THE FIRST CONTEMPORARIES

July 28 - August 20 , 2022

For decades, the phrases contemporary Indian art and modern Indian art were employed as synonyms, the only possible divergence being that contemporaries were necessarily alive, while modern artists could have passed on. In the course of the 1990s, a split occurred between the two terms. Although there was no unanimity about where precisely the boundary lay, Bengal school painters and Progressives were consensually labelled moderns, while artists featured in the current exhibition were classed as contemporaries. The title of this show alludes to that first generation of artists who were designated contemporaries as a way of differentiating them from the moderns.
To call them the first generation is a little misleading because the birth years of the featured artists span almost two decades, from 1956-57, when Jayashree Chakravarty, Ravinder Reddy and Dhruva Mistry were born, to 1973-74, when Reena Saini Kallat, Jitish Kallat and Raqib Shaw came into the world. Nevertheless, these artists can justifiably be clubbed together because they share stylistic traits and concerns that define an era in Indian art, a period constituted by the emergence of globalisation and a unipolar world order. These shared formal traits and thematic propensities include: the expansion of the material possibilities of painting and sculpture; an engagement with nature driven by environmentalist ideas; a non-dogmatic preference for figuration; an embrace of the decorative; the use of found images drawn from mass media; and a tendency toward irony and intellectual distance.
The impulses play out in widely varying ways from one artist to another. For instance, Jayashree Chakravarty’s interest in ecology finds actualisation partly through the incorporation of physical exemplars of the natural world, while Jagannath Panda views environmental degradation through the prism of urban sprawl and migration. Ravinder Reddy incorporates the aesthetic taste of the Indian street into his monumental heads, while Raqib Shaw leans on sophisticated ornamental traditions in conceiving his scintillating compositions.
Graduates of the famed fine arts faculty of Baroda’s MS University dominate the display, a testament to years when it was the most conceptually progressive arts department in the country. Although some of the works in the show were made after the decade between 1995 and 2005 when most of the featured artists grew nationally and internationally prominent, they are all true to the predilections and elective affinities that made the emergence of the first contemporaries such an exciting moment in Indian art.
This is the first of a multi-exhibition series that will cover different inflection points in Indian art history.
 
Text by Girish Shahane

Images


Installation



Press


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