'Thresholds And Distances'

 

 

Lokesh Khodke

Sathyanand Mohan

Ashutosh Bhardwaj

 

 

 

9th to 25th November, 2005
1
0.00 am to 6.30 pm
 

 

 

 

 


Click on the picture for details.
     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lokesh Khodke                                                                                                                
LK-11 LK-9 LK-10
 

 

LK-12
 

 

Sathyanand Mohan
SM-3 SM-2 SM-4
 

 

SM-1
 

 

Ashutosh Bhardwaj
AB-9           AB-10         AB-11
 

 

AB-15 AB-12 AB-17
 

 

AB-18 AB-19 AB-16
 

 

AB-21        AB-13      AB-20
 

 

AB-14
 

 

 

Lokesh Khodke

 

To begin with, over the course of my practice as a painter, I have come to realize that the way in which we live our lives or confront its various dimensions definitely reflects in our work. Speaking of myself, I feel that life around me has created several questions within me, and with time these queries have led to an unknown discomfort regarding my own complacent notions about life and language of art itself.

What then becomes a compelling area of interest in my work is the question of space and their inter/contradictory relationship with object, time and people. Within my work I try to address this area both at a subjective as well as formal level. Another issue that has come up again and again while exploring this area is space and the complex power relationships that go with it, an issue that I feel needs to be addressed genuinely in contemporary times. As an artist what becomes a challenge for me is how to look at the marginalized spaces within this power struggle which have, over time, pushed in the background through a process of homogenization which is increasingly becoming an integral part of our society.

I cannot claim that the present set of works do justice to what I say, yet for me it’s a beginning which will open up other possibilities. 

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Sathyanand Mohan

During the last two years I have been trying to evolve a language that is flexible enough to address both the personal and the political at different levels. The making of a work involves not just personal choices and decisions, but also an understanding of its context, its position vis-à-vis the time and place as well the channels of exchange where it is situated and gathers its meanings.

A main area of interest for me is the human subject, and one part of my work deals with the problems and possibilities inherent in the representation of people, people who I know intimately, and who form a part of the social milieu that I as a painter inhabits. These people are mostly writers, artists, art historians and so on, who can be broadly categorized as belonging to a generic ‘intellectual’ class (if one could call it a class at all). They belong to an intellectual milieu, and insofar as they have been represented, my works (the portraits) could also be understood as trying to give form to the idea of the vocation of the artist/intellectual, what it constitutes, and what its relation to the present is. It is therefore, also a way of reflecting on my own practise, and of locating it within a concrete social world within which I operate and which gives me a sense of my own selfhood. So the genre of the portrait permits me to address the supposed antinomies of the self, or the personal (the ‘sitters’ are all people I know well), and the world, or the political/social (the ‘sitters’ have a well defined public role). The portrait is also a historically ‘rich’ genre, a genre that has been re-invented by almost every generation since antiquity, and it continues to be particularly germane territory for artists who situate themselves in that indeterminate zone that lies somewhere between the private and the public.

Another kind of work that I do is what may perhaps be called private metaphors wherein I try to evoke various aspects of the self and attempt to work it out at the level of the visual in a somewhat playful and ironic manner. Play and Irony are generally employed, in literature and painting, to draw attention to the language and its materiality. If nominally we are at present living under the sign of ‘realism’, then these works could be said to be trying to obscure that notion a little by bringing into play different registers of language(s) culled from quite different contexts and sources which are yet, somewhat like the uses of collage employed by the Surrealists, stuck together in the work by some notion of the ‘real’. The fantastic subject matter of works like “Portents”,- the sources of which are, among other things, those medieval broadsheets illustrating the apocalypse-to-come (strange signs in the sky etc.),- allows me to suspend the gravity of the real, and permits me the liberty of engaging in some play acting of my own.

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Ashutosh Bhardwaj

Though my works always provide equivocal meanings and interpretations, but they defiantly respond to the contemporary Cosmo and metro surroundings around us.
           
          The clichéd images projected to us through various forms of media, which serves as the imagolouge of the global socio-politics comes first to me as metaphors. While juggling with these media images, I always try to be conscious of keeping their clichéd ness alive. By doing  so there is a continuous attempt to use the meticulous strategies of these imagolouges as a tool, which can decode their own rationally crafted meanings, that automatically questions their unreal superficial existence around us. In this whole process I always prefer to keep a distance from the images and try to keep their gloss alive without any personal and real life touches, which help me to be at a place from where I can point up the power and violence in the contemporary life. My sheer interest in precise, sharp, meticulous geometry and various O.P. or other design references help me to create suitable unreal abstract spaces where these clichéd images can interact. In this interaction images from history (art monuments and artifacts) also gets indulge, the history which is with us as an accepted legacy.

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BIO - DATA

 

LOKESH KHODKE :

 

Born 1979

B.F.A. from Faculty of Fine Arts, Maharaja Sayajirao University, Baroda,(Gujarat) 2002

M.F.A. from Faculty Of Fine Arts, Maharaja Sayajirao University Baroda(Gujarat) 2004, with gold medal.

Pursuing PhD

  

Scholarship:

Nasareen Mohammadi Scholarship for the 2001-2002, Faculty Of Fine Arts Baroda

 

Exhibitions and Workshops:

 

Solo show:

Dvelalikar kala Vithika Indore 1995.

 

Group shows :

“Are We Like This Only” Vadhera art gallery, New Delhi, Feb 2005

“Workshop with Painters/ sculptors” , Panchmadhi (MP), March 2005

“Preview Show” Faculty of Fine Arts, Baroda, Sept 2005

“The Bridge Show” Lalit Kala Academi(Ravindra Bhavan) New Delhi 2004

“13 Artists Show”, Sarjan Art Gallery, Baroda, 2004

Avantika Bawa drawing exhibition at various countries in the world 2002

Camlin landscape workshop at Rangapur, show at Faculty of Fine Arts, M.S.U. Baroda – 1999

Jaidev Thakur’s workshop of water color and show at Mumbai 1999

 

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SATHYANAND MOHAN :

1975                    Born in Kerala

Qualification:

1994-1998           BFA in Painting from The Government College of Fine Arts,

                          Trivandrum, 1994-1998

1998-2000           MFA in Printmaking from The Faculty of Fine Arts, MSU, Baroda

 

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ASHUTOSH BHARDWAJ :

Born 1981

Qualification    :    2002 B.F.A. Faculty of Fine Arts, M.S.U., Baroda

                           2004 M.F.A. Faculty of Fine Arts, M.S.U., Baroda.

Scholarship     :    Junior Research fellowship, 2005.

Awards           :     National scholarship 2003-05

                            Workshops for Per 04, recedency at Khoj, Delhi, 2004

                            Nasreen Mahamadi award and scholarship, 2004

                            Workshop for site specific work at Samod, 2005

                            Painting workshop at Pachmati, 2005

                            Merit scholarship 2003-04, 2002-03, 2001-02, 2000-01, 1999-2000,

                            1998-1999, M.S.U. Baroda.

Exhibitions        :   In-Cinque group show at Palette Art Gallery, Delhi, 2005

                            Open Studio Day, (Installation: Matrix-We Love America, America

                             loves us) Khoj, Delhi, 2004

                             13 Artists show, Sarjan Art Gallery, Baroda, 2004

                             PICASSO AND POLLOCK (Installation), Faculty of Fine Arts, M.S.U. Baroda 2004

                             Group show at Ravindra Bhavan, Lalit Kala, Delhi, 2004

                             Camlin water colour workshop and show, Faculty of Fine Arts, Baroda, 2000.