THE FACE OF THE SUN

July 06 - August 31 , 2018

“The face of art is somewhat like that of the sun. It does not communicate but gives.” - Jagdish Swaminathan
In Delhi during the 1970s and 80s, with Garhi studios as a hub, Jagdish Swaminathan had come to occupy a singular place, as artist and ideologue. Seeking the ‘numen’ and a poetic mysticism in art, he spearheaded the Roopankar museum in Bhopal, the first cultural site to engage art that was folk, tribal and ‘urban’. In his own practice Swaminathan revitalized ancient signs and symbols, drawings with equal fervour from the yantra, the Brahminical logos and vernacular ritual references. Like the face of the sun this was a generous incursion into the possibilities for abstract art, as much as for discursive thought on identity. 
Almost simultaneously, two other streams of engagement came underway: a close friend and associate of Swaminathan’s, Manjit Bawa reengaged another aspect of Indian tradition. In a hundred year span, after Ravi Varma and MF Husain, Manjit Bawa became the third artist to attempt a reimaging of the gods,  creating in a shadowless world a contemporary vision of the pastoral, somewhat less grandiose vision of divinity. 
Arpita Singh, located firmly within the capital city, its unchecked sprawl and political complexity arrived at a graded language of irony and critique. The feminine subject, from the young girl to  the middle aged figure of the woman in domestic interiors, occasionally alternating as the exhausted Devi in the market place, appeared as  the unlikely protagonist in her work. A perceptible level of threat in public spaces, a scrambling of suggestions of value and hierarchy, use of the Mughal hashiya and a sophisticated language of abstraction embedded in her drawing and painting have contributed to  her work an enduring commentary on our times. 
 

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Press


The Sunday Guardian, July 8, 2018
Architectural Digest, July 9, 2018
The Sunday Guardian July 8, 2018 - Photoessay

Arpita Singh, Untitled, Mixed Media on Paper, 16 x 12 inches, 1992

Arpita Singh, Untitled, Mixed Media on Paper pasted on Board, 18.5 x 14 inches, 2002

Arpita Singh, Untitled, Watercolor on Paper, 10 x 7 inches, 2001

Arpita Singh, Untitled, Watercolor on Paper, 8 x 8 inches, 2000

Arpita Singh, Untitled, Watercolor on Paper, 11.5 x 15.5 inches, 2001

Arpita Singh, Untitled, Watercolor on Paper, 7 x 10 inches, 2001

Arpita Singh, Untitled, watercolor on paper, 7 x 10 inches, 2000

Arpita Singh, Untitled, Watercolor on Paper, 7 x 10 inches, 2000

Jagdish Swaminathan, Geometry of Color, Oil on Canvas, 36 x 36 inches, 1965

Jagdish Swaminathan, Untitled, Oil on Canvas, 25 x 15 inches, 1960's

Jagdish Swaminathan, The Sign Comes to Rest, Oil on Canvas, 24 x 30 inches, 1965

Jagdish Swaminathan, Untitled, Watercolor on Paper, 18 x 23 inches, 1992

Manjit Bawa, Untitled, Charcoal on Paper, 42 x 30 inches, 1994

Manjit Bawa, Untitled, Oil on Canvas, 8 x 7 inches

Manjit Bawa, Brooch, Jewelry, Gold and Gem stones, 2 x 4 inches

Manjit Bawa, Untitled, Oil on Canvas, 20 x 24 inches, 1990's

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