Somewhere Between Living and Dying

Elisabetta Marabotto of Saffronart on Sunoj D’s residence at the Natural History Museum in London and his response to the museum’s India Collection

London: Two works by Sunoj D are currently being exhibited in the ‘Images of Nature’ gallery at the Natural History Museum, London, following his three month residency at the institution. The works will remain on display until the 28 February, 2014.

Sunoj D in Front of his Installation, National History Museum, London

Sunoj D in Front of his Installation, National History Museum, London. Image Credit: http://www.nhm.ac.uk/nature-online/art-nature-imaging/collections/india-collection/artist-perspective/index.html

During his residency, Sunoj explored the scientific, commercial and political stories behind the remarkable India Collection at the museum, adding his own perspectives to it.

Sunoj created two works inspired by the Hortus Malabaricus (The Garden of Malabar), a book compiled between 1678 and 1703 that records 742 medicinal plants which existed in Malabar, Kerala, the artist’s homeland. One of the aspects of the book that captured Sunoj’s attention was the fact that it was written by several people from different social ranks. Such intra-caste collaboration had never been seen before, and it was quite a peculiarity at the time.

‘Somewhere Between Living and Dying’ is the first work he created during the residency. This graphite scroll decomposes and contrasts the order in which the plants are documented in the book and the rest of the India collection. In fact, Sunoj arranges the plants on the paper in a very chaotic and wild manner.

Somewhere Between Living and Dying, Sunoj D, Natural History Museum, London

Somewhere Between Living and Dying, Sunoj D, Natural History Museum, London. Image Credit: http://www.nhm.ac.uk/visit-us/galleries/blue-zone/images-nature-gallery/images-nature-highlights/index.html

‘The Remains of the Soil from the Land Where the Sun Never Sets’, the artist’s second work, contains a double allegory. Firstly, the piece refers both to the British Empire and its wide reach, which allowed some part of the Empire to always be experiencing daylight. Secondly, the work also symbolizes our relationship with the soil in an urban context. This is expressed through the use of plant pots, some of which were donated to the project by the public, symbolic of urban objects that link humans with nature and soil. Sunoj also creates a parallel between the objects in the museum, which are inanimate and frozen, and these pots, which once contained soil and life but now are empty.

The Remains of the Soil from The Land where the Sun Never Set, Sunoj D, Natural History Museum, London

The Remains of the Soil from The Land where the Sun Never Set, Sunoj D, Natural History Museum, London. Image Credit: http://www.nhm.ac.uk/visit-us/galleries/blue-zone/images-nature-gallery/images-nature-highlights/index.html

Nature and the changing environment are very dear themes to the artist. In fact, Sunnoj grew up among farmland, and his most recent works discuss his personal experience of moving from the countryside to a city or ‘urban jungle’, and related issues such as the relationship between man and nature.

Through his work, Sunoj documents our evolving relationship with nature, and reminds us of what we built on and of what we are forgetting.

Watch this video of Sunoj talking about the works he created during his residency at the National History Museum.

More information on this project can be found here.

Memorial for Four Legends – Ganesh Pyne, Bal Chhabda, Rajendra Dhawan & Jagmohan Chopra

Manjari Sihare shares details of memorial to be held for Ganesh Pyne, Bal Chabbda, Rajendra Dhawan and Jagmohan Chopra at the NGMA, Delhi

New Delhi: The National Gallery of Modern Art, the Lalit Kala Akademi and the Ministry of Culture, Government of India are holding a memorial for four Legendary Masters – Bal Chhabda, Jagmohan Chopra, Rajendra Dhawan and Ganesh Pyne on March 20, 2013 at 5:30 pm at the NGMA, New Delhi. It is great to see that two institutions, the NGMA and the Lalit Kala Akademi, are coming together to mourn the loss and celebrate the lives and work of three great Indian artists. Please do attend if you are in Delhi.

Memorial

The World Mourns the Loss of a Legend

Tarika Agarwal of Saffronart on Indian modern artist Ganesh Pyne

Mumbai: Ganesh Pyne passed away at the age of 76 after suffering a heart attack on March 12, 2013, at a private hospital in Kolkata, India.  A well known and critically acclaimed modern Indian painter, Pyne was acknowledged to be a pioneer among second-generation Indian modernists, who took over from early path breakers like M.F. Husain and F.N. Souza.

Ganesh Pyne was famously described a ‘an artist’s artist, a philosopher’s philosopher and a master fantasist of them all’, and received several awards and accolades for his work, which has been exhibited around the world including in Kolkata, New Delhi, Mumbai, Paris, London, Washington DC and Berlin.

Pyne will always be remembered as a pioneer of the Bengal School of Art and a pillar of Indian modernism. A scholar, master draughtsman and accomplished painter, Pyne’s loss will be felt deeply. His intricate drawings and delicately layered tempera paintings reflected a personal mythology shaped from his experiences growing up and living in Kolkata, and have always resonated with collectors of modern Indian art.

Although the artistic community lost someone very important to the evolution and development of modern Indian art, Pyne’s memory shall live on through his work for generations to come.

Read more.

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The National Gallery of Modern Art, the Lalit Kala Akademi and the Ministry of Culture, Government of India, are holding a memorial for three Legendary Masters – Bal Chhabda, Jagmohan Chopra and Ganesh Pyne on March 20, 2013 at 5:30 pm at the NGMA, New Delhi.

Lecture Series by Prof. Iftikhar Dadi at JNU, Delhi has been cancelled

Last week, we had shared details of public lecture series“Modernism in Muslim South Asia”by Prof. Iftikhar Dadi hosted by the School of Arts & Aesthetics, Jawaharlal Nehru University. This lecture series has been cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances.

To learn more about Pakistani art, click here.

Talk on Sharjah Biennale in Mumbai on March 22nd, 2013

Manjari Sihare shares details of a forthcoming public lecture on the Sharjah Biennale in Mumbai organized by the Asia Society

Mumbai: The Sharjah Biennale 11 is currently on until May 13, 2013. The Biennale organized by the Sharjah Foundation is an internationally-acclaimed exposition of contemporary art that takes place every two years in Sharjah, U.A.E., where the works of art spread across the city. Curated by Yuko Hasegawa, this Biennial reassesses and challenges the Westerncentrism of knowledge in modern times and reconsiders the relationship between the Arab world, Asia, and the Far East, through North Africa and Latin America.  The exhibition features work by more than 100 artists, architects, filmmakers, musicians and performers, including Indian participants Amar Kanwar, Raqs Media Collective, Studio Mumbai, and CAMP; and foreign artists Francis Alÿs, Matthew Barney, Olafur Eliasson, Yang Fudong, Ernesto Neto, Elizabeth Peyton, Anri Sala, and Wael Shawky.

For those who cannot make it to the Biennale, this public lecture (details below) is a goodopportunity to learn about this international exposition.

Sharjah Biennial 11
Re:emerge –Towards a New Cultural Cartography

Speakers:
Sheikha Hoor Al-Qasimi
, President and Director, Sharjah Art Foundation
Judith Greer, Associate Director of International Programmes, Sharjah Art Foundation
Moderator:
Girish Shahane,
writer and curator

Friday, 22 March 2013, 06:30 – 8:00 pm.

Registration begins at 6:00pm  Venue: Auditorium, National Gallery of Modern Art, Sir Cowasji Jahangir Public HallM G Road, Fort Mumbai – 400032    

RSVP REQUIRED: [email protected]  (priority will be given to Asia Society members)

Information about the speakers:

Hoor Al-Qasimi, President of the Sharjah Art Foundation, is a practicing artist who received her BFA from the Slade School of Fine Art, London (2002), a Diploma in Painting from the Royal Academy of Arts (2005) and an MA in Curating Contemporary Art from the Royal College of Art, London (2008). She is on the Board of Directors of MoMA PS1, New York and Ashkal Alwan, Beirut, and was on the curatorial selection committee for the 2012 Berlin Biennial. Her recent curatorial projects include ‘Drift’ — an exploration of urban and suburban landscapes (2011), and the upcoming ‘In Spite of it All’ (2012). A solo exhibition of her photographic work ‘Off Road’ opened recently at the Nevada Museum of Art, Reno.

Judith Greer is the Associate Director of International Programmes for Sharjah Art Foundation. Greer previously worked as International Director at the Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo. Co-author of Owning Art: The Contemporary Art Collector’s Handbook (2006), she lectures internationally on the topics of collecting, arts patronage and the Middle East art and cultural world. A long-serving trustee of Artangel, UK, she was a juror for the 2007 Max Mara Prize for Women Artists and, in 2009, was on the jury for the Dubai-based Sheikha Manal Foundation Prize for young Emirati artists.

Girish Shahane has degrees in English literature from Elphinstone College, Bombay University and Oxford University. He attended Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar. He was editor and later consulting editor of Art India magazine. He has written on visual art, film and cultural politics for leading publications, and contributed columns to Time Out and Yahoo! India. He has lectured at institutions like the NGMA and NCPA in Bombay, the Indian School of Business in Hyderabad, the Tate Modern in London, and the Art Institute of Chicago, and is on the faculty of art history courses run by Jnanapravaha and Bhau Daji Lad Museum. Exhibitions curated by him include The Presence of the Past (NCPA, Bombay, 1998); Art / Technology (Max Mueller Bhavan Gallery, Bombay, 2000); Legacy: A-vanguard (Gallery Threshold, Delhi, 2010); and Home Spun (Devi Art Foundation, Gurgaon, 2011).