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The National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA) has shown several mid-career retrospectives of artists such as Anish Kapoor, Subodh Gupta and Atul Dodiya. These shows managed to break out of the so-called 'art circuit' and reach out to a larger audience with phenomenal aplomb.
2017 has started with Jitish Kallat's much-awaited retrospective, one that wraps itself around an ever-evolving practice of 20 years. But that said, the show leaves much to be desired.
Jitish's wide-ranging oeuvre is not represented here as well as it should have been. He has addressed the pushes and pulls of contemporary life with not just his prodigious understanding but also with his fantastic draftsmanship. However, the show squanders his reputation as a spectacular virtuoso of space and political commentary by its shoddy curation, its placement of works and bad lighting (the latter most crucial for installations).
In two decades, what has truly stood the test of time are Jitish's signature paintings and his (pre-historic) 'bone vehicles'.
His bone vehicles are of epic proportions, with names that evoke images of Jurassic Park inhabitants. If these works elicit fear and intimidation, they are being effective. They are meant to wrench your gut and make you see the mindless violence that has largely desensitised us to so much ordinary everyday violence.
A lot of multiple-framed photo works created almost 10 years ago – spread across the NGMA hall – could seem visually jaded for the existing smartphone owner who is used to playing with photo-collage apps today.
The work, titled 'Cry of the Gland' is a set of extreme close-ups of different, everyday shirt pockets and the objects they hold. Mostly pens, ID cards, spectacles, key chains and sometimes earphones. The artist calls it organic extensions of the body.
There's a poignant story behind why Jitish decided to create 'Conditions Apply' which traces the phases of the moon. He uses the image of a chapati to depict the lunar cycle. It is used as a metaphor for the different phases we all go through in life. He wanted to trace all the phases of the moon that his father had seen in his entire lifetime.
A lot of sketches are displayed only to understand the journey of his art practice.
I’d suggest you take a good two or three hours out of your day if you’re interested in embarking on this journey with Jitish. He is undoubtedly one of the pillars of Indian contemporary art and has produced a show that can fire up your imagination in bits. Unfortunately, it is mostly tepid.
(Sahar Zaman is an independent arts journalist, political newscaster and artist. She has founded ‘Hunar TV’, Asia’s web channel on the arts.)
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