Creative India Foundation presents Srinivasa Prasad at the Wanås Foundation, Sweden

Diana Campbell, Founding Director and Chief Curator of Creative India Foundation shares details of its first realized international sculpture park commission.

“In and Out”, 2012, Srinivasa Prasad
Willow, grass, wood chips
The Wanås Foundation, Sweden
co-commissioned by Creative India Foundation
Photo: Wanås Konst

Mumbai: A year and a half after I first visited Wanås Konst, I am proud to see a new Indian sculpture by Srinivasa Prasad literally growing on the grounds and beginning the realization of my task to place Indian contemporary sculpture in a hundred cities around the world. Srinivasa Prasad’s work is the first Creative India Foundation co-commission at an international sculpture park, and Rathin Barman, Hemali Bhuta, and Vishal Dar’s works will follow suit in 2012 at de Cordova Sculpture Park in the US, Yorkshire Sculpture Park in the UK, and the Cass Sculpture Foundation in the UK, respectively.

Roxy Paine, Impostor, 1999 (Paine’s first tree sculpture in his famous series)
The Wanås Foundation, Sweden
Photo: Anders Norsell

I have visited sculpture parks in countries ranging from Brazil to China to the UK, and Wanås Konst in Sweden is one of my favorite open air museums because of the commitment it extends to artists (their motto is “the artist is always right”), which allows masterpieces to be created there. Roxy Paine created his first tree at Wanås, and one of Anne Hamilton’s best works is housed in an old barn on the property. When I saw the new ideas and works that were realized on the grounds (like Peter Coffin’s “Untitled (Tree Pants)”) I knew that Wanås had to be the first park that Creative India would collaborate with.

Mattias Givell (first from left), Diana Campbell (second from left), Srinivasa Prasad (Front center in red) and Elisabeth Millqvist (front center in orange) with other artists

As part of my work with the foundation, I completed over 220 studio visits in India learning about contemporary sculptural practice in the country. I helped the artistic directors of the park select Srinivasa Prasad as their resident artist (ironically, he is one of the few Indian sculptors whose studio I have yet to visit – he works about eight hours from Bangalore in Sagra), and was thrilled to accompany them on part of their visit to India in January during and around the India Art Fair. Elisabeth Millqvist and Mattias Givell are amazingly forward thinking curators, and they brought their young children Flora and Vera to India and visited artists and learned about the context of the artists which they were inviting to exhibit in Sweden. This was just the start of their engagement with India. They’ve invited another Indian artist to do a site visit for next year, and they are returning to India to give art workshops to children around the country.

Maya Lin, 11 Minute Line, 2004
The Wanås Foundation, Sweden
Courtesy the artist.
Photo: Wanås Konst

Srinivasa Prasad in the landscape at the Wanås Foundation, Sweden

Srinivasa Prasad’s work, “In and Out,” is comprised of Swedish willow trees that spell his name in Kannada.  The work will take about two years to grow in, and I look forward to seeing the work grow and thrive on the beautiful Swedish landscape. Sculpture parks like Wanås do not yet exist in India, and it was wonderful to walk around the grounds with Srinivasa and see his reaction to the work of other land artists like Maya Lin and Richard Nonas. Srinivasa Prasad is an artist who I follow closely, and I can’t wait to see what he creates for the upcoming Kochi biennale.

Daughters of the Co-Director of the Wanås Foundation, Flora and Vera Millqvist enjoying the sculpture
“In and Out”, 2012, Srinivasa Prasad
The Wanås Foundation, Sweden
co-commissioned by Creative India Foundation
Photo: Wanås Konst

Diana Campbell is Founding Director and Chief Curator, Creative India Foundation, Hyderabad, a private foundation which advances Indian contemporary art globally and is developing India’s first international sculpture park. She is responsible for directing the foundation’s programming, selecting artists & commissioning sculptures for international sculpture parks as well as the foundation’s future park slated for 2015. Through her work with the foundation, she is a key advisor for renowned international sculpture parks such as de Cordova Sculpture Park, Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wanås etc. on Indian artists for their collections. Campbell has curated sculpture projects for the India Art Fair, and SH Contemporary fair in Shanghai, and has contributed to projects at Frieze New York, Frieze London and Art Hong Kong. She is also is the co-curator for the Mumbai City Pavilion for the 9th Shanghai Biennale. Campbell also advises real estate developers on their public art programs in India. Prior to moving to India in 2010, Campbell curated exhibitions independently at prestigious galleries such as Marlborough Gallery, and worked at Sotheby’s New York and the Neue Galerie. Campbell is a Princeton and Independent Curators International (ICI) alumna, and speaks Mandarin, Portuguese, and Spanish. 

Reviewing Devi Art Foundation’s Sarai Reader 9: The Exhibition

Kanika Anand visits Devi Art Foundation’s recent project Sarai Reader 9: The Exhibition, curated by & in collaboration with Raqs Media Collective

New Delhi: Raqs Media Collective has consistently been curating and creating intellectually stimulating work, even if occasionally too dense for common comprehension. And since its inception, the Devi Art Foundation has hosted meaningful exhibitions that are ambitious yet well presented. So collaboration between the two makes for a potentially successful exhibition with alternative views in both thought and creation.

A look into a work in progress at the Devi Art Foundation exhibition

The basis and impetus behind Sarai Reader 9 is its nature to draw on ‘exhibition’ as an evolving process, introducing new forms of exploring creative thought and method. Invitations are open to anyone with an interesting idea and an engaging means of presentation, limited to a fixed duration and applied in a space.

The path leading to the projection screens showing Ishita Tiwari’s ‘Amateur Film Archive’ including films like Arranged Marriage, Machli, Sab Maal China etc. with contributions from Amitabh Kumar, Aman Sethi, Jacques Ranciere, Vivek Narayanan

The curatorial format follows three episodes, each showcasing a series of the 100 projects in its nine month life. The selection of the first 40 was announced at the opening on 18 August accompanied with architectural interventions by Sayantan Maitra Boka and Zuleikha Chaudhari; experimental sounds and electro-acoustic music by Ish Shehrawat, Andi Teichmann, Brian Citro and Ignat Karmalito; amateur cinema presented by Ishita Tiwary; and the release of a book by Cybermohalla Hub. The exhibition space in its current avatar reminds one of scaffolding upon which participants will furnish their subjective particulars of expression. The space somehow maintains an air of mystery and sanctity until each proposal’s gradual and final realization, scheduled as per a time-line.

The ideation of the project is certainly refreshing, and its eventual manifestation is something that I’m not the only one looking forward to. It has proved to be a platform for young and emergent energies to partner and experiment in a space widely visited yet one that maintains the demureness of the artist’s studio.

Visualizing the Invisible- Reading & Writing Nietzsche by Belinder Dhanoa

The architectural prototype of the Cybermohalla Hub, by Nikolaus Hirsch and Michel Muller

I wish to see many more of the same endeavors!

More information on the project.

Kanika Anand is an art professional and budding curator specializing in Indian contemporary art. She holds a degree in Art History from the National Museum Institute, New Delhi, and has worked in the field for five years with leading galleries of the like of Gagosian Gallery, Gallery Espace and Talwar Gallery in New York and New Delhi. She is currently pursuing the Curatorial Training Program at the Ecole du Magasin in Grenoble, France, in line with her interest to responsibly curate projects towards making art more accessible as well as inter-disciplinary.

Remembering Prabuddha Dasgupta

Josheen Oberoi on the artist and photographer Prabuddha Dasgupta

New York: Prabuddha Dasgupta passed away on August 12, 2012 of natural causes. He was in his late 50s. A beloved photographer in India, he was internationally renowned for his commissioned fashion photography, but had, in fact, straddled the worlds of fashion and fine art photography for decades, one of the few to have done so with his level of acclaim.

Prabuddha Dasgupta
Francis and Bobby D’Souza in their Bedroom, Parra, Goa, 2006
Archival digital print on paper, 18.5 x 27 inches
Image courtesy Saffronart

Prabuddha Dasgupta was a self-taught photographer and first hit Indian national consciousness with the publication of his book Women in 1996, featuring portraits and nudes of Indian women. This publication came decades after he was already well established and revered as a photographer in the fashion and advertising industries. More recently, he published Edge of Faith (2009), comprising seventy nine intimate portraits of the Catholic community in Goa.

I had the pleasure of working with Prabuddha at his first personal showing in New York in 2007, for his body of work Longing. This series was also written about in the Paris Review. The show was a narrative of memories and experiences, with the artist allowing us a glimpse of intimate fragments of his life and experiences. These images, like most of his recognized work, were monochromatic; his mastery over the nuances of black and white being unparalleled.

Prabuddha Dasgupta
Untitled, 2005
Print on paper, 14.0 x 20.5 inches
Image courtesy Saffronart

What I took away most from my experience working with him, beyond his obvious artistic genius, was his tremendous humility. He had a degree of graciousness that is rare to encounter, in both his professional and personal interactions, and he will be sorely missed.

You can read more about him in the personal recollections of his colleague Pablo Bartholomew here. A couple of the many obituaries published over the last few days can also be read here and here.

Web of Stories: Gulammohammed Sheikh

Anika Havaldar of Saffronart reflects on a new series of autobiographical videos on one of the leading figures in the world of Indian art

Gulammohammed Sheikh in a still from the video ‘Developing my work, Hockney & Kitaj’

Mumbai: From his first solo exhibition in 1960 to the present day, Gulammohammed Sheikh, a recipient of the Government of India’s prestigious Padma Shri award for his contributions to the arts, has become a major contributor to the world of Indian art. As an active artist, poet, critic and professor, Sheikh has encouraged the development of the arts in India in myriad ways, including his critically acclaimed collection of surrealistic poems ‘Athwa’, his theorizing of the narrative-figurative tendency in contemporary Indian art, and over three decades of teaching art history and painting.

In a series of seventy videos on Web of Stories, an online archive of thousands of autobiographical video-stories, Gulammohammed Sheikh weaves together personal anecdotes, ruminations, and influences, to share with his viewers the unique vantage point from which he views the art world.

In his video on developing his own work and the artists David Hockney, and R.B. Kitaj, Sheikh speaks of his time at the Royal College of Art in London (from where he graduated with an MFA in 1966). Entering the RCA just as Hockney and Kitaj graduated, Sheikh talks about dealing with an artistic cul-de-sac at a time where London was buzzing with stories of Hockney and his artistic endeavors. While he remembers enjoying Hockney’s works, Sheikh describes an immediate affinity with Kitaj’s works, from which he derived inspiration to experiment with collages and which he compares to Godard.

The other videos in the series, also recorded in 2008 as conversations with the British artist Timothy Hyman, describe Sheikh’s life and work from his earliest years to the latest monograph published on his life.

Click here to watch the video.

Interview with Beth Citron of the Rubin Museum of Art, New York

­Manjari Sihare in conversation with Beth Citron about the Rubin Museum’s exhibition program of Modern Indian Art

New York:  Last week, I had the pleasure of speaking with Beth Citron, Assistant Curator at the Rubin Museum of Art, New York where she has organized a series of exhibitions on “Modernist Art from India,” and of the work of India’s first female photojournalist Homai Vyarawalla. Modernist Art from India is a three-part series of exhibitions highlighting the predominant themes and extraordinary examples of modernist art created after Ind­ia’s independence:

The Body Unbound | November 18, 2011–April 9, 2012

Approaching Abstraction | May 4–October 15, 2012

Radical Terrain | November 9, 2012–April 22, 2013

The Homai Vyarawalla exhibition is the first museum retrospective in the United States of works by this pioneering photojournalist, whose iconic images of the events surrounding India’s independence in 1947 from British rule endeared her to the Indian people. The exhibition is on view till January 14, 2013.

Beth completed a Ph.D. on Contemporary Art in Bombay, 1965-1995 in the History of Art Department at the University of Pennsylvania in 2009, and has taught a course on “Contemporary South Asian Art” in the Art History Department at New York University.

Q: Could we just begin with the modern Indian art series? What is the motive behind this exhibition program and how is this exhibition program different from other such exhibitions worldwide?

Beth: Since 2004, the Rubin Museum has been engaged in exhibiting and defining the art of Himalayan Asia and in 2010, while they were also looking to expand their involvement with contemporary art at this museum, they also began to be interested in working directly with India and Indian communities, not just ancient Indian art but modern and contemporary. It was something that the founder, Donald Rubin felt very passionate about as well. I was basically hired with the opportunity to create a series of exhibitions on Modern Indian art and bring new material and new ideas about it to a New York institution.

One way in which this series is different from most of the exhibitions worldwide is that these shows are exclusively focused on modernist moments and not contemporary art. This was for a few reasons. One is that my own field of study is modernist art from India and I feel that in spite of all the market attention on contemporary art and large scale installations in the past couple of years, the 60s, 70s and 80s are still very much under-studied. The second thing is that our galleries look great with paintings, (the museum building was formerly a portion of the Barneys department store in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood) so for aesthetic reasons and in terms of an art historical lineage, it made more sense to work with paintings, which related more closely to the type of art work that had be shown at the museum before and it became, in many ways, a natural extension for what the museum had been doing previously.

Q: The Rubin Museum is the first museum in New York to have a comprehensive exhibition program of modern Indian art. Why do you think it has taken so long for this recognition and what has powered it now?

Beth: Obviously the expansion of the market in the last few years has played a role in bringing awareness of this material to the United States. I also think that this museum has opened only since 2004 so I would really say that it has not taken so long in our particular local sense because it takes a few years just to identify what your core areas are and what your secondary and supplementary areas of expertise will be so I think, for this museum it came fairly early in the evolution of what it is that we are doing. We have also had a fairly active photography program. Since we have been opened, we have shown Pablo Bartholomew’s work and now Homai Vyarawalla so there have been interventions by Indian photographers since the beginning.

Homai Vyarawalla, Nehru releasing a dove, sign of peace at a public function at the National Stadium in New Delhi New Delhi; mid 1950’s
From the exhibition: Candid: The Lens and Life of Homai Vyarawalla
Collection: The Alkazi Foundation for the Arts
Image Courtesy: Rubin Museum of Art, New York

Q: What is the audience demographic of this museum and what has the response to these exhibitions been?

Beth: The audience demographic is a good question and we are actually currently involved in research on that topic. We hope and expect very often that we have overlaps with many other cultural institutions in the city, both small and large. We are liked by our neighbors and even by audience members who can’t be with us but are here with us virtually, because they live in places around the world. But more specifically than that, I think people come here because they like the experience of the place. It has a good feeling. There is always something new to explore either through programs or new exhibitions. They are seeking something new and different and cool.

Q: Is there a large South Asian diaspora community involved? Are they active at the museum?

Beth: There are some South Asian diaspora community members involved at the museum on our board and events that we do here but the institution also fits in the more broad art community. We hope that it fits in the art community.  One example of the modern Indian art series going beyond what we think is a regional audience, which we also really want to be there is that a work from the Body Unbound exhibition, B. Prabha’s Fisherwoman was in the Daily Pic of the Daily Beast one day.  More recently, Approaching Abstraction was reviewed in the New York Times. So there has been coverage and attention that goes beyond communities in India and the Indian diaspora.

B. Prabha, Fisherwoman; 1960
From the exhibition: Modernist Art From India: The Body Unbound
Collection: Shelley and Donald Rubin Collection
Image Courtesy: Rubin Museum of Art, New York

Q: Overall, has the response in the modern Indian art series been different from the other aspects of the museum?

Beth: Well there has been a positive response and enthusiasm especially from various educators at the museum that they find it an easy exhibition to teach with and students like it. There is a program called Mindful Connections that they do with people with dementia and their caregivers. They used the Body Unbound for that and found the material very accessible. The staff and people from various communities, from young children to the elderly have been able to use this exhibition.

Bhupen Khakhar, First Day in New York; 1985
From the exhibition: Modernist Art From India: The Body Unbound
Collection: Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts
Image Courtesy: Rubin Museum of Art, New York

Q: What are the fundamental principles for you when putting together an exhibition on Indian art? Where does the process start for you- from the collection of museum founders, Donald and Shelley Rubin, as the crux and filling gaps thereon? Could you elaborate on that?

Beth: I was given a lot of latitude about how I approach the exhibition. So I decided to have it structured as a three-part thematic series on figuration, abstraction and landscape that would essentially build on each other. Of course Shelley and Donald Rubin’s private collection is available to borrow from but in no way was it assumed or restricted that their works had to be the crux of the exhibition. Instead, it was met with a lot of enthusiasm to borrow from local institutions like MoMA for abstraction, the Peabody Essex Museum, which was a great resource especially for Body Unbound, and lots of other private collectors who are very excited to participate in the series. So I think, in a certain way, there has been a lot of community building, just in putting together a checklist and working with various collectors and institutions. One example is the Grey Art Gallery Museum of the New York University. They have a small but very nice collection of modern Indian art that Abby Grey collected during a very short period in the 60s. They had a very small collage by Vivan Sundaram that they didn’t know was by Vivan Sundaram because he signed his name differently at that time. So I said, “oh, that is an early pop collage by Vivan Sundaram and we would love to borrow it.” And it was actually able to enhance their knowledge as well. So it has been a really good exercise in that sense.

Q: Support for these exhibitions comes from a multitude of resources like the private collections you mentioned. I have also seen credits related to private galleries. How easy or difficult has it been for you to garner these resources also considering that art philanthropy in India is still in its nascent stages?

Tyeb Mehta, The Diagonal, 1974
From the exhibition: Modernist Art From India: Approaching Abstraction
Collection: Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts
Image Courtesy: Rubin Museum of Art, New York

Beth: There is also support from the Dedalus Foundation, Inc. for the exhibition, for both the first and second parts so far. We did have Roshini Vadehra express a lot of enthusiasm in this exhibition and she committed to help support the first part of the series. We felt very fortunate about that. We haven’t solicited that many people in India for this purpose, partially because the exhibition is here and at this time, we don’t have the opportunity to borrow from India or travel the exhibition to India so I think that we have been more successful so far getting resources, materials and support from communities here. At the same time, I would like to hope that art philanthropy in India will continue to grow. Some people like Anupam Poddar of the Devi Art Foundation have set examples of how private foundations can become homes for philanthropy in a sense.

Q: We spoke about the private collection of the founders, Shelley and Donald Rubin. Does the museum itself have an active program for the acquisition of modern and contemporary Indian art?

Beth: We can actually accept gifts of modern and contemporary Indian art and we are very interested in building a collection but at this time, we have an extremely limited acquisition budget and so we don’t have the opportunity to actively go out and look for works to purchase.

Q: Could you talk a little about the most recent exhibit of Homai Vyarawalla?

Homai Vyarawalla, Mohammad Ali Jinnah at his last Press Conference before leaving for Pakistan; August 1947
From the exhibition: Candid: The Lens and Life of Homai Vyarawalla
Collection: The Alkazi Foundation for the Arts
Image Courtesy: Rubin Museum of Art, New York

Beth: A year and a half ago, Rahaab Allana of the Alkazi Foundation was here in New York and met with me soon after I started this job about the possibility to collaborate on an exhibition. I was immediately struck by Homai Vyarawalla’s work and I thought she would be a perfect fit for the museum. Fortunately, our Advisory Photography Committee and the Chief Curator did as well. We started planning this exhibition with the hope that Homai would be here. It was intended to be a small, mini retrospective of the larger show that travelled to the National Gallery of Modern Art in Delhi, Bangalore and Mumbai in 2010-11 really to encapsulate many iconic shots that she took and also a sense of who she was as a person. And, I actually got to meet her last summer. I went to Baroda and spent a morning with her and came back and started a conversation with Sabeena Gadihoke about bringing Homai here for the opening, which Homai agreed to and was very excited about. So we very much had her presence in mind when we started planning this and I feel lucky that we were able to have this tribute to her after she passed away this past winter. I hope that she would have liked the exhibition. Sabeena said that she would have liked that the exhibition was in a public gallery, you don’t need a ticket to come see the show, it is free and open. Also that she would have been happy to see the selection of work.

Homai Vyarawalla, Close up of Mahatma Gandhi’s body in state at Birla House for darshan; 1948
From the exhibition: Candid: The Lens and Life of Homai Vyarawalla
Collection: The Alkazi Foundation for the Arts
Image Courtesy: Rubin Museum of Art, New York

Q: With you being in dialogue with Homai for the planning of the exhibition, was there a void in the exhibition making­ process with her death?

Beth: There wasn’t a void in that sense. I think Sabeena had done such a rigorous job with Homai interviewing her, knowing her work, understanding her work, and understanding her as a person that I leaned on Sabeena a lot as a resource. Homai was not in a position this past year to meet with me on a regular basis and talk about a checklist and what the exhibition would focus on. So it was really Sabeena who carried across Homai’s wishes and legacy to the exhibition.

Homai Vyarawalla, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife, Coretta Scott King, with Prime Minister Nehru during their visit to India; 1959
From the exhibition: Candid: The Lens and Life of Homai Vyarawalla
Collection: The Alkazi Foundation for the Arts
Image Courtesy: Rubin Museum of Art, New York

Q: New York and the United States have a strong community of diaspora artists. As probably the sole institutional space for Indian and Himalayan art in New York City, do you plan to involve diaspora artists in the exhibition program?

Beth: Well, actually, we already have in the sense that Approaching Abstraction has works by Zarina Hashmi and Krishna Reddy. I think the category of diaspora is quite complicated in the global world that we live in. In many ways, a lot of the artists that I know who live here and are from South Asia or have South Asian heritage, resist being looked into that kind of category. I think there are many ways to work with artists from all around the world including New York City without necessarily working within the category of diaspora. I run an occasional program here on Friday nights called Artists on Art and Chitra Ganesh has done that, so has Kanishka Raja and several other artists who one could bill as diaspora but its not an approach or a term that we are working with.

Q: You mentioned that this program started with your own engagement, a PhD. in Art from Bombay, 1960s to 1990s. What drove you to this genre? Tell us about your journey so far.

Beth: I started studying Indian paintings at the Ajanta Caves in 2000 with Professor Walter M. Spink at the University of Michigan. That was my first trip to India and I knew that I would be back to study Indian painting. I have always been a painting person but I am also an urban person. So the idea of being able to work in Bombay and understand Bombay was extremely attractive to me. I was lucky that when I decided to go to the University of Pennsylvania, my advisor, Prof. Michael W. Meister was very open to the idea of working on modern Indian art, even though there was no infrastructure to do so. It was a challenge that he and I both really enjoyed to carve a program around that. When I got to Bombay in August 2006 to stay for some time, I found a lot of openness to the research. It was very easy to work collaboratively with artists and galleries, magazines and journals to increase knowledge in this field, particularly because the world was starting to look at modern Indian art and contemporary Indian art. Also there was this great expansion even within existing galleries and existing infrastructure in the cities at the time and I was lucky to be able to be part of that through the research I was doing.

Q: Who and what are you influenced by in terms of curatorial practice?

Beth: I don’t really think of it as “curatorial practice” in that sense. Many of my friends are artists, especially my friends in India. I have always been really influenced by artists and their creativity. I think curators working with living artists have an opportunity to almost funnel the vision and ideas of the artist rather than impose something on to them and that’s why if you look at the exhibition upstairs on Abstraction, each artist is essentially given their own category, not category but their own heading. Their work defines the spaces rather than vice versa so I think I have really wanted to let artists take the reins. This is something that I plan to do even in other types of exhibitions like this winter, in the theater level space of the current Vyarawalla exhibit, the new exhibition to come is by a New York based photographer, Lisa Ross, who has since eight years regularly been traveling to the Taklamakan Desert, the desert of China, taking these really incredible photographs of the landscape and Muslim shrines there, and she actually educated me a lot on that topic and on that region. I am working really closely with her about how that show should work and how we should communicate her perspective and this material.

Q: You spoke about the February exhibition, what else is there in the pipeline?

Beth: Beyond contemporary Indian art, we have some really exciting exhibits in the pipeline especially for 2014, which is the museum’s tenth anniversary. One is the two-floor exhibition for Tibetan medicine. We are hoping that it will attract a lot of new audience members. We are even going to have a Tibetan medical herb garden on the Highline so it will extend our community and into the neighborhood in that way. And I am working on this exhibition of Lisa Ross for February and a couple of other photography shows and a cross cultural contemporary show in 2015 which I have to be a little bit vague about because I have just started thinking about it. There is lots more to come of art from this region.