“Nine Fish” Art Gallery presents ‘Contemporary Trajectories’
by Najuka G
A group show organized by Dot Line Space,
curated by Gourmoni Das
Nine Fish, India’s trendy art gallery introduces its group show “Contemporary
Trajectories” organized by Dot Line Space showcasing contemporary trajectories in
the contemporary world of the visual arts in India, mainly in painting and sculpture,
curated by Gourmoni Das. The group show is expounded by the works of four
mid-career contemporary artists in India, which will give an opportunity to
explore the ways in which these artists venture forth in their individual
trajectories, at once emboldened and hemmed in by the forces of the market,
religion, the current turbulent political scenario, as well as the more
immediate and confused paths that contemporary art in India is following. The
Nine Fish Art Gallery is located in the heart of Mumbai in Byculla and spread
across 3000 sq. ft in the New Great Eastern mills compound. Nine Fish presents
a true art experience in a great environment with state of the art lighting,
high ceilings and brilliantly showcased artworks. The exhibition is open to all
art connoisseurs from 16th
February, 2018 to 4th March, 2018 at Nine Fish Art Gallery in The
Great Eastern Mill Compound’, in Heritage Byculla from 10.30 am to 7 pm.
About ‘Contemporary
Trajectories’: After the “Retro
Realism in Post Modern World” this chapter examines contemporary trajectories
in the contemporary world of the visual arts in India, mainly in painting and
sculpture. Using the word “Trajectories” they wanted to show the individualism
of each artist’s career, or if they are all of the same shade.
About the Artists: Brajmohan Arya: The history of
art in our times can be viewed as a pendulum swinging between the urge to copy
and the urge to invent - both being valid traditions. Instead of
relating to external facts, visible for all to see, artists today prefer
to retreat inwards and conduct a specialized dialogue within limited circles of
their own, commenting not on their attitudes to reality, but on their relation
to art itself. Hence the somewhat reclusive nature of present day works, which
err by chasing the swing of the pendulum with zeal - total abstraction. So the
painter reconciles the dual attractions of art and reality with skill.
He or she cannot therefore be accused of replacing the poetry of invention
with the prose of fact. In this way the work is a bridge between
worlds. But every mind and every culture has a tendency in these
directions. He works his way from an idea downwards, proceeds deductively,
starting from some ideal conceptions, and seeking in realities some visible
illustrations of time-tested existences. Well, this is one way of approaching
his work.
Rahul Mukherjee: Rahul Mukherjee is a visual artist work at
Baroda. His works range from painting to installations to sculpture. He has
done his Bachelors in Fine Arts specializing in Painting from College of Art,
Delhi and Masters in painting from Faculty of Fine Arts, Baroda. His art works
deal with the space, the imagined limitations of paintings, the
construction of his installations and the interpretations that he consciously
lets his works manifest: all telling that the story about existence or human
presence today can only be suggested in abstractionism.
Shilpa Nikam: A line which runs between two countries
defines their territorial boundaries, while the unreachable yet visible horizon
line represents a union of intangible entities. For her this very line helps to
divide the space into several units, and is a key element of her works. There
are certain other invisible lines drawn on unmapped territories of the human
psyche- emotional ones, of love, hate, ego, avarice etc. An imbalance of any of
these lines could result in disharmony, in the miss-functioning of the very
ecosystem of humanity. Be it a family unit, society, a nation or the entire
world, lines of control is employed for the balance to be maintained. Whether a
social, political, or personal identity, one is subjected to a constant battle
of dominance and subjugation based merely on the employment or defiance of
these mental or physical lines of control. Her works address this conflict
zones that all of humanity carries within, expressed and unexpressed. The very
lines that divide are the ones that unite and connect.
Shardul Kadam: The socio-political conditions of the days
have always fascinated Shardul Kadam, as art is not devoid of what happens in society,
he feels. While he might not take on, too literally, individual events in his
works: the social and political flavour of the times certainly informs his
penetrating by intelligent works. Kadam’s work is not just decorative. All
these experiences formulate the imagery, if not the subject itself.
Layers of meanings may unfold as the viewer tries to search beyond the
basic aesthetics of his works. Kadam wants to make the viewer neither happy nor
sad. His works are like our lives, fine and ideal on the surface, but broken
and worn - out within. His works reveal the hidden shadows that are less
apparent.
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