Sunday, 6 March 2016

PIN POSTER : Museum of Goa

SAVE THE DATE: March 16th, 2016, Museum of Goa.

We are delighted to announce the 8th Edition of the Bellevue Salons, in collaboration with Chameleon Art Projects, and partnered with Museum of Goa and Charosa Wines, on the subject of ART + ECOLOGY: Genesis Eternal - Art Production, Sustainable Materials and the Environment with Shilpa Joglekar, Sanvar Oberoi, Kanchi Mehta & Subodh Kerkar. Followed by a performance withRomain Loustau. We look forward to having you for the presentations, salon, performance & festivities.— with Kanchi Mehta, Shilpa Joglekar, Romain Loustau and Sanvar Oberoi at MOG - museum of goa.

Wednesday, 2 March 2016

PIN POSTER : FEARLESS FILM MAKERS - This Thursday, March 3 from 6.00 p.m - 8.00 p.m at National Gallery of Modern Art, Fort.

FEARLESS FILMMAKERS - This Thursday, March 3 from 
6.00 p.m - 8.00 p.m at National Gallery of Modern Art, Fort.

Join Fearless Filmmakers Mary Dore of She's Beautiful When She's Angry, Vibha Bakshi ofDaughters of Mother India & Nishtha Jain of Gulabi Gang the documentary in conversation about using film as a medium to inspire social change with Anamika Chakravorty Goree Chief Cultural Officer of U.S. Consulate General Mumbai on March 3rd at the NGMA Mumbai
#InternationalWomensDay

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

PIN POSTER : Dilip Ranade #artblogazine

Alibaug
1028, Ranjanpada
Next to Sai Mandir
Mandwa Alibaug Road
Alibaug  - 402201

Open Wednesday - Monday 
10.00 am - 6.30 pm
Phone: + 91 02141 247847

 

PIN POSTER : The Journey is the Destination - that opens on the 15th of March, 2016 at 5pm. #artblogazine






We are delighted to present our new exhibition at the Jehangir Nicholson Gallery - The Journey is the Destinationthat opens on the 15th of March, 2016 at 5pm.

The exhibition traces the journeys of eight artists in the
Nicholson Collection : Anju Dodiya, Atul Dodiya, Baiju Parthan, Nalini Malani, Sudhir Patwardhan, Sunil Gawde, Vivan Sundaram, and Zarina Hashmi.  We juxtapose a work by each of these artists in the  Collection with a work that conveys their present concerns. In each case, the difference or distance between the work in the collection and the recent work tells the story of the journey the artist has made in the course of his or her practice.

Artist Vivan Sundaram will release a catalogue that has been created to document this narrative of journeys  and speak to us of the many twists and turns his artistic practice has taken over the last few decades. 

Join us on the 15th of March at the Jehangir Nicholson Gallery, CSMVS, at 5.30pm. Tea will be served at 5pm.

Friday, 26 February 2016

Swapan Nayak & Gilles Bensimon: Gardens of the Mind TARQ, Mumbai

Gardens of the Mind


Tasveer and TARQ are delighted to announce the opening of Gardens of the Mind in Mumbai on the 25th of February, 2016. As part its 10th anniversary, Tasveer brings together for the first time the works of Indian artist, Swapan Nayak, and French fashion and lifestyle photographer, Gilles Bensimon, in an exhibition that juxtaposes two very different approaches to photographing elements of the natural  world.



Gilles Bensimon, former art director of Elle, makes a significant departure from his earlier figurative oeuvre in his series Watercolour, featured here. Fascinated by the beauty of flowers, and by their associations with myriad varieties of cultural expression around the world, he both literally and metaphorically submerged himself – and volumes of freshly cut blooms – into pools of water to create amazing blossoms of colour. The resulting images present a range of wonderful palettes and blurring the lines of abstraction and representation, yield  a new perspective on the traditional notions associated with the depiction of the flower in  art.

Recent work  Gilles Bensimon at TARQ

Bensimon’s photographs bursting with colour and a refractive-glossiness, are a stark contrast to Swapan Nayak’s black and white minimalist imagery. Nayak, a former photojournalist, also examines the natural world, and its intimate association to transformation. Made  over a span of three years, in Eastern and North Eastern India, his series Radha: A Love in Eternity also breaks away from simple representation, producing the known and familiar and new, graphic ways. Intended to be an exploration of purity, the nature of the self, of consciousness, the profound and the divine, this series was inspired by his reading of Vaishanava Padabali, a nearly 700 year old Bengali text, that narrates the very popular Hindu myth, of Radha and Krishna and their eternal love. In many ways, this series also forms a lateral progression from Nayak’s earlier Being and Nothingness that was inspired by Satre’s text of the same name and involved a quest for the truth.


Providing a unique opportunity in the study of photographic method and practice,  this exhibition through its juxtaposition of two distinct aesthetic styles highlights the diversity offered by the photographic medium in interpreting and re-presenting  reality.
SWAPAN NAYAK



Born in 1965, Swapan Nayak is an independent photographer based in Kolkata, India who started working professionally from 1995 and has worked in editorial photography for various publications both in India and abroad. He was awarded the National Media Fellowship (2002-2003) by the National Foundation for India, the Nirmaan photography fellowship award in 2006 and the National Senior Fellowship in photography (visual art) for the period of 2009-2011 by the Ministry of Culture, Government of India.
Recent work  Srwapan Nayak at TARQ




Nayak has held three main solo exhibitions, ‘Nowhere People’, ‘Refugees In Their Own Land’ and ‘Being & Nothingness’, and was also part of the group exhibition ‘Click! Contemporary photography from India’ organised by the Vadehra Art Gallery in 2008. His work has further been published in several international magazines; Time, News Week, Asia Week and Southern Exposure, amongst others.



GILLES BENSIMON



Born ‘a relatively long time ago’, in his own words, into a family of art dealers and artists, Gilles Bensimon is an internationally acclaimed fashion and lifestyle photographer, who counts his current age as 15 in leap years, since he was born on February 29. After stints in art school and the army, he ended up working for fashion magazines in France. Bensimon established his international reputation at the helm of Elle magazine, and  his star-studded portfolio consists of a very long list of leading models and celebrities, including Cindy Crawford, Naomi Campbell, Gisele Bündchen, Madonna, Gwyneth Paltrow, Keira Knightley, Beyoncé, Jennifer Lopez, Reese Witherspoon, Sarah Jessica Parker, Halle Berry and Uma Thurman; and his commercial clients have ranged from Kohl’s to Saks Fifth Avenue and Maybelline to Clarins.


Exhibition Previews: 25th February 2016

Exhibition Continues: 26th February - 19th March 2016

F35/36 Dhanraj Mahal

C.S.M. Marg, Apollo Bunder Colaba

Mumbai 400001

Monday to Saturday, from 11am to 6pmSunday, closed

Press Contact: press@tasveerarts.com | +91 080  40535233

All copyright Tarq

PIN POSTER: Exhibition Previews: 25th February2016 Exhibition Continues:26 th February-17 th March 2016


PIN POSTER : Solo show of Bhopal Base Artist RAHIM MIRZA at Art Gate Gallery,

All Art Lover and Artist

You are all cordially invites solo show of Bhopal Base Artist RAHIM MIRZA at Art Gate Gallery,
OPENING ON 22/2/2016 / 6.00 PM Chheda Sadan,
115, J.tata Road, Above Satyam Complex, Churchgate, Mumbai 400020/
Email: rahim_mirza@yahoo.co.in/More Details : 9826032707rahim_mirza@yahoo.co.in

Saturday, 20 February 2016

PIN POSTER : Gallery no 8 Lalit Kala Akademi

    Address: 512 3/4/5, Ratnadeep Chember, Kasturi Chowk, Ganesh Peth, Ganesh Peth, Pune, Maharashtra 411042
    Phone:020 2634 9047

Thursday, 18 February 2016

Functional function of Artist Leonardo-da-Vinci - Pankaja JK



It has been long since anything is written about past era artists like Raphael, Michelangelo, Leonardo and others. They all have classic contribution in art. In the age when one can write in volumes about contemporary artist, it may seem queer to some, the mention of past era artists. But I need to. The reason is important and to be considered from social point of view.  We all know artists are the mirrors of the society. History has also witnessed their valuable contribution. One such artists who has contributed to society in the fullest extent is Leonardo da Vinci. His contribution was not only restricted to his country but to the whole world. The following is a brief introduction to his socially viable work and also how his share as an inventor, civil engineer, military engineer, astronomer, geologist, anatomist and partly an astronaut a researcher, scientist and engineer and many more practical aspects has resulted in assisting his art and how we have with us the treasure of his illustrated pages with detailed observations and outlines of inventions. He was marvellous in every field that is mentioned here. It is interesting that his art bloomed due the scientific instincts and his scientific nature bud out of art. So, we can conclude that a true artist also must have an instinct of scientist.
(Image :www.codeavengers.com)


Leonardo da Vinci had been the greatest experimental scientist of his age and an acknowledged artist. His ‘Mona Lisa’ and ‘Last Supper’ are classic paintings one with mystery and awesome creativity and other mesmerizing too.

Since his school days he was sharp in solving mathematical problems and also showed notable talent in paintings. When he was sixteen years old he worked as an apprentice of artist Andrea del Verrocchio. In his guidance, Leonardo learned to work with wood, marble and metal. Andrea then insisted that Leonardo studied Latin and Greek classics, philosophy, mathematics and anatomy. 


As I write this article, I really wonder how many artists take efforts to go out of the way to learn something different from what they intend to paint or install.Hardly a few do this, and only those who know that referring to subjects other than art, is only the way to be a true artist. An artists should have knowledge of various fields. 


Reading recommended books on art and improvising one’s own skill is the sign of academic excellence and not of a true artistic passion.Leonardo’s mentor, Andrea wanted Leonardo to become a true artist and knew that study and knowledge of various fields was necessary for it. Sadly, now art schools have become production houses of artists with degrees and very little understanding of other fields. Newly studying and budding artists are in hurry to have exhibition of their artworks and intend to be famous- famous and likeablelike instant foods! Following the guidance of Andrea, Leonardo completed his apprenticeship at the age of twenty six and he was admitted in Artists’ Guild, where one could obtain their own patrons. This was a step towards progress. He invented a novel musical instrument- a lute in the shape of a horse’s head in which teeth served to select the tones- this captured the attention of Duke Ludovico Sforza, the then ruler of Milan. This opened the doors for Leonardo to try and experiment his conceived projects. Art came closer to politics as he got the patron.
Image wikipedia (A page showing Leonardo's study of a foetus in the womb (c. 1510) Royal Library,)


That was the age when kingdoms of Italy frequently strived with each other. The artist Leonardo da Vinci devoted his art for military equipment design. Almost at the same time was suffering from plague, which is a disease spread by rat bite, he was aware of it and knew to prevent it sewers needed modification. So he worked on his projects, though they were not approved. But here acceptance or rejection is not an issue, his social conscience ids admirable. He was socially aware artist. 


His exceptional anatomical drawings are still considered the perfect anatomical drawings. He developed them while in Milan, with the help of famous doctors and also by attending dissections himself to observe the internal make of human body. Obviously, his drawings show a profound understanding of the anatomical structure of a man. His skull drawings showed for the first time, the openings in the forehead and in jaws. He perfectly presented the position of unborn child in the womb of mother. His drawings of heart, the chambers, and the valves presents his doctor’s vision. 


When the Duke Ludovico Sforzawas captured by the King of France, Leonardo lost his patron, so he went to Venice and offered his military inventions. He devised a diving suit and a submarine.  He was mindful not to note or illustrate the designs of these inventions because he was afraid that evil nature of man would use it to murder men at the bottom of the sea. Oh, how clearly it reminds us of scientist Albert Einstein, who regretted his atomic research which proved fatal to mankind!
( Albert Einstein ) Image wikipedia


Leonardo also applied his knowledge to be a cartographer for Cesar Borgia. As Borgia wanted to conquer Italy, Leonardo was engaged in making maps;Leonardo himself didthe survey and measurements. For travelling long distances and measuring the area, he invented an important tool called odometer, the device that notes how long automobile hastravelled, by keeping records of revolution of wheels. This helped him in making maps. Interestingly, even modern automobiles have odometer.

Leonardo is also instrumental in inventing machine gun with many barrels mounted on triangular support. His military tank consisted of a mobile enclosure with breech-loaded cannons. The tank was manually operated, as it was invented before any mechanical power other than wind or water power was invented. A double-hull ship is also an excellent example of his artistic and scientific brain. If the outer hull was gun- fired by enemy, the ship still remained afloat. 

(A design for a flying machine, (c. 1488) Institut de France, Paris)Image wikipedia



His other notable inventions include anemometer, the device used to measure wind.

Leonardo invented mechanisms which are refined and used even today. For example, machine tool industries have file-cutting and screw-cutting machines equal to those designed by Leonardo da Vinci. All the artists working in metal please note the Father of this invention!

Leonardo had special interest in aspects of water that inspired him to design a pump that used the power of stream to raise water. He studied shape of fish which helped him to design ship. His botanical love is presented in notes and drawing forms which include heliotropism, rings of trees related to age of the tree. Flowers of varied types were drawn and he understood how the male and female plant life exists. 


In his teenage, he made observation of birds’ inflight by releasing some swallows from cage. He noted their way through air, now flying, now soaring. The sketches are valuable from artistic angle too. He was confident that the same principles of flight would hold true for men. It was impossible for anyone in that age to think that a man could fly. But Leonardo da Vinci was certain that we could.  He experimented with this thought in1940 and designed a flying machine (though it never worked out) with flap of huge wings. Then he tried his hand at making helicopter also linen-covered wooden frame in pyramid form.


Invention is one of the greatest art. Leonardo’s unbounded extent of thinking, feeling and creating gave birth to his excellent creations in paintings, scientific studies and inventions.Leonardo always practiced noting his observations in his own style- the mirror image, to maintain secrecy. Many of his sketches have been made into working models. These devices are occasionally exhibited. 
The Last Supper (1498)—Convent of Sta. Maria delle Grazie, Milan, Italy(Image wikipedia)
 
An artist needn’t only follow philosophical course. True knowledge comes from experience and meticulous observation of things around. It is the skilful understanding of how every element in nature works in unison and in individual space. Nature has all the examples of what human can think and get inspired by.  

Leonardo da Vinci should be an inspiration for all the true artists and if possible instead of making paintings and installation projecting reality, practical contribution would be welcomed by all. If artists make use of resources around for the cause and benefit of the society it will be enticing from social benefit point of view. 

Just before I stop detailing about Leonardo da Vinci’s contribution in other fields than in art, I would like to mention the clock invented by him. It was he who first developed a clock that had hours and seconds hands.

The time ticks and it can be heard clear in silent zone, making the thoughtful brains to come up with something novel, fruitful and evergreen, just like Leonardo da Vince. 


Content taken from reference materials too. 

(2016 - No copyright claim of any image by Writer or Artblogazine.com)

send feedback to JK  pankjajk@gmail.com

By Pankaja JK.  

Sunday, 14 February 2016

# MONEY * FOOD @ LIFE, at Jehangir Hirji Art Gallery, 1st floor, Fort, Mumbai, Inauguration at 5 pm to 6 pm on 15th Feb 2016, Chandrakant Ganacharya Mumbai

# MONEY * FOOD @ LIFE, 
at Jehangir Hirji Art Gallery, 

1st floor, Fort, Mumbai,

Inauguration at 5 pm to 6 pm
on 15th Feb 2016,

Chandrakant Ganacharya
Mumbai