From Delhi to London: Atul Bhalla’s Yamuna Walk

Elisabetta Marabotto recommends a visit to ‘Walk On: 40 Years of Art Walking’ at the PM Gallery & House in London

London: If you are looking for something interesting to do during the Easter break in London, one of the options is a newly opened exhibition “Walk On: 40 Years of Art Walking” at the PM Gallery & House.

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010. Image Credit: http://sepiaeye.com/atul-bhalla-s-yamuna-walk

This is the first exhibition revolving around the basic and natural act of walking. This show looks at the different ways artists from all over the world have tackled this theme in the last 40 years. Many different media are involved in the exhibit, and every artist worked in a different setting, some in the countryside, some in the city, but they all shared the act of walking and the experiences and memories around it; ultimately all thinking that walking is a way of freeing their imagination.

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010. Image Credit: http://www.atulbhalla.com/images/thumb/instthumb/ecoart/1st_text.htm

Atul Bhalla is one of the artists whose work is featured in the exhibition. His work, “Yamuna Walk” made in 2010, is a photographic account of the journey the artist undertook around Delhi along the Yamuna river. Bhalla shows how different the life along the river is, depending on the area, underlining the recurrent paradoxes within India. While some areas are breathtakingly beautiful, others are laid to waste by poverty.

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010. Image Credit: http://www.atulbhalla.com/images/thumb/instthumb/ecoart/1st_text.htm

Through this work, Bhalla also highlights the paradox of the Yamuna river, considered sacred by Hindus but at the same used for refuse disposal. The artist believes that by doing so we are  polluting the city aesthetically but also spiritually.

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010. Image Credit: http://www.atulbhalla.com/images/thumb/instthumb/ecoart/1st_text.htm

Click here to see the full work by Atul Bhalla, and here for more information about the exhibition.

Talk by Atul Bhalla in Johannesburg

Manjari Sihare shares details of Atul Bhalla’s talk and residency program in Johannesburg 

Johannesburg: For those living in or visiting South Africa, contemporary Indian artist, Atul Bhalla will be delivering a talk titled “Immersions” on August 14, 2012, at the School of Visual Art, Witwatersrand University in Johannesburg. Bhalla pursued his undergraduate (BFA) and graduate (MFA) studies in Fine Art from the Delhi University and the School of Art of Northern Illinois University respectively. His work has been included in several museum exhibitions, most notably in the Newark Museum’s ‘INDIA: Public Places, Private Spaces’, the Fotographie Forum Frankfurt’s ‘Watching me – Watching India: New Photography from India’, and the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum Triennial.

Bhalla explores the physical, historical, spiritual, and political significance of water to the urban environment and population of his city (New Delhi) in his artworks in different media including sculpture, painting, installation, video, photography and performance. This talk draws its title, ‘Immersions’, from a series of works in which Bhalla uses sand taken directly from the progressively contaminated Yamuna river in Delhi to make concrete casts of portable water containers. These casts are then placed in water-filled vitrines, drawing a connection between Delhi’s historical source for water and the disposable containers of today, now absent of any spiritual connection. In an e-interview with Saffronart, Bhalla revealed that in this talk, he will be discussing ‘Water and the Performative’, the theme that pervades his most recent works.

Bhalla is in Johannesburg for a six-week residency program at the Nirox Foundation, a private not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of global contemporary arts in Africa. This foundation is set in the extensive nature reserve of Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site in the Gauteng Province of the Republic of South Africa. Read more about the residency program.

To learn more about Atul Bhalla’s work, click here.