Showing posts with label Installation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Installation. Show all posts

Monday, 2 November 2009

Mithun Jayaram








Mithun Jayaram likes to work with expendable objects. The humble pencil, the charmless eraser, the square yellow post-it clones - all exalted by the ambitions Mithun sees for them.
From everyday utilitarian objects, he builds several little universes. All much more magnificent than anyone ever thought they would be. He carries out this task purposefully -sharpening, shaving, rolling , tearing and building inch by inch in full view of a skeptical audience.From curiosity some stop and watch, from amusement some stop to stare.

Mithun's latest work-in-progress , a post-it /eraser cosmos titled A Feeling Bubble of Forgetting , explodes slowly to the smells of coffee .He captures every awkward nuance of the journey in a space not conventionally used to showcase art. This can be revealing in it's demystification or completely fascinating in it's deliberate progression. To Mithun, the end does not matter. He works in public spaces to include an audience interaction , keeping the element of chance in space , turning it into a 'playground of ideas'.

He hopes people will 're-look' their waste. While the actual materials used in his installations are not in fact waste , he uses everyday , ordinary things, hoping to alter your perception of them.While this is not a re-cycling project, Mithun never throws away the materials, hoping to reuse them and the traces of their essence in a different context or arrangement.

As much as it is an experiment in observation as most things art are , it is also an experiment in introspection (as most things art are) Mithun is often asked by participants and onlookers if he was always this industrious or persistent but Mithun chalks it up to selective patience. A momentary yielding surge in tenacity for the sake of enlightenment, an opportunity to test his own limits and learn about himself.

He pushes on as he starts to seperate mind and body from the physical 'feeling' discomfort. While these little universes take shape , Mithun gains from the thoughts and conversations fueled by his creation.

Catch Mithun Jayaram at Gloria Jean's Coffee, Indra Nagar, Bangalore from 11 am - 11 pm. You won't regret it! More images on his facebook page.

Have included images from his previous installation at Citylink Mall, Singapore featuring pencils and their associated parts.



Sunday, 9 November 2008

Doshi Levien

Quirky design couple Nipa Doshi and Jonathan Levien once again awe and entertain with their first large scale installation titled Myth and Material in New York last month. The installation featured their 'culturally hybrid' products typical to Doshi levien, designed for the Italian brand Moroso. The star of the show was the pebble shaped couch so poignantly named, My Beautiful Backside, the design for which was inspired by a brightly hued miniature painting. Psychedelic graphic cut outs and motifs occupied the walls while rangoli inspired rugs were laid out on the floor. The installation also featured the 'Charpoy' daybeds flanked by cushions covered with vintage embroidery of Indian household staples like chai strainer and sewing kits.






I love their Industrial-meets-Indian style. Their creations constantly blur the lines between design and art. For more , visit www.doshilevien.com.

Wednesday, 5 November 2008

Shirley Bhatnagar



stoneware, slab forms, copper wire earthenware glazes screen, size:8 feet by 3 feet
Some incredible ceramic sculptures and installation by New York based artist Shirley Bhatnagar. Shirley is originally from Delhi and has a B.A in Design from NID, Ahmadabad. More from her portfolio here.

Monday, 20 October 2008

Mumbai - A Laundry field



"In her new exhibition , Korean-born, globe-trotting artist Kimsooja explores the caste system in India through the use of colorful fabrics, photography, and a video installation. "

While the implications of this installation are of a sombre nature , my first unedited reaction to this was sheer amusement. I guess we don't take ourselves too seriously , which would explain why we wash our dirty laundry in public. Text from here. Images from here.

Thursday, 25 September 2008

Pushpamala N.



Paris Autumn, Pushpamala N.'s third solo exhibition at Bose Pacia New York, is a cinematic installation in the form of a rich movie theatre experience around the title work, a 35-minute experimental short film created from B&W still photographs. More info here.

Pushpamala's work has traditionally hinged upon illustrative narratives of women's history, memory, and life in contemporary society. Pushpamala N. studied sculpture at the MS University in Baroda, India. Since the mid-1990s she has primarily worked in photo-performance and video.

The exhibition is on display till the 25th of October,2008.

Wednesday, 30 July 2008

Imran Qureshi



Site specific installation , Leakage

Pakistani artistImran Qureshi is Professor at the Department of Fine Arts, National College of Arts Lahore where he has been teaching Miniature painting and drawing since 1994. Qureshi re-interprets Mughal miniature motifs , creating patterns of illusion and shadow through repitition . Illustrated above is an installtion titled Leakage using an atypical lotus motif to resemble water. Images from here.

Thursday, 5 June 2008

Sumakshi Singh





"Using the history and physicality of spaces as a springboard, my current work involves interventions that I find or create in the walls, floor and ceiling (often in sterile seeming urban environments). These subtle interventions occasionally house microcosmic activity in the form of synthetic, miniature structures of painted polymer clay along with moss, fungi, plants and other organic materials." Sumakshi Singh was born in New Delhi , India . She lives and works in Chicago, Illinois. More here.

Tuesday, 1 April 2008

Rina Banerjee


Rina Banerjee had sent in images of a couple of her works from her current exhibition at The Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art that I've taken forever to post . Banerjee currently lives & works in NYC . Her works explore specific colonial moments that reinvent place and identity as complex diasporic experiences, their aesthetic and cultural beginnings suggest in particular how the many regional culture affects continue to stain our perceptions of home, the exotic, the foreign and domestic worlds. Her exhibition will be on display through the 25th of May.



Thursday, 17 January 2008

Amrit Raj Gupta




Dubai based artist Raj decided to go the spiritual way & came up with this multicoloured wonder . A 1969 Fiat transforms to become a metaphorical sculpture/installation piece named Omkara - the vehicle to cross the ocean of life. On one side of the car is an illustration of the majestic postcard India complete with elephants & a palace. On the other side is a rather kitch painting/sculpture of an unusually placid Shiva & his consort Parvati. On the reverse resides on lotuses, lord Vishnu. The interior of the car is lined with rich Indian textiles with the Hindu scriptures on them.



The future looks ambitious albiet fatal for Omkara , Raj has decided to take the car out for a spin ,starting the journey from the Arabian sea and ending up at the Indian Ocean where Omkara will be put to rest. A true metaphor of the evolution of all that is materialistic & therefore impermanent. Well, I hope Omkara has a good journey, lets toast to the most psychadelic Premier Padmini that ever was !