Absolut Kapoor

Aaina Bhargava of Saffronart on Absolut’s latest collaboration with Anish Kapoor and his reinvention of the BOTTLE.                              

 London: Artists and Vodka? Certainly not a surprising association, but one that has constantly been given new meaning for the past 27 years by Sweedish vodka company Absolut.  In 1986 Andy Warhol started a long association between Absolut and the arts community by painting their vodka bottle, more recently, this year they have announced Anish Kapoor as the artist who will continue this tradition by creating a unique installation, his interpretation of the absolut bottle.  The work is to be made using Kapoor’s trademark engagement of the viewer with space.  The creation of the bottle will be made with ‘negative’ space employing a sculpting technique that has commonly been featured in many of Kapoor’s previous works, as well as his use of metals and the colour red.  The artist elaborates on this opportunity by stating,

           “Absolut has a long history with artists, from Warhol to many of my great colleagues. The idea of somehow encapsulating whatever it is that one does in a single moment….and kind of making it an Absolut Kapoor. It is a strange notion, but one that I felt I could at least go in pursuit of” –Anish Kapoor.”

Kapoor’s bottle will be one of the latest in the collection including the work of countless established contemporary artists such as Rosemarie Trockel and Louise Bourgeiouse who have contrinbuted through their interpretations of the bottle and it’s meaning [See images below].

Louise Bourgeouis, Andy Warhol, Rosemarie Trockel for Absolut

Louise Bourgeouis, Andy Warhol, Rosemarie Trockel for Absolut. Image Credit: http://images.idiva.com/media/content/2011/Feb/absolut_art_collection_more.jpg

Closer to home, Indian designer Manish Arora designed a bottle in 2009, and soon after Subodh Gupta (in 2011), Bharti Kher (in 2012), and most recently early this year, author Vikram Seth have all participated in this artistic alliance [see images below].

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 Collaboration between brands and the arts community is a common enough occurrence.  For istance you have internationally renowned artists such as Takashi Murakami and Yayoi Kusama who have both worked with large brands like Louis Vuitton, and more recently you have up coming artists like Thukral and Tagra who designed handbags for the Italian brand Etro.  With Absolut you can physically trace this history, starting with Warhol in 1986.  Warhol’s legacy is characterized by the genre of Pop Art, through deconstructing this term, it is evident that he essentially fused the worlds of popular culture and art together, making it more accessible or appealing to a wider audience.  Often these partnerships are accussed of having commercial overtones, or being marketing gimmicks for both the brands and the arists involved, but ultimately what they achieve is greater recognition for the artist and their works, thus providing audiences with an opportunity to discover what contemporary art is, therefore reaching a wider audience.  This focus on the audience and their experience with the work is what makes Anish Kapoor so apt and simultaneously unique as a choice to interpret the Absolut bottle. His works are conceived on the premise of viewers engagement with the space and the artwork – which is this case is the bottle – an object they have probably come across at least a couple of times.  The experience of viewing the installation encapsulates not only a very academic notion the engagement of audiences and space, but the mesh of popular culture and art as well which is extremely reflective of and imperative to the contemporary art scene.  Anish Kapoor himself reflects on this aspect of how an artwork functions (in relation to the audience) and what it can accomplish,        

 

Art is really all about transformation; it’s about taking a piece of metal, a lump of clay, a bit of cement, or whatever else and turning it into something that it isn’t. That fundamental transformation is truly mysterious; it is something that is in a way is wondrous. That moment of wonder is something that is deeply attractive and we are instinctively drawn to it, it is as if the work is saying come here, come and be part of this wonder, this thing that is happening. And I feel that intimacy with the viewer is something special, something we have to hold on to.” – Anish Kapoor.

The transformation of the bottle is what we are looking forward to, and have great expectations for. 

 For more information click here.

Chitra Ganesh’s Residency at Bose Pacia, New York

Kanika Pruthi of Saffronart discusses Chitra Ganesh’s fantastical works in light of her ongoing artist residency at Bose Pacia in New York City

Secrets, Chitra Ganesh, 2007

Secrets, Chitra Ganesh, 2007. Image Credit: http://www.chitraganesh.com/dc6.html

NEW YORK: Brooklyn based artist of Indian origin, Chitra Ganesh is the current artist- in residence at Bose Pacia in New York City as part of their Transparent Studio initiative, showing her works from June 18th to July 16th, 2013.

The Transparent Studio is an artist studio program founded by Bose Pacia where the selected artists are provided with a studio space in the main gallery. The intention of turning the transitional gallery space into a temporary artist studio is to enable an atmosphere of engagement and conversation around the creative process, allowing an opportunity to engage with the artist is the given set up.

Chitra Ganesh received her BA in Comparative Literature and Art Semiotics in 1996 and her MFA from Columbia University in 2002. Ganesh’s work has been exhibited widely at venues including PS 1/MOMA, Brooklyn Museum, the Asia Society, and the Andy Warhol Museum, Fondazione Sandretto in Italy, Nature Morte Berlin, ZKM in Germany, and the Gothenburg Kunsthalle.

Ganesh’s art and practice draws equally from her Indian roots as from her engagement with contemporary discourses regarding identity, the feminine, history and such. An adept multimedia artist, her works range from text based canvases, illustrations, prints, installations and collaborative projects. Her visual oeuvre serves a concoction of mythology, folklore, sci-fi, Indian bollywood, graffiti- drawn from her international experiences- a heady mix nonetheless a stimulating portion for a discerning connoisseurs’ palette .

The female protagonist is central to Ganesh’s work, reminiscent of the male super heroes of the comic book traditions. The ‘heroine’ often takes on the garb of the superhero- challenging and questioning societal norms and beliefs. The artist’s narrative is fuelled by her efforts to challenge the established canons- of history, literature, art, culture. The super ‘heroine’ of Ganesh’s works gives voice to the excluded narratives which are often relegated to the periphery of the ‘popular’ and ‘accepted’.

A consistent element of Ganesh’s visuality is her adaptation of the comic book layout in her works. An important point of reference is the Indian Amar Chitra Katha comic series that the artist encountered early in her life. They present religious and cultural narratives based on Hindu mythology and Indian history. She combines these with her interest in Greek mythology, western fairy tales and fantasy literature. She skillfully adapts the popular comic book format to her large scale works. Her use of the comic script as a trope to infuse the otherwise playful visual with an intent and relevant narrative is one of the many high points of her practice.

The humor and lightness of the visual elements balance the weighty discourses she handles in her practice. The blown-up and larger than life scale of her works also references the multiple points of entry and focus. She uses the busy and sometimes overwhelming imagery to give material form to an abstract concept- which through this process becomes accessible to multiple viewers. The use of text in her works is an inviting point of reference which opens the eye to the fantastical landscape at view. The words interject her visual narrative, and the two elements together take the viewer on a journey that titillates multiple senses.

Bose Pacia will be hosting an open studio on 11th July 2013 where the artist will be present.

More to it than meets the eye?

Sabah Mathur of Saffronart on Hayward Gallery’s new exhibition ‘Invisible: Art about the Unseen 1957-2012’

London: The latest show at the Hayward Gallery about the art of the unseen makes for a fascinating visit. Although there is not much to look at, there is a lot to appreciate. Including works by Andy Warhol, Yves Klein, Yoko Ono, Maurizio Cattelan, and Robert Barry, this exhibition explores ideas related to the invisible and the hidden.

Invisible art seems to be a type of conversation between artist and audience. As we enter the almost empty rooms with blank canvases, unoccupied plinths, and nearly invisible labels, it seems at first that we are being sold the emperor’s new clothes, but we quickly find that in presenting things that cannot be seen, artists are ultimately asking us to re-imagine how we engage with art.

According to the curator, Ralph Rugoff, it is possible that the history of what may be called ‘invisible art’ began on May 14, 1957. On that date Yves Klein opened an exhibition in Paris that included a seemingly empty room. The artist argued that the white walls of that space were infused with the artist’s sensibility and nothing else. In the following year, Klein took this a step further and developed the immaterial room into an entire exhibition at Iris Clert’s Paris gallery. We get a glimpse of this through a vivid archival film of the artist striding about his empty gallery contemplating the bare (but curiously glowing) walls as if there really was something to see. This landmark work arguably kicked of a low profile tradition of invisible art that has spanned seven decades.

Since 1957, artists have been drawn by various motives to make work that engages with the invisible and this exhibition brings together the key moments in this history revealing that there is no apparent limit to the possible meanings of invisibility in art. Therefore, the fact that the whole exhibition is centred on the invisible does not mean it is repetitive. Among the surprises of the exhibition is the realisation that artists have used invisibility in so many different ways, says Richard Dorment of the Telegraph.

Klein himself went on to explore the unseen in numerous ways. He envisioned a new society in a non-material world. This led to the ritual sale of ‘zones of immaterial pictorial sensibility’ in 1959. He began to issue certificates for these zones in exchange for pure gold. Several sale ceremonies were conducted in Paris on the banks of the river Seine, and if, in the spirit of immateriality the purchasers agreed to burn their receipts, Klein would throw the gold (or at least most of it) into the Seine. The exhibition shows photographs recording one such transaction with Hollywood screenwriter Michael Blankfort.

The invisible can be engaging with works such as Yoko Ono’s ‘instruction paintings’ which consist of written statements asking readers to visualise in their own minds the actions, images and scenarios suggested by the text. Visitor participation peaks with Jeppe Heine’s Invisible Labyrinth, which has to be navigated equipped with digital headphones which vibrate (activated by infrared rays) every time we bump into one of the maze’s virtual walls.

The invisible can also suggest a mischievous attitude with works that make us laugh such as Maurizio Cattelan’s Untitled (Denunzia) which is a standard police report that officially documents the artist’s claim that an invisible artwork had been stolen from his car the night before he was to exhibit it at a group show in Milan. He exhibited this solemn police report instead. There is also Untitled (A Curse) by Tom Friedman who hired a practicing witch to curse the space above the plinth.

One of the rooms is devoted to all-white canvases including Bruno Jakob’s works which are a challenge to cynics, as they are made with not much more than canvas or paper exposed to the elements and creatures such as garden snails. Although at first these works appear to be blank, they evoke a range of images often suggested by their titles such as The Visitors where Jakob has exposed the paper to snails. The room also includes Magic Ink by Gianni Motti which consists of drawings sketched in invisible ink.

Another interesting but rather spooky work is The Ghost of James Lee Byars which is essentially an empty and dark room enclosed by thick velvet curtains. The artist spent most of his life contemplating death, and his own death was the subject of many of his works. Teresa Margolle’s work, which also deals with death, also provokes uneasiness. Upon entering her installation Aire/Air, we find an empty room with two working air-conditioning units. The slightly humid air is cooled by water from public mortuaries in Mexico City that was used to wash the bodies of murder victims before autopsy.

Also included is Warhol’s empty plinth, on which he had once stood to leave behind the ‘aura of his celebrity’. Other interesting exhibits include photographs of Song Dong’s secret diary written with water on stone, and Claes Oldenburg’s proposal for a memorial to John F. Kennedy in the form of a gigantic statue of the assassinated president buried upside-down in the ground, only to be viewed through a small hole while lying on the ground. Conventional memorials are designed to comfort future generations into thinking that the heroic figure somehow lives on. Oldenburg suggests that we should instead know what it is like to have had something extraordinary, and then have it taken away.

Pakistani-born artist Ceal Floyer shows her work, Plumb Line, which acts as a pointer to the unseen. It marks the dead centre of the entire space of the Hayward Gallery, including its depths, such as its basement storage area, plant room, library and offices, which are hidden from the exhibition visitors.

This novel show demands our attention and gives us a lot to think about. As the curator points out, the idea is based on the thinking of Marcel Duchamp who took exception to what he called ‘retinal art’ or art aimed at the eye. His 50 cubic centimetres of Paris air bottled in a glass ampoule is arguably more interesting to think about than to look at. Duchamp’s most profound impact on the future of invisible art was his notion that an artwork is only ever fully realised in the mind of its audience.

Although the conception of this exhibition proved to be interesting, I am not sure how long works with almost no visual interest can capture our imagination and keep us amused. This modern experimentation may have a prankish flavour, yet it is engaging and profound. As Jackie Wullschlager of the Financial Times has said, “Rugoff is an inventive curator and has curated the show as primarily a participatory performance piece, dependent on physical encounters with spaces that by turns inspire dread, confusion, laughter, annoyance.”

Read more about the exhibition.

Watch this video.

Song Dong, Writing Diary with Water, 1995-present
Image credit: Exhibition Catalogue, Invisible: Art about the Unseen 1957-2012, p. 64

Ceal Floyer, Plumb Line, 2004
Image credit: Exhibition Catalogue, Invisible: Art about the Unseen 1957-2012, p. 72

Maurizio Cattelan, Untitled (Denunza), 1991
Image credit: Exhibition Catalogue, Invisible: Art about the Unseen 1957-2012, p. 56

Yoko Ono, Hand Piece, 1961, Summer
Image credit: Exhibition Catalogue, Invisible: Art about the Unseen 1957-2012, p. 36

Yves Klein, Cession d’une Zone de sensibilité picturale immatérielle á Dino Buzzati, Paris, 26 janvier, 1962
Image credit: Exhibition Catalogue, Invisible: Art about the Unseen 1957-2012, p. 34

 

Looking Back, Looking Forward: A Reflection on 2012

Amy Lin of Saffronart looks back on some of the highlights for Saffronart and the art world in 2012

Saffronart

New York: As 2012 winds down, we reflect upon the good, the bad and the peculiarities of the year. 2012 has been an exciting year for all of us here at Saffronart. We pursued uncharted territories and ventured in many new and different directions, Marco Polo style.

In February, we held our first Impressionist and Modern Art Auction, which also happened to be the first Western art auction in India. At the previews and talks in Mumbai and Delhi, collectors and enthusiasts got a chance to see and learn about original artworks by Van Gogh, Pissaro, Matisse, Picasso, Dufy, Cezanne, Dali, Miro and Warhol. Later, we shone a spotlight on India’s tribal communities and curated the world’s first Indian Folk and Tribal Auction. In November, we shared Pakistan’s rich artistic heritage with some beautifully detailed pieces dealing with gender and political issues among others. In jewelry and collectibles, our first Art Deco Sale was a big hit in Mumbai, and helped rediscover the city’s forgotten Art Deco past.

Our most recent project is The Story, a new website offering curated collections of unique objects for sale every day. These would make fine holiday presents for your girlfriend, grandmother and practically anyone else. Also, this very blog was launched in April, and what an incredible journey it has been. Thank you all for your support and appreciation! Last but not least, our new gallery in New York is finally open to the public after months of hard work and dedication. We welcome all of you to visit us here!

Our friends in the art world had a busy year as well. Here are some of my favorite stories, events and oddities from this year:

The Ecce Homo IncidentDoc1-page-001

This one needs no introduction. We all heard of the sweet but misguided little old Spanish lady who took it upon her herself to “restore” the Ecce Homo fresco at her church this August. Instead of being saluted as a fine work of art, Cecelia Gilmenz was accused of vandalism and creating a “Beast Jesus”, and sparked off an internet sensation across the world. Today, she is selling her art on Ebay!

Ai Weiwei and Anish Kapoor’s Gangnam Style

Our favorite contemporary artists come together to promote free speech. After Weiwei posted his parody of Psy’s Gangnam Style, Kapoor and other artists responded with a video of their own to advocate for freedom of expression around the world.

Kochi Biennale

Kochi is home to India’s first international biennale, which was kicked off this month with contributions from big names such as Ai Weiwei, Atul Dodiya, Subodh Gupta and others. Internationally renowned singer M.I.A. rocked the opening when she performed in the country for the very first time.

Vandalism for Art’s Sake

Vladimir Umanets vandalized Mark Rotho’s 1959 Black on Maroon painting at the Tate Modern in London in the name of Yellowism, a movement that deems all artistic expressions to be equal. He scribbled, “Vladimir Umanets ’12 / A Potential Piece of Yellowism” on the painting, worth several millions of dollars, and calmly walked out of the museum. Days later, he was arrested and sentenced to two years in prison. Apparently, the judges did not see his act of vandalism as part of an art movement.

New York, New York

Finally, I have to tip my hat to this amazing city. Despite Hurricane Sandy, where close to half of the galleries in Chelsea sustained serious damaged, the city pulled together and remained strong and uncompromising as the art capital of the world. Artists and creative minds are still flocking to New York to discover all it has to offer. We wish them and all of you the best of luck in 2013 for the challenges ahead!