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Making An Impression
By DEEPANJALI KAKATI
The Frank Museum's first display of Indian
art showcases contemporary prints.
Contemporary Indian printmaking is on display for the first time at
Otterbein College's Frank Museum of Art in Westerville, Ohio, in an
exhibition titled "Current Impressions." Selected by New York-based
printmaker and curator Vijay Kumar, the 35 prints are in different media
including etchings, serigraphs, woodcuts, engravings, aquatints and
lithographs.
There were three criteria when Kumar asked the 29 artists to submit their
work. First, the prints had to be made by traditional, hands-on methods.
"I did not want to include digital (computer-generated) images or
scanned-image reproductions," he says. Second, the prints had to be on
paper no larger than 56 by 76 centimeters, to make them easy to ship to
the United States. Third, the prints had to be recent, done since 2004.
"I am especially pleased that several artists produced a new print series
in response to the invitation to submit work for this exhibition," says
Kumar, whose first memory of printing dates back to his childhood in
Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, where he saw woodblock printing on fabric.
The works depict a variety of themes and sensibilities. While Walter
D'Souza says "Tricycle," which is part of his series "Ticket to Ride," is
a comment about "the present scenario we are journeying through in the
subcontinent," Hemavathy Guha's "The Clown" lends itself to multiple
interpretations with its use of the traditional clown mask to show moods
ranging from glee to pathos.
"I've tried to transform the subtle tones and rhythms of various musical
compositions into visual forms," says Bhawani Shankar Sharma of his "Color
Symphony."
"The imagery in a few prints can identify their country of origin, but
this is not true of most," says Kumar, who planned the show to be diverse
in both style and theme. "Some work is humorous, some narrative, some
mostly concerned with issues of composition and color. Images by several
artists involve galaxies and outer space, many include figures, but all
are quite personal."
So, from the rich hues of Uttam Kumar Basak's "Intimacy," the folk motifs
in Shahid Parvez's "Friends" to the multidimensional perspectives in
Yashpal Chandrakar's "Ten Windows," the exhibition provides a glimpse of
the varied palette contemporary Indian printmaking has to offer.
"I attempt to create humor in my work, which comes from the perception and
depiction of the incongruities of existence which are always present in
the folk and tribal art forms from which I draw my inspiration," says
Parvez.
"I look at the scene with a child's curious mind, full of richness as well
as complexity. The overall treatment is a subtle blend of an adult's
experience and a childlike fantasy."
Other artists participating in the exhibition include Dattatraya Apte,
Rajan Fulari, Hanuman Kambli, Vijay Kumar, Avijit Roy and K.R. Subbanna.
The museum is located in Westerville, a suburb of Columbus, Ohio, in the
house of Lillian Frank, who taught art, theology and philosophy at
Otterbein College for 29 years. With the help of her husband, Paul, she
converted the former Salem Evangelical Church, built in 1877, into a
residence in 1956. The structure was given to the college after she died
in 1999, for the purpose of creating a museum for the college's
collection. It opened in 2004.
According to museum director Nicholas Hill, small private colleges in Ohio
agreed to focus their art collections in particular areas many years ago
in order to maximize their resources.
"The Frank Museum of Art has a mission of exhibiting global art
exclusively. We have had several…of African and Japanese works but nothing
from India," says Hill. "Another reason for the selection of an Indian
exhibition was that there is a large Indian American population in the
Columbus, Ohio, area."
The exhibition, which is open from April 2 to June 6, came about because
of Hill's contact with Kumar at the Manhattan Graphic Center in New York
City. Kumar had coordinated a major U.S.-Indian print exhibition in
2004-06 that traveled to India, and Hill's work was included in the show.
Later, when Hill was planning upcoming events he invited Kumar to curate
the Indian print exhibition.
Kumar has planned several Indian art shows in the United States,
particularly in the New York City region. "There are now more than 10
galleries in Manhattan that show primarily contemporary art from India.
Many of their clients are of Indian heritage," he says. Recently,
long-established galleries like Marlborough in New York City have also
begun exhibiting work by Indian artists.
"Whether or not Indian contemporary art will come to the mainstream of
American art only time will tell," he says.
Courtesy:
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