form of her painting concept. So for this reason she started working in metal. She attempted to hammer it in flat surface to remove any space in it. She also wanted to cast the same in desired form. She forged the metal to remove all the space in it, make it flat and of desire shape. It gave her immense pleasure to see her panting come live, a thing that could to be touched and felt. But there were many images in her mind that has to be shaped which were unique of being sculptures in vacuum. The trial and error process started. The real challenge was to create sculpture without volume. A hollow effect to be more precise. It was challenging to make mould and equally challenging for the caster to cast it. Still her artist impulse took over the practical difficulties of casting. As the molten metal was taken out of the mould, the artist was elated to see the effect. The models turned out to be of irregular shape, some with hollow, completely vacuous at places. That was the ultimate creation! This is what artist wanted and got. It was blissful for her to feel the forged metal with emptiness of matter and hollows. But the challenge was how to make them stand on their own. Wall was the only solution and we find different casts on wall having their own space.
Recent work by Vanita Gupta
Casting metal was a part of her creative progress. She desired to fill those holes without disturbing the hollowness of her creation. And here we find some of her finest creation of videos where we find void filled with blown up balloons.

Her video projects her spiritual and concentration that is essential for a creation. Her videos have been part of International exhibitions. In 2012 her video works were selected by ‘Videoholica International Video Art Festival’, Varna Bulgaria. Here solo exhibition was presented in London in 2008 by Pundole Art Gallery in collaboration with Rob Dean Art, London. In 2006 her solo exhibition was presented at Singapore Art Fair. Presently her paintings, sculptures and videos are exhibition at Art Heritage, New Delhi.            

by Pankaja JK- Mumbai
More Details about Vanita Gupta

"Vanita lives and works in Mumbai. She has been awarded one of the most prestigious fellowship grant 2015 by "Asian cultural council , New York supported 3rd by J D Rockfeller".  In 2014 she was awarded with "pollock Krasner foundation Grant", New York. In 2008 she received the Raza Award,India for excellence in art. 

In 2014 she was selected for artist residency in Vermont studio centre, USA. Vanita has been widely exhibiting her work nationally and internationally. In 2013 her new body of sculptures were presented by Pundole art gallery , Mumbai . In 2012 her video works were selected by "videoholica international video art festival, Varna Bulgaria. Her solo exhibition was presented in London in 2008 by Pundole art gallery in collaboration with Rob Dean art , London. In 2006 her solo show was presented at Singapore Art Fair. 

All image copyright by artist -2015


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