- 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
Tuesday, 8 April 2014
Saturday, 5 April 2014
The Legacy of the Master- Vilas Tonape
There
is an anonymous quote that reads, “Art is the highest form of hope”; it propels
us into a deeper understanding of creation, beauty and nature. Art gives so
much to the human spirit, whether you’re standing before the greatest
masterpieces in the world or your own canvas. Being an artist means more than
simply expressing oneself; it is a story being told—a story of courage and
truth, a story of hope.
(Vilas Tonape in his studio) |
Vilas Tonape is a man of
extraordinary depth and expression. His roots go back to India where he first
picked up the weapon of mass creation that would ignite a fire—a paintbrush. He
has excelled in all he does, receiving his BFA in drawing and painting with
distinction, from the Sir J.J. School of Art, University of Bombay and his MFA
in painting from Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas, USA. His work
has been exhibited internationally in Bombay, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles,
and Ontario; he works in both figurative and non-representational modes.
"Rolando", 2011, Graphite on paper, 22" x 18" |
He has competed across the United
States and India, winning many awards that showcased his remarkable artistry in
the field. Tonape has judged many artexhibitions, worked at several renowned
schools and universities, and has conducted workshops and presented discourses
at numerous venues. There is a natural magnetic energy surrounding the
passion-infused professor. He engages people with professionalism and pride.
Countless artists across the world have been under the watchful eye of Vilas
Tonape, and have only bettered themselves because of his mentorship.
"Drunk Detective", 2014, Pastel on paper, 25" x 19" |
Beyond all the awards, of which
there are dozens upon dozens, beyond the numerous recommendations and features
in magazines, beyond all of those lines on a resume, there is something that
only can be recognized as a deep need to create. This fire in Tonape’s spirit
is made evident when he stands before students and artists alike, blowing the
dust off of the goldthat they already possess within. If teaching is required,
then demonstrating what it is that the students must grasp, is vital. Vilas
Tonape not only introduces concepts of the Renaissance and Baroque Masters, he
exhibits the techniques before his students’ very eyes. He focuses solely on
what his eye sees in human features or folds of cloth, and he lets his hands
show his students the way. Poetry unrivaled in beauty and grace emerges on the
canvas before Tonape, and with one small gesture or movement the subject jumps
off the page.
"Anna Lisa", 2014, Pastel on paper, 22" x 17" |
With only mere words to convey what
this man does to his students, I will say that he bestows a gift beyond measure
to them—the gift of art. Tonape is a teacher, an
educator, and above all, he is an artist. He challenges those around him to dig
deeper into themselves. He pushes himself to get better with each pastel and
each painting that he does, only accepting the utmost excellence. There are few
in this world that are both artist and educator; there are even fewer who grant
others the opportunity to discover the magnificent world of a paintbrush or
pencil.
Elliana Hillhouse
Trinidad,
Colorado, USA
Published : 2014 _ art blogazine
Published : 2014 _ art blogazine
Friday, 4 April 2014
PRESS RELEASE Exhibition: Contemporary Paintings of Avinash Godbole
PRESS RELEASE Exhibition: Contemporary Paintings of Avinash Godbole Date: April 14 – 21, 2014 Venue: Art Gate Gallery, Churchgate, Mumbai
Byline: The Art Gate Gallery hosts an exhibition of contemporary paintings by Mumbai based Artist Avinash Godbole.
About the exhibition: In this solo exhibition Avinash Godbole is showcasing a body of 30 works, inspired by his own recovery from a stroke that left him crippled 11 years ago, and the gradual re-picking up of the brush one hand at a time. These paintings cover diverse subjects ranging from sexuality to philosophy, explorations of the human mind and resurgence from pain. What binds them together is the presence of emotions; whether it be the musician singing a soulful song or a human head - each conveys passion. The choice of colours is bold and the strokes strong and unwavering. Together they create paintings that not only move the viewer but stun with their intensity.
About the artist’s work: Godbole’s technique is expressive but his subjects introspective, as he deals with deep existentialist questions. Another recurrent subject is that of sexuality and how we human beings deal with or rather shuns it. Three years ago, Godbole created a series of 25 paintings describing his tryst with stroke. He was also invited to exhibit his paintings at the World Stroke Association's conference in Brazil last year. Hope is the message he wishes to convey to stroke patients and their families. This exhibition is a continuation and tangential progression to that theme.
About the artist: Avinash Godbole graduated from the Sir J. J. School of Arts, Mumbai, in 1966. He taught in the same institute before working as a creative director in some of the top agencies across the country. All along his forte was and continues to be his illustrations. His work has been part of magazines and newspapers for over 30 years. He was inducted to the Commercial Artists Guild (CAG) Hall of fame in the year 1999.
Godbole, though actively involved in advertising, always had painting as his first love. He continued to paint all along, through his hectic schedule. He has been showing his work regularly in galleries in Mumbai since 1997.
The artist lives and works in Mumbai.
The artist lives and works in Mumbai.
He can be contacted at: +91 98206 57358 or emailed at ratangodbole@gmail.com
Exhibition details: April 14 – 20 (11.00 am to 7.00 pm) and April 21 from 11.00 am – 3.00 pm Art Gate Gallery 1st Floor (above Satyam Collection) Chheda Sadan 115, J Tata Road Churchgate Mumbai, India
Wednesday, 2 April 2014
The deadline for submitting applications is April 30, at 2pm
International call for applications for Botín Foundation Visual Arts Grants and art workshop 2014
Application deadline: April 30, 2014
Botín FoundationPedrueca 1, 39003Santander
Spain
T +34 942 226 072
info@fundacionbotin.org
www.fundacionbotin.org
International Visual Arts Grants 22nd call 2014–2015The Visual Arts Grants provide artists with financial support for education, research and the undertaking of personal projects in the sphere of artistic work. To conclude the grant cycle, the Botín Foundation organizes a group exhibition featuring works by all the grantees, and accompanied by a catalogue. The call is open to individuals of any nationality; applicants must be over 23 and under 40.
The deadline for submitting applications is April 30, at 2pm. All applications must be filled out online www.fundacionbotin.org. The other documents must be sent to the Botín Foundation in Santander. Works of artists selected in the last edition can be seen in the video of Itinerarios 2012–2013 here.
Summer workshopThe workshop will be led by Cuban artist Carlos Garaicoa and will take place in Santander (North of Spain) from June 30 to July 11. The workshop will admit a maximum of 15 artists. Applicants from any nationality will be considered. Participants who do not reside in Cantabria will be provided with free shared accommodation and a stipend of 455 Euros, paid at the end of the workshop. Applications must be submitted online by April 30.
Terms and conditions at www.fundacionbotin.org.
Wednesday, 26 March 2014
In the Shadow of the Anti-Nimbus- Ranjit Hoskote
(Rahul Vajale recent working in camp: 2013 ) |
At a time when many young painters are tempted to adopt one or another of the prevailing house styles of contemporary Indian art, Rahul Vajale pursues a refreshingly idiosyncratic agenda. His imagery is not influenced by the media. His work does not suffer from the semiotic clutter that afflicts any number of young artists, testimony to their misguided attempts at scanning and grabbing the hard-won sophistications of Parthan, Dodiya, Nair, Kallat and Natesan. Nor does Vajale try and win on mere scale, stretching paint and losing detail in the effort to cover the distance from one edge of a vast canvas to the other. And, most fortunately, he remains untouched by that XL enthusiasm for civil-society initiatives of social awareness which, in the absence of true radicalisation, serves numerous young artists as a feeble politics.
Instead, Vajale’s charcoal drawings on paper and acrylic paintings on canvas are marked by an attractive crispness of handling and clarity of image. His drawings insist, in their dramatic precision, that we follow the charcoal on its image-making journey around a head, rising up against the whiteness of the paper in jags, flows and curlicues: the line folds itself around the psychic history of a personality, real or imagined, and contours its representation accordingly.
(Mahatma Gandhi, Acrylic on Charcoal on canvas Size: 36x36", 2006 :by Rahul Vajale ) |
His paintings demand full-bodied engagement too. Look carefully at the animal baying at the moon: a chimera, part bull, part wolf, it has an intertwining serpent pattern painted on its flank. As it challenges the moon, its horns form a glowing, defiant crescent by themselves. Or is the wolf holding the moon in its jaws? Is the moon a waxy, golden chapati? Look, also, at the portrait of Van Gogh suspended in a field of colour with a prickly plant for company: yes, the genius of the tattered ear is now a cliché of artistic suffering, but gaze upon his serenity here, his anguish transferred, in the manner of the Rajput miniatures, to the symbol that accompanies him like a plaintive stringed instrument to the raga of his silence.
The energy that Vajale invests in evoking his figures is matched by the detailing he lavishes on the seemingly empty areas of field. His figures carry their histories with them, histories that are bred in the bone; and the fields they occupy are integral to their identity, tuning up a sense of loss, amplifying the melancholia of the long-distance dreamer. Consider, in this context, the man-rock-tree composites that fly past one another, at a distance, in the slow motion mandated by a zero-gravity space: there is more than a hint of Hanuman here, as he flies back to the battlefield of Lanka bearing the precious herb-scented mountain of Gandhamadhana; there is also more than a hint of the isolatos that we all are, carrying the hope of healing even as we pass each other by, as we travel through the large vacancies of hurt. While Vajale’s fictions captivate our imagination, his formal handling urges us to attend, again, to those seemingly lost properties: the cunning stroke of the brush and the delicious richness of vermilion, acid yellow, nocturnal black and forest green.
(Golden Hauman , Acrylic on Charcoal on canvas Size: 48x72", 2006 :by Rahul Vajale ) |
Indeed, the phrase ‘lost properties’ could act as our guide into the circuitry of Vajale’s imagination: in his vivid evocation of colour states and prickly symbols, he reclaims much that the senses have abandoned, that the intellect has grown to disregard. His paintings and drawings are generated around symbolic forms, but this should not suggest an aloof, abstract idiom. Vajale’s universe is elaborated, not from the standard dimensions that determine space, but from such unpredictable measures of sensual experience as dryness and sheen, volatility and weight, sharpness and ductility.
There is nothing withdrawn about his works: they are charged with an entire vocabulary of sensations. We feel, in his surfaces, the immediacy of clay, fire, maize, night, stubble, thorn and bone. We feel, in a word, visceral excitement in the use to which Vajale puts the inherited resources of the painter’s craft.
Visceral excitement is exactly what Vajale feels in the presence of the human face. The faces of people he might see in the street or meet in paintings in museums return to haunt him; they urge him to memorialise them as portraits. But Vajale’s portraits are not transcriptions of retinal testimony; rather, they record the stylised aftermath of visual encounter. They capture some essential characteristic of the person receiving the artist’s attention, and translate these into a pictorial language that startlingly melds eulogy with caricature. Vajale recognises, and is ready to struggle with, the formal problems attendant on this choice of quasi-portraiture. Since his practice impels him to abstract the visual stimulus of a particular face from its lifeworld and translate it into a metaphorical proposition, the artist must manage a delicate balance between the distinctive and the generic.
Vajale develops his paintings and drawings from a secret archive: the ceaseless flow of doodles and ruminations that he makes in the sequence of notebooks that he has maintained over the years. This ongoing journal is a barometer of his works and days: in it, he records fluctuations of mood and speculations on fate; writes of chance happenings and dwells on the pressures and dilemmas of everyday life; sings of sleepless nights and happy meetings; stumbles on the patterns that occasionally reveal themselves from beneath the random movements of the mind.
|
Vajale develops his paintings and drawings from a secret archive: the ceaseless flow of doodles and ruminations that he makes in the sequence of notebooks that he has maintained over the years. This ongoing journal is a barometer of his works and days: in it, he records fluctuations of mood and speculations on fate; writes of chance happenings and dwells on the pressures and dilemmas of everyday life; sings of sleepless nights and happy meetings; stumbles on the patterns that occasionally reveal themselves from beneath the random movements of the mind.
Vajale’s gallery of heads, shaped in charcoal, follows the curve of this journal. His heads testify to the range of expressive possibilities inherent in the features of men and women: he treats the head frontally and in profile, now suggesting an imperial disdain, now a sage-like meditativeness; now a demotic handling, now a hieratic touch. By turns, the head is tonsured and cloud-haired, gorgonic and monk-like. What unites Vajale’s heads is the curlicued pattern that emanates from within them, curling out of the mouth or falling across the face, propping them up in lieu of a neck or swelling out like a luxuriant beard.
What is this signature device: an axis of flame; a spine; a necklace? On Vajale’s account, it is the mortal equivalent of the aura that is said to surround beings of high spiritual attainment: it is a versatile energy that could stand for virility or rage, focused attention or indwelling negativity. This anti-nimbus, this counter-halo is an integral feature of the emotional costume in which the artist clothes his unwitting sitters. It is, in fact, a symbolic reminder of our common humanity, hostages as we are to the passions, subject to a fate that we write for ourselves in the journal of our neurons, enzymes and hormones.
- Ranjit Hoskote
Paintings & Drawings by Rahul Vajale (Mumbai: September 2006)
‘I show the invisible in my works’- Vinita Dasgupta
Delhi-based artist Vinita Dasgupta on self-imagery, spirituality and sold-out shows
Among the works that sold out at the India Art Fair (IAF), the country’s largest exhibition-cum-sale of art held annually in Delhi, was an eccentric series with portraits of Marilyn Monroe, an unknown Indian boy, and the artist herself painted on layers of cigarettes. “Step closer, there’s something more beneath the obvious,” says Vinita Dasgupta, 30. On a second look, the “cigarettes” turn out to be canvas strips rolled into hollow pipes of various sizes. They are pasted together to create an undulating surface, giving Dasgupta’s paintings a three-dimensional appearance.
Among the works that sold out at the India Art Fair (IAF), the country’s largest exhibition-cum-sale of art held annually in Delhi, was an eccentric series with portraits of Marilyn Monroe, an unknown Indian boy, and the artist herself painted on layers of cigarettes. “Step closer, there’s something more beneath the obvious,” says Vinita Dasgupta, 30. On a second look, the “cigarettes” turn out to be canvas strips rolled into hollow pipes of various sizes. They are pasted together to create an undulating surface, giving Dasgupta’s paintings a three-dimensional appearance.
Dasgupta has been selling out since she was a student at College of
Art, New Delhi, in the early 2000s and the red dots at IAF have only
sealed her place among the promising names of her generation. Relaxing
in her studio, she looks less arty and more airy. No intellectual
handlooms or ethnic jewellery; instead, she is a Delhi girl with
straightened and streaked hair, a nose ring and four tattoos.
“I like to show the invisible in my works,” says Dasgupta. Each roll
of canvas, she points out, contains icons or scenes from mythology —
Rama and Krishna, Radha and the gopis — and Sanskrit shlokas, so that a
painting is made up of many other rolled-up miniatures. “I was looking
for a new style when a friend gifted me earrings made from bits of Coke
cans twisted together,” she says.
Into this pop inspiration, Dasgupta fused images from Indian
spirituality. “I am a seeker of spiritual truths. I travel to Dharamsala
and Varanasi regularly to meditate. And I travel alone,” she says. Even
the tattoo on her thumb has spiritual significance. “It’s the female
moon sign in Chinese and is shaped like an Om,” she says.
As a child — when her first name was still Dipannita, which she
changed in school without telling her parents — Dasgupta learnt Kathak,
classical music, cooking and painting, participated in almost every
activity in school and won lots of prizes, had friends but also spent a
lot of time by herself. Consequently, her artwork looks inwards. Almost
every series Dasgupta has produced since she turned professional in 2008
include reflections of herself.
Of these, My Window Shut to Open (2010) comprise acrylics, digital
and mixed media juxtaposing a world as of candy coloured consumerism —
through motifs such as lipsticks, multiple telephones, stilettos, shorts
and sleeveless tops — with symbols such as the Taj Mahal (“my ode to
builders who build great cities but go unnoticed”) and traffic signals
(“It is only at red lights that we get a chance to look at people who
live on the streets”). “When I was working on this series, I was always
deep in thought. I would watch TV and talk to people, but when that
external conversation stopped, the inner conversation would begin,” she
explains.
( Vinita Dasgupta's works at Indian Art Fair 2014- New Delhi) |
Dasgupta was among the toppers in the entrance exam at College of Art
and she proceeded to spend her four undergraduate years metaphorically coloring outside the lines. “I would sit in the postgraduate class
Since then, she has held four more solos as well as 200 group shows
in India and internationally, with Delhi-based Art Konsult representing
her since 2009. This year’s IAF was the first time that Galleria Art
Lounge from Lisbon displayed her works, with successful results. The
gallery has planned a solo of her works in Lisbon this autumn.
(Report courtesy Written by Dipanita Nath )| March 16, 2014 11:38 pm ( Indian express)
(Report courtesy Written by Dipanita Nath )| March 16, 2014 11:38 pm ( Indian express)
Thursday, 20 March 2014
Wednesday, 19 March 2014
Showcasing Indian art scene for the world...J.J Today & Tomorrow
In the last few decades, one has seen a reasonable growth in the contemporary art scene of India.
And in order to spread the awareness of Indian art and artists around the world, The Art Affaire, a platform for artists and art lovers alike, is hosting paintings by the ex-students and teachers of Sir JJ School of Art. A group show titled 'J.J Today & Tomorrow', the exhibit includes the work of 40 artists like Mangesh Kapse, Manohar Rathod, Abid Shaikh, Parag Kashinath Tandel, Javed Mulani, Vijay Bondar, Javed Mulani, Manohar Rathod, Abhid Sheikh, Raman Adone and others, alongside faculties from JJ School of Art like Anant Nikam, Douglas John, Dr Manisha Patil, Prakash Sonavane, Rajendra Patil, Vijay Sakpal, Vishwanath Sabde (Dean) and more.
The JJ School of Art too, has a tradition of excellent painters and art teachers like M V Dhurandhar, Jagannath Ahivasi, Y K Shukla, S B Palsikar, Baburao Sadwlekar, PM Kolte and so on, who through their relentless efforts have played mentors to numerous talented artists over the years.
This art show will give aspiring artists an opportunity to show their talent.
(The exhibit is on from February 24 to March 2 from 11 am to 7 pm at the Art Gate Gallery, Satyam Collection, Opposite Churchgate station)(above painting by Raman Adone )
Krutika Behrawala,TNN | Feb 24, 2014, 01.03 PM IST
And in order to spread the awareness of Indian art and artists around the world, The Art Affaire, a platform for artists and art lovers alike, is hosting paintings by the ex-students and teachers of Sir JJ School of Art. A group show titled 'J.J Today & Tomorrow', the exhibit includes the work of 40 artists like Mangesh Kapse, Manohar Rathod, Abid Shaikh, Parag Kashinath Tandel, Javed Mulani, Vijay Bondar, Javed Mulani, Manohar Rathod, Abhid Sheikh, Raman Adone and others, alongside faculties from JJ School of Art like Anant Nikam, Douglas John, Dr Manisha Patil, Prakash Sonavane, Rajendra Patil, Vijay Sakpal, Vishwanath Sabde (Dean) and more.
The JJ School of Art too, has a tradition of excellent painters and art teachers like M V Dhurandhar, Jagannath Ahivasi, Y K Shukla, S B Palsikar, Baburao Sadwlekar, PM Kolte and so on, who through their relentless efforts have played mentors to numerous talented artists over the years.
This art show will give aspiring artists an opportunity to show their talent.
(The exhibit is on from February 24 to March 2 from 11 am to 7 pm at the Art Gate Gallery, Satyam Collection, Opposite Churchgate station)(above painting by Raman Adone )
Krutika Behrawala,TNN | Feb 24, 2014, 01.03 PM IST
Tuesday, 18 March 2014
After 20 years, Kumar Vaidya is all set to comeback with the most anticipated show... ‘SUKSHM’
When you think of an artist, names like Friedrich Schiller,
Rembrandt etc pops up. Eccentric, unconventional and abstract in their being,
they didn’t follow the typical norms of society, following their instinct and
desires, they went through life as if it was a canvas, where the only
acceptable formula was to use colours, textures and designs that fulfilled
their sense of being, in a way that made absolute sense or sometimes, no sense
at all.
(Kumar Vaidya) |
Kumar is one of such person. As eccentric as any artist,
what sets him apart is this beautiful disposition he has towards life and the
meaning it holds. An eternal soul with the exuberance of a boy, caught in the
daily humdrum of life, he is a story within a story. Walking on the road less
travelled, he does what he knows best, and that is to just go with the flow of
life, wherever it takes him, in whichever way it takes him.
Breaking traditional norms of being an artist, Kumar
Vaidya’s life is as colourful and dark as his artwork. Having seen it all in
the past 20 years, one thing that never changed was his undying passion towards
feeding his artistic flair in whichever way possible, to learn rather than
acquire.
A true artist doesn’t restrict his emotions and thoughts to
one channel of outlet, instead they let it flow out through any medium
possible, be it music, art or a philosophical take on life. When they talk,
they are consumed with this sense of passion about everything and listening to
them, your mind can’t help but wander off to the beautiful unexplored
dimensions that only a true artist can open.
Such is the persona of Mr. Kumar, unassuming in nature,
prolific in thoughts & alternative in personality, his work breaks all
benchmarks that restrict human emotions. He is an artist who is completely in
tuned with his innermost emotions, which are free flowing and does not limit
itself to one form of style.
What sets his work apart is that it gives his viewers a
sense of freedom to interpret his work in whichever way they want to. Not wanting to restrict a persons thought and
emotions, his work takes you on a journey of your choice. Open to exposition,
his work challenges you to think outside the box, to not restrain your
emotions, taking your thoughts on a path that has been unexplored, where
meanings and preconceived notions no longer exist, a new territory of
unimaginable depths and heights, where no two people will express the same
emotions while they are lost in finding the meaning in his art. And when they
realise, that the only meaning to bring out of his art is to free one’s mind
and let it take its own journey, like Mr. Kumar did, is when the real meaning
of his work hits home.
(Untitled : 10.5x10.5" water color on paper) |
Bio-Profile: Kumar Vaidya:
Kumar
Vaidya is an Indian artist known for his contribution to the cutting-edge yet comprehensive Indian artwork. Born on 5th
August 1964 at Kapadwanj, Gujarat, his first artistic endeavour began with his
degree in Bachelor of Fine Art from Sir J J School of Art Mumbai. His drive for
more rigorous and traditional training led him to Nationale Supérieure des
Beaux-Arts de Paris – FRANCE on French Government scholarship, 1993.
Kumar
Vaidya, known for his avant-garde yet
revolutionary artwork, successfully positioned himself in the Indian art
domain with his first solo exhibition in Mumbai, Madras and Delhi in 1992.
Constantly
reinventing himself while retaining his artistic DNA, Kumar Vaidya, especially
known for his sense of style which leans towards layers and straight lines,
gives his paintings a mystical eminence and high level of quality and
perfection.
Well
renowned for his artistic disposition all over, most of Kumar Vaidya’s
paintings are in a private collection in France. His alluring art work has also
been showcased as a part of Sadruddin Daya's art collection. Mr Vaidya’s
artistic talents have been recognized by known names like Rajiv Sethi, who
commissioned him to paint one of his rooms at the landmark Shah House in Juhu’s
Janki Kutir, owned by Czaie and Suketu Shah (MD Mukund Iron and Steel).
His
achievements also include painting four of large size paintings for Kohinoor
Bungalow of ex Chief Minister of Maharashtra, Shri. Manohar Joshi. Furthermore,
he went on to paint a large (45 ft X 9 ft) painting on the wall for Vipul Doshi
at his Churchgate office.
Artist
Kumar Vaidya’s work stands apart and takes your mind on an experimental and
innovative journey, breaking the conventional norms and showcasing depth
through his talented art strokes.
After 20 years, Kumar Vaidya is all set to
comeback with the most anticipated show, ‘SUKSHM’ that will display his
extraordinary piece of art to all the art lovers. The exhibition will be
from 22nd March -29th March at an art gate gallery above Satyam collection, next to Eros
Cinema, Churchgate, Mumbai 400020.
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