The
Guild Art Gallery is pleased to present a new Show titled
‘Linkages/Dialogues’ bringing together works of four emerging
Artists- Anpu Varkey, Lavanya Mani, Om Soorya and Sukhdev
Rathod.
Linkages/Dialogues is an attempt to suggest a net of relationships
between the participating artists who share certain subject matter and
aesthetics. The dialogues between the pieces reveal surprising
connections relating to inter psyche, illusion memory and reality,
urban, rural and social conflicts and the nature of reality:
historical associations between femininity, decorativeness and
deception. A certain groping, struggle and a search for an artistic
pursuit is evident in some of the works exhibited
The
works are so juxtaposed as to introduce subjective responses.
Anpu Varkey
talks about her ‘Artistic Pursuits’ - The Artist says:
“These paintings are less about anything definite, as I found it
problematic to keep everything lucid within a painting. I’ve found it
hard to distinguish between exactly what needs to be painted and what
needn’t, so in these works I’ve been effectively not representing what
I don’t, or not defining what I needn’t, just focusing on where I
wanted to apply colour. I keep finding loopholes within my search,
trying to rectify it, as it is the part of the process. I constantly
change my approach and thinking, which can be volatile, for often I
find myself at a dead end, looking inconsolably at the emptiness I
created myself”.
Lavanya Mani on her her recent work titled -‘Fox
Story - The Blue Coat’ - ”Over the last few years, I have been
working with various techniques associated with textiles such as
embroidery, tie and dye, appliqué, batik etc in conjunction with
painting. Cloth has been at the center of a long set of historical
associations between femininity, decorativeness and deception. These
have to do, on the one hand, with the way various art &craft practices
such as embroidery, knitting, needlework etc, were seen primarily as
“women’s work”, as well as to the perceived sinfulness/ excess of the
decorative within a patriarchal economy, that privileged austerity and
functionality. This could also be related to what was considered to be
the inherent deceptiveness of cloth- its ability to hide as well as
reveal, and its ability to change the persona of the wearer; tales and
fables, that have been associated with it emphasize dyeing and
changing colours as a narrative device. Thus, The work titled ‘Fox
Story- The Blue Coat’ has tried to explore this idea.
Om Soorya talks about the nature of reality and urban
and rural justapositions "as a search for the constant truth in the
reality, which surrounds me. Reality doesn’t merely mean the
socio-political arena, it relates to the most inner truth of
everything. Conscious mind enters the real world and it searches for
the logic in reality. Here all doubts on reality emerge by itself,
from the realms of the conscious mind. The question of existence and
the reason of Birth, Growth and Death are the phenomenon to be
unveiled. At the same time, there is an inherent obligation to live.
Concurrent to this thought, the unconscious mind manifests an
imaginary world of dreams. Ultimately, my works are being just like a
pendulum in between the quest for total existence and the anxieties
over the present realities. The idea of life, death and the confusion
over the universe, are concurrently repeated in my works. Sometimes
the nature of the idea is a kind of contradiction on the present
realities."
The
title of Sukhdev Rathod’s current work is
‘Contradiction Between Eye and Mind’ about which the Artist says, “for
all this work, that I’ve done for this show, the idea about the work
had come, when I started to think about the illusions in our daily
life. As its true, when the Eye sees something at a moment, the mind
starts to relate or compare it with whatever it has in its memory.
Thus, I’ve tried to paint both of these versions together, where I’ve
painted various objects to narrate the ideas that I have. Every object
that I’ve Painted, has its own individuality and a story to tell,
which is however interpreted differently by different people and hence
remain, open to multiple readings”.
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