If you have some time to spare in Panjim the next couple days, I
recommend the art exhibitions underway in Miramar and Fontainhas.
Below is a brief review (written by me) from today's ToI.
Best,
VM
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All through the 20th century, Goa produced many of the most important
and influential artists of the subcontinent, but every single one was
forced to leave to seek opportunities elsewhere.
We know the Goa government has always ignored its own best cultural
talent. But potential art patrons - the economic elites of Goa - have
also never displayed the sophistication required to recognize the art
geniuses of their time. Generation after generation, our best artists
such as Trindade, Fonseca, Chimulkar, Pai, Souza and Gaitonde have all
been forced to seek their fortunes abroad.
The case of the latter pair of Goans - lifelong friends and arguably
the two most important modernists in Indian art history - is
particularly stark when seen from their homeland. They both struggled
to make a living right to the end. And both felt abandoned and
neglected by their own people. It is an inconvenient truth that just
ten years ago, any one of our richer citizens could have bought up
scores of masterworks from either Souza or Gaitonde for the same price
as just one imported car. But none of them ever did.
We're still not much better in 2012, as we see history repeat itself
at two impressive group exhibitions underway in Panjim. Together, they
demonstrate a new generation of artists in Goa is steadily becoming a
formidable cultural force, despite being overlooked by society. Those
looking for the next Souza or Gaitonde could find him in the ongoing
group exhibitions at Gallery Gitanjali (Fontainhas) and Ruchika's
Gallery (Miramar).
Ruchika's Gallery is the most impressive modern art space in Goa.
While programming remains intermittent through the year, its
management hosts large annual exhibitions that have quickly become the
best way to see works by a large number of Goa-based artists. Over
time, the quality has improved. 'Carnival of Colours 2012' is
unexpectedly, consistently outstanding. While young artists have
contributed some of their best work - notably Sachin Naik's immense
woodcuts - it is the senior artists who really impress.
Theodore Mariano Mesquita's 'Tempus Fugit' is the work of an
image-maker of the highest capability. Similarly, Hanuman Kambli's
untitled contribution showcases the senior artist at his very best.
Francis D'Souza's abstract landscapes were a revelation. I rate them
alongside the best Indian abstract painters work: Antonio e Costa,
even the all-time-great Ram Kumar. But the gold medal surely goes to
Sadguru Chendvankar, for the clear-eyed, rigorous 'The Beginning
Foot'. It, and many other paintings in this exhibition, should be
secured by the state for the benefit for future generations of
artists.
These very future generations dominate the exuberant curatorial debut
by Miriam Koshy Sukhijia at Gitanjali Gallery. 'WYSIWYG' is an
irresistible, obviously sincere collective effort by many of the
participating artists to experiment, to take risks and push personal
artistic boundaries. The ethic extends to the great Vamona Navelcar.
Known for his elegant line, for epitomizing gentility, the seniormost
contributor has rendered a grotesque skull-bedecked 'Ogre', a painting
that immediately recalls Angelo da Fonseca's 'Apocalypse' (a likewise
searing vision painted after a lifetime of making serene images).
Praveen Naik's 'Whatever You Desire May it Be Fulfilled' is a highly
memorable mythological future deity sculpted from papier-mache,
thermocol, plastic and wood. It's also impossible not to like Norman
Tagore's cheeky Thanda Matlab...(After Wei-Wei), a traditional mud
water vessel with the Coca-Cola logo stenciled on the side. Andy
Warhol would have smiled at this Ganvti Pop Art.
Sitting discreetly on a table at the Gitanjali gallery is the best
single work across both exhibitions. 'Ways of Seeing' is an exquisite,
intimately personal artwork by Rajeshree Thakker. A little box shaped
like a cupboard, it keeps unfolding to reveal hidden wonders. It is an
apt metaphor for art in Goa in 2012.
--
#2, Second Floor, Navelkar Trade Centre, Panjim, Goa
Cellphone 9326140754 Office (0832) 242 0785
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Margaret,
One of the paradoxes for artists as you have indicated--I am thinking of writers I know--is that at a certain point, they have to leave their country to create their art. The art may have a lot to do with their country, but it has to be created when the artist is outside, for various reasons: safety, lack of distraction of the community that has its own expectations, a wider perspective than provided by one's community, etc. In my novel The General is Up, the reader discovers from the Epilogue that Ronald wrote the novel when he left. He discovered several writers outside his country who provided him with knowledge and a perspective through which he could deal with what he experienced in his country: Paule Marshall, Norman Mailer, Ishmael Reed, Garcia Marquez, and Christopher Okigbo. He also meets someone connected with the publishing world who has third world experience (a Lebanese), who can bring the novel out. In effect, he does what he heard George Kapa telling David Costa while he was serving beers at the farewell party at the Institute: to scoop out what he can when he has left and bring it home.
There is a line in one of Andrew Salkey's poems, which I adapt/adopt: I have not gone back because I never left.
My work goes back.
Peter
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Victor Rangel Ribeiro, Raj Salgaocar, Heta Pandit, Subodh Kerkar, Diviya Kapur, Nandini Sahai; Apurva Kulkarni; Miguel Braganza; Bal Mundkur; Victor Hugo Gomes; Rudy Kammermeir, Prasad Loliekar, Theodore Mesquita, Dr Saryu Doshi, Dr Vidiya Dehejia, Pheroza Godrej, Vamona Navelcar; Theodore Mesquita, Hanuman Kambli, Viraj Naik.