Art Review: Many Shows and Many Indias
By HOLLAND COTTER, 'New York Times' art critic
NEW YORK -- If you like New York City, chances are you'll like India.
Midtown Manhattan at lunchtime and an Indian village on market day are
surprisingly alike. Cars and bikes charge by; personal space is at a
premium; the noise level is high, the sheer variety of people
exhausting.
There are days when it's just too much, and you'd rather be anywhere
else. But when you leave, if you leave, you can't wait to return.
The comparison has seemed particularly apt over the last year. The 50th
anniversary of the independence of India and Pakistan from British rule
arrived in August, and celebration surrounding the occasion has brought
a steady flow of cultural riches to New York, including an unprecedented
concentration of Indian art, old and new.
Two of the year's most spectacular exhibitions are on view, side by
side, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. One, "King of the World: A
Mogul Manuscript From the Royal Library, Windsor Castle," is a traveling
show of the painted page from a single renowned 17th-century book.
The other, "Flowers Underfoot: Indian Carpets of the Mogul Era,"
organized by the Met, is a gathering of some of the most beautiful rugs
imaginable and, given the fragility of the work, a once-in-a-lifetime
event.
To this list one must add "Mandala: The Architecture of Enlightenment,"
at the Asia Society, a much-anticipated show that, top-heavy with
Tibetan material, ends up being a disappointingly incomplete study of
its subject. Still, it offers some gorgeous objects, a few Indian in
origin, all of them ultimately Indian in inspiration.
Perhaps the real news of the season, though, lies in the local
appearance of contemporary art either from or about India in three
recently opened exhibitions: "Out of India: Contemporary Art of the
South Asian Diaspora" at the Queens Museum of Art," "Women Artists of
India: A Celebration of Independence" at A Gallery in Chelsea, and
"Francesco Clemente: Indian Watercolors" at the Met.
Widely varied in scale, content and polish, the shows together define
the very different meanings that "Indian" can have. And they give at
least a hint of the groundswell of creative activity not only on the
subcontinent but also within its vast and widening sphere of influence
abroad.
"Out of India" at the Queens Museum is by far the most ambitious show.
Astutely selected and shaped by the curator, Jane Farver, it is a hybrid
international showcase. Of its 27 artists, the majority were born in
India, though fewer than half live there now. Others, Indian by descent,
are from Myanmar (formerly Burma), Uganda, Ireland and the United
States.
Most take India as the subject of their work, but far less as a specific
place than as a symbol, sometimes political but more often personal.
Only one of the artists, Homai Vyarawalla (born 1913), actually
witnessed the drama of August 1947. She was then a leading
photojournalist in India, and her images of Jawaharlal Nehru addressing
a jubilant crowd in Delhi, and of the body of Mohandas K. Gandhi being
prepared for cremation, give a vivid sense of the mood of a nation whose
self-image was cast in a romantic epic mold.
Much has happened since -- sectarian violence, economic upheaval, the
extended medical emergency of AIDS -- to eat away at that initial
tragedy-shadowed optimism. And the heightened, even exultant mood that
runs through Ms. Vyarawalla's pictures is nowhere to be found in the
work of her younger colleagues.
For example, in the photographs by Satish Sharma (born 1951), which hang
across the gallery from hers, political figures appear not in person but
as spectral public icons. A sculptured bust of Nehru crumbles from
neglect; the face of Rajiv Gandhi peers out from a torn poster under a
commercial sign reading "dynasty."
The work of Ayisha Abraham moves further back in time: her enlarged
details of colonial-era photographs catch the uneasy social disparities
of the English-Indian world of the Raj. Dayanita Singh, by contrast,
turns her lens to the present to capture India's rapidly growing urban
middle class, in whose lives Western and non-Western styles merge with a
kind of surreal aplomb.
The Delhi-based journalist Pablo Bartholomew takes a similarly
documentary approach in his pictures of Indians in the United States,
from a Jain holy man enjoying tacos in upstate New York to hundreds of
South Asian Muslims praying in the park that surrounds the Queens
Museum. But other artists more clearly assume a critical, outsider
stance.
Allan deSouza -- born in Kenya, now living in Los Angeles -- shoots the
chilly, empty interiors of the arrival areas in American and European
airports, which are often an immigrant's first glimpse of a new home.
Sunil Gupta's grainy photomontages suggest the subjugated but vivifying
Indian presence in England today.
And then there is work that invites ambivalent readings. Such is the
case with Zarina Bhimji's illuminated transparency of what might be
taken as the forbidding interior of a power station. It is actually a
shot of the stacks of the British Library, where both Gandhi and Karl
Marx formulated their ideas. Mohini Chandra's framed photographs may
appear to be blank, and they are, in fact, the backs of snapshots,
creating a hidden family portrait.
Portraiture, of the self or others, is a repeated theme in the show.
Shani Mootoo, for example, creates a composite image of herself as a
kind of nature spirit, half man and half woman, framed by panoramic
views of wilderness in Canada, where she lives. And Chila Kumari Burman
contributes a terrific collage of dozens of pictures of her own face in
a Pop-flavored, kaleidoscopic play of identities.
Ms. Burman, incidentally, along with deSouza, Gupta and several other
British artists of Indian descent, is also included in "Transforming the
Crown: African, Asian and Caribbean Artists in Britain, 1966-96," a
three-part exhibition at the Bronx Museum of the Arts, the Franklin H.
Williams Caribbean Cultural Center/African Diaspora Institute in
Manhattan and the Studio Museum in Harlem, where the installation, by
Jorge Daniel Veneciano, is especially good.
Role-playing is also the essence of Poulomi Desai's series of portraits
of Indian transvestites, which she titles "Shakti Queens." Shakti is a
Sanskrit term for feminine spiritual energy. One senses this subversive
energy, too, in the immense sculpture of a female head by Ravinder G.
Reddy, in which the face has the features of a low-caste village woman
but the golden skin of a goddess.
Apart from Reddy's work, sculpture in the show takes the form of
installation. Rina Banerjee comes through with a packed,
dangerous-looking environment of found materials and sari cloth; Vivan
Sundaram with a walk-in paper house with a video image of a cooking
fire; N.N. Rimzon with a snaking line of earthenware pots and brooms, an
allusion to the status of the so-called untouchables, who were required
to sweep the ground they walked on, and Shaheen Merali with an
atmospheric video piece accompanied by his own music.
And some print work is included: chalky gray etchings by the New
York-based artist Zarina showing the floor plans of homes she has lived
in in Asia, Europe and the United States, Vijay Kumar's silhouetted
crowds of figures set against newspaper reports of religious violence.
But it is in the medium of painting that one finds some of the best
entries.
This is certainly true of the three small pieces by Shahzia Sikander,
the young artist (born in 1969 in Pakistan) now living in Houston, who
was a standout at the recent Whitney Biennial and whose strong solo show
closed last week at Deitch Projects in SoHo.
In Pakistan, Ms. Sikander studied the traditional art of miniature
painting, a convention-bound art form requiring the use of hand-ground
pigment and burnished paper and now often geared to the tourist market.
She has revamped it in extremely imaginative ways by taking its
signature image, the figure of the endlessly available woman awaiting
the arrival of a lover, and setting it on a collision course with the
psychic chaos of the contemporary world.
A piece like "Uprooted Order Series 3, No. 1," which is only inches
high, interweaves Hindu, Islamic and personal emblems. The central woman
grasping the branch of a tree is an ancient Indian symbol of fertility,
but the cordlike roots dangling below her body seem to cripple rather
than sustain her. The slightly raw, disjunctive, unfinished quality of
the some of the work becomes part of its power.
Interestingly, "Out of India" introduces a second Pakistani artist,
Miriam Ishaque, also in her 20s and a recent graduate of the Whitney
Independent Study Program. Using egg tempera on panel, she adapts the
precisely limned female figure of the miniature tradition but isolates
it against a bare or lightly gridded flesh-pink ground. The effect is
subdued, almost hesitant, but Ms. Ishaque is an artist to watch.
The show's selection of paintings is rounded out by two artists who live
and work in India. The stainlike, calligraphic watercolors of Nalini
Malani, 51, offer deliberately generalized scenes of coercion and
violence within a patriarchal society.
Atul Dodiya's semi-realistic oil-on-canvas paintings depict a polluted
Bombay and the many-armed goddess Durga, who is usually shown holding a
weapon in every hand, in the form of an airport metal detector.
Ms. Malani's work also appears in the show at A Gallery, an exhibition
originally organized by Mary-Ann Milford-Lutzker for Mills College Art
Gallery in Oakland, Calif., last fall.
It arrives in New York in radically truncated form and in an overcrowded
installation. It is worth seeing, however, not only for its fine and
influential artists but also because it touches on stylistic aspects of
Indian art only glancingly addressed in the Queens show.
In the decades after independence, many vanguard painters, breaking away
from both British academic models and traditional Indian styles, adopted
Western modernism as the appropriately progressive style for a new
nation. And in the form of a versatile, readily personalized, often
semi-abstract figuration, it maintains its currency in India today,
though its cachet has faded in the West.
It is the style practiced by several of the artists in the A Gallery
show, among them Arpana Caur, Jayashree Chakravarty, Suruchi Chand,
Kanchan Chander, Anupam Sud, Vasundhara Tewari, Gogi Saroj Pal and Rekha
Rodwittiya. The results, inflected with specific Indian content, require
a carefully judged presentation to look persuasive in trend-conscious
New York. Unfortunately, they don't get that here.
Even under the circumstances, though, some things shine through. They
include Ms. Malani's touching figure of a child dressing, Nilima
Sheikh's lightly touched depictions of childbirth in tempera on handmade
paper, and aquatints by Naina Dalal, two of which address the vulnerable
status of unwanted female infants in India.
Also worth seeking out are early abstract paintings by Arpita Singh,
whose first New York solo show has been extended into January at Bose
Pacia Modern Gallery in SoHo.
If modernism was an import to the subcontinent, Indian art has, in its
turn, been an inspiration for several Western artists. One is the
Italian-born painter Francesco Clemente, represented in a small show of
19 watercolors organized by Holliday T. Day for the Indianapolis Museum
of Art and now installed at the Metropolitan.
Since 1973, Clemente has spent part of every year in the southern city
of Madras, and the big, grid-divided paintings in thof Madras, and the
big, grid-divided paintings in this show incorporate many Indian images:
the elephant-headed Hindu god Ganesh, Buddhist lotuses and wheels,
tantric configurations. In characteristic fashion, Clemente abstracts
them slightly, smoothing and sweetening them in the process, as
Whether the results look too smooth, particularly when placed beside the
densely textured, emotionally urgent paintings of Ms. Sikander (or those
of Bhupen Khakhar, born in 1934, for whom a New York solo is long
overdue) is a question. Clemente's work at the Met looks too easygoing
for its own good, but he has produced far more provocative things,
particularly when giving visual embodiment to the intensely erotic
implications of Hindu devotional poetry.
In any case, the internationalist, crossover example he has consistently
set is important, particularly in New York, where the most "advanced"
art too often carries the whiff of a hermetic art-school parochialism.
He has helped establish the climate for the reception of Indian work
here and has undoubtedly given certain younger artists in India itself
reason to believe they would find an audience abroad.
That audience is still, it is true, relatively small, but it will grow.
At the moment Ms. Sikander must bear the unenviable burden of being a
breakthrough figure, with work dynamic enough to capture the attention
of viewers who have little direct knowledge of her sources. But there
are other artists waiting in the wings to join her in an art world that
is now global.
That's the basic message of "Out of India," and it is summed up in the
work of the conceptual artist Navin Rawanchaikul, the show's youngest
participant. Born of Indian parents in Thailand in 1971, he lives in
Japan.
In the conceptual piece created for the show, he has asked members of
the Indian temple in his home city in Thailand to send postcard
greetings to the show (many of the responses are on view) and invites
visitors to the Queens Museum to send cards back in reply. (Just fill
them out; the museum does the mailing.)
It's a simple gesture of reciprocity but a liberatingly expansive one,
in which everyone is an artist and far-flung corners of the world become
a common ground.
-- --
HERE ARE THE EXHIBITIONS DISCUSSED IN THE ART REVIEW.
"Out of India: Contemporary Art of the South Asian Diaspora" remains at
the Queens Museum of Art, New York City Building, Flushing
Meadows-Corona Park, Queens, (718) 592-9700, through March 22. The
exhibition is sponsored by Bell Atlantic.
"Women Artists of India: A Celebration of Independence" remains at A
Gallery, second floor, 521 West 23rd St., Chelsea, (212) 206-8350,
through Jan. 5.
The following shows are at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fifth Avenue
at 82nd Street, (212) 535-7710: "Francesco Clemente: Indian Watercolors"
(through Feb. 8); "Flowers Underfoot: Indian Carpets of the Mogul Era"
(through March 1); "King of the World: A Mogul Manuscript from the Royal
Library, Windsor Castle" (through Feb. 8, after which it travels to the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Feb. 26-May 17), the Kimbell Art
Museum, Fort Worth, Texas, (May 31-Aug. 23) and the Indianapolis Museum
of Art (Sept. 6-Nov. 29).
"Transforming the Crown: African, Asian and Caribbean Artists in
Britain, 1966-96" remains on view at three locations through March 15:
the Bronx Museum of the Arts, 1040 Grand Concourse at 165th Street,
(718) 681-6000; the Franklin H. Williams Caribbean Cultural
Center/African Diaspora Institute, 408 West 58th St., Manhattan, (212)
307-7420, and the Studio Museum in Harlem, 144 West 125th St., (212)
864-4500.
Arpita Singh remains on view at Bose Pacia Modern Gallery, 580 Broadway,
near Houston Street, SoHo, (212) 966-3224, through Jan. 17. The gallery
is open Tuesdays through Saturdays, 12 to 6 p.m.
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