يحاول ذهب - حر
Kaleidoscope: Now
February 2021
|Art India
Neha Mitra visits four shows and looks at works by twenty-four artists.
A careful tour of three galleries reveals a wide range of subjects addressed by artists. While three of the shows examine how normal the new normal really is, the fourth dwells on matters of patriarchy and politics.
From the 30th of November to the 30th of December, Untitled VII and Untitled VIII at Mumbai’s Priyasri Art Gallery present the breakdown of reality – the lives we lead in the virtual world are often felt to be more real than the desolate streets around us.
B. Vamsi’s watercolours and structures in metal and wood make for a fluid bridge between memory and architecture. Rugged, rusted ruins that have been on a journey through time, clutch on to steps that go to and come from nowhere in particular. Vamsi explores what seems like a minimalistic analogy of life as Mausham R. Manglla’s screenprints use overlapping images to express the intermingling of impressions and memories. Space and what it holds is the artist’s main concern. Manglla’s Walking on the Street with its blue and black criss-cross of sketchily approximated built spaces and bare legs is an intimate chronicle of just about any metropolis.

هذه القصة من طبعة February 2021 من Art India.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Art India
Art India
Parts, Wholes And The Spaces In Between
Sonal Sundararajan introduces Samira Rathod's free-spirited and rebellious explorations in the world of architecture, furniture and design.
6 mins
April 2023
Art India
"The Fine Art of Going to the Pictures."
Dr. Banerjee in Dr. Kulkarni's Nursing Home at Chemould Prescott Road brings together 26 paintings featuring a series of dramatic scenes from Hindi and Bengali films. In conversation with Abhay Sardesai, artist Atul Dodiya talks about childhood trips to movie halls, painted figures gripped by tension, and the closeness and remoteness of cinematic images.
10 mins
April 2023
Art India
"To Finally Have Something of Your Own to Mine."
Dayanita Singh is the recipient of the coveted 2022 Hasselblad Award. Keeping the photograph at the centre, she speaks to Shreevatsa Nevatia about books, book objects, photo novels, exhibitions and museums.
6 mins
April 2023
Art India
OF DIVINE LOSS
Shaurya Kumar explores the relationship between the subject and object of devotion, finds Aranya.
3 mins
April 2023
Art India
THE PAST AND ITS SHADOWS
Neha Mitra visits two shows and three artists in Mumbai.
3 mins
April 2023
Art India
FORCE OF NATURE
Alwar Balasubramaniam dwells on absences and ephemeralities in his new work, states Meera Menezes.
3 mins
April 2023
Art India
SHAPES OF WATER
Devika Sundar's works delineate the murky, malleable boundaries between the human body and the organic world, says Joshua Muyiwa.
3 mins
April 2023
Art India
INTIMATIONS OF INTIMACY
Sunil Gupta shares his journey with Gautami Reddy.
5 mins
April 2023
Art India
THE FRACTURED PROSPECT
Nocturnal landscapes as ruins in the making? Adwait Singh looks at Biraaj Dodiya's scenes of loss.
5 mins
April 2023
Art India
TEETERING BEYOND OUR GRASP
Meera Menezes traces Mahesh Baliga's journey from Moodabidri to London.
5 mins
April 2023
Translate
Change font size

