يحاول ذهب - حر
Rise of the auto-narrative
February 07, 2026
|Mint Mumbai
Rising inequality and geopolitical tensions are, once again, igniting new practices as artists respond to these experiences
Tito Stanley S.J., 'Waiting for the Luna', from the exhibition 'The Teeming Earth'.
(COURTESY ANANT ART GALLERY)
Across the world, it is a time of charged geopolitics, marked by widespread crackdowns on civil liberties and freedom of expression. Can the art world be unaffected by all the conflict? One can sense the impact of polarisation in the exclusions at certain events.
For instance, at the ongoing Kochi-Muziris Biennale, Tom Vattakuzhy’s exhibition was closed temporarily last year after religious groups protested against Supper at a Nunnery, an interpretation of The Last Supper, outraged by the artist’s treatment of a Biblical theme. For the 2026 Venice Biennale, South Africa’s minister of sport, arts and culture blocking artist Gabrielle Goliath’s entry Elegy, which depicts gender-based violence and references Gaza.
Throughout history, cultural practitioners have responded to moments of conflict in their own unique way, giving rise to significant art movements and major turns in artistic practice.
In his 2024 article The Impact of War on Art, published on the website of the online Naturalist Gallery of Contemporary Art, artist Gavin Coates lists Dadaism and Surrealism as two movements forged in a response to turmoil and conflict. The former developed during World War I, with artists like Marcel Duchamp and Hannah Höch “using absurdity and chaos to reject conventional aesthetics, mirroring the senselessness they saw in the war,” he writes. “Similarly, Surrealism arose post World War I... with artists like Salvador Dalí and André Breton channeling their trauma into dreamlike, unsettling works that critiqued the social and political conditions of their time.” Pablo Picasso's Guernica (1937) is still considered one of the most powerful political statements by an artist in response to the bombing of a town in Basque.
هذه القصة من طبعة February 07, 2026 من Mint Mumbai.
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 Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
JSW One eyes $350 mn IPO, pvt fund raising under way
JSW One Platform, the Sajjan Jindal-led conglomerate's B2B digital marketplace, has held discussions with bankers for an initial public offering (IPO) later this year, and is also in talks to raise a private round ahead of the listing, three people familiar with the matter said.
2 mins
April 18, 2026
Mint Mumbai
EMPIRE OF DESIRE
Asha Bhosle's body of song is the evolution of desire in Hindi cinema. By giving voice to every kind of fantasy and longing, she liberated us all
6 mins
April 18, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Asha in America: Encounters with a grandmotherly Elvis
Asha Bhosle was never an immigrant. But she was brave enough to go outside her boundaries to try and discover new worlds
5 mins
April 18, 2026
Mint Mumbai
The playback singer who tried everything
Asha Bhosle's non-film collaborations, from Kronos Quartet to Ghulam Ali, reveal an artist constantly pushing boundaries
6 mins
April 18, 2026
Mint Mumbai
NDR InvIT secures two warehouses
NDR InvIT Trust has acquired two operational warehousing assets in Kochi and Coimbatore for around %260 crore, continuing its buyout momentum this year.
1 min
April 18, 2026
Mint Mumbai
17 banks cleared for gold, silver imports
The Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) on Friday authorised 17 banks to import precious metals for the period from | April to March 2029, according to an official order.
1 min
April 18, 2026
Mint Mumbai
How rising heat forces street vendors to take on more debt
A recent report highlights the impact of heat stress on the lives and livelihood of women street vendors in Delhi
5 mins
April 18, 2026
Mint Mumbai
India bans use of ashwagandha leaves over risks
India’s food regulator has cracked down on a key ingredient in popular wellness supplements, banning the use of ashwagandha (withania somnifera) leaves and their extracts amid safety concerns flagged by the Ministry of Ayush, according to a government official and documents reviewed by Mint.
2 mins
April 18, 2026
Mint Mumbai
How a 233-yr-old Wall Street institution went all in on crypto
Centralized, gated and closed on weekends, the New York Stock Exchange is the ultimate architectural symbol of everything bitcoin was created to disrupt.
4 mins
April 18, 2026
Mint Mumbai
No internal complaints, says TCS on Nashik case
Tata Consultancy Services on Friday said it had not received any internal complaints related to the alleged religious conversion and sexual misconduct at its Nashik unit.
1 min
April 18, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
