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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Art Incept
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TZID:Asia/Kolkata
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DTSTART:20230101T000000
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DTSTART:20210101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240908T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20241007T183000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20240827T124416Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240827T125142Z
UID:49206-1725793200-1728325800@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Incept in Baroda
DESCRIPTION:Faculty of Fine Arts at MS University in Baroda was founded in 1950. For the first time in independent\nIndia\, a program of study was introduced to offer courses and research facilities in the field of arts. It\nwas envisaged that art is an integral part of life for the new citizens. The establishment evolved to gain a\nreputation of the foremost institution of the country for contemporary art education. With pedagogues\nlike KG Subramanyan\, Gulam Mohammed Sheikh\, and Jyotsna and Jyoti Bhatt\, MS University remains\none of the most sought after till date. \nArt Incept made its maiden trip to attend the annual student exhibit\, coupled with studio visits and artist\ninteractions in the summer of 2024. Incept at Baroda presents carefully selected artists that are skillfully\nbreaking the boundaries. Each of the practices included in the show hold immense promise to develop\nunique artist practices in years to come. \n  \n– Rahul Kumar (August 2024) \n 
URL:https://artincept.com/event/incept-in-baroda/
LOCATION:227\, South Point Mall\, Golf Course Road\, Gurugram\, India
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Incept-In-Baroda-_INV_short2-2-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240823T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240830T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20240813T090538Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T090538Z
UID:49037-1724410800-1725044400@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Prithwish Daw - Solo Show Awardee\, Inception Grant 2023
DESCRIPTION:  \nPrithwish Daw – Solo Show Awardee\, Inception Grant 2023 \n  \nThe exhibition explores Daw’s practice and artistic journey as he explores the popular culture of West Bengal specifically through the artist’s vision of Bengali culture\, society and architecture. Prithwish explores the cityscape of Kolkata from an unseen perspective\, choosing ‘walls’ as a representative icon to speak about the massive wave of urbanization\, land mafia\, and real estate\, erasing the existing aesthetic culture of his hometown. The walls present the idea of advertisement\, representation of political climate through a satirical lens. \nPrithwish Daw (b. 1990\, Kolkata). He received his bachelor’s from the Indian College of Art and Draughtsman ship and his master’s from Rabindra Bharati University. He has been part of various exhibits namely the Birla Annual Show (2021)\, the CIMA Award Show (2022)\, the Lalit Kala Academy’s 62nd National Exhibition (2022)\, the 19th Asian Art Biennale Bangladesh (2022)\, Inception Grant 2023 Finalists amongst others. \nThis exhibition is an extension of our continued collaboration with Triveni Kala Sangam.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/prithwish-daw-solo-show-awardee-inception-grant-2023/
LOCATION:Triveni Kala Sangam
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/triveni-e-invite-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240823T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240830T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20240813T090005Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T120932Z
UID:49028-1724410800-1725044400@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Hiraeth
DESCRIPTION:A solo exhibition of Pankaj Chouhan\n Mentored by Prima Kurien\nWriting for Gulam Mohammed Sheikh’s solo exhibition Returning Home—a retrospective of works from 1968 to 1985 at the Centre Pompidou\, Paris—Gieve Patel recorded the artist expressing\, ‘It is not that if you see pink\, you paint pink. A Mewar painter does not use red because there is red earth around him. It has something to do with a full body experience of the environment.’ This elemental experience of pinks\, greens\, and blues filling our landscape is as savourable as it is visual for the Indian painter. It is an immersive sensuality that transforms our perception of the natural world; a flood of colours that washes over all that is flesh. In this inundation lies Pankaj Chouhan’s paintbrush\, daubing over the changing faces of our cities and farmlands. \nHiraeth introduces us to a mystical landscape of hazy colours and hypnotic brushstrokes that affirm Chouhan’s belief in the continually transforming aura of the natural world. His paintings—dissipating canvases of disastrous urbanisation and greenlands lost—inform us of an abstract vocabulary that is innocent and childlike\, yet wilfully committed to narrating the exacting toll of our footprint on the environment. In this tale\, Chouhan’s landscape does not merely hinge on the depiction of a tree\, sky\, or ground; no\, their presence is incidental. As a colourist\, he focuses our attention on the elements that form the landscape: his palette. By emptying commonplace colour associations\, his earthy shades of browns and greens exude richness as well as quietude. What makes this remarkable is that such silence is constantly punctured by everyday environmental collapse; it is a violent whirlpool of watercolours where Tyeb Mehta’s Trussed Bull prances around—helplessly hurtling towards cataclysm. \nThe works on display here are storehouses of violent natural—nature’s—energy; an energy that smoothly dissolves into thin air with each stroke of Chouhan’s brush. One is reminded of J. Swaminathan’s works: straightforward brushstrokes that are immediately grasped in a single viewing\, but remain potently lodged in our minds\, resonating deeply\, and capturing our attention overtime. In this concentration of light and pigment lies the lived experience of an artist that has been fighting ‘bechaini\,’ an air of despondency due to unmitigated ecological catastrophe and environmental degradation. Chouhan’s world navigates itself through a historic tradition of art-making that has filled the manuscripts of the Hamzanama as well as the waterfalls of Song dynasty paintings. It is the intuitive making of a geography—a representation of cities and towns\, of nature and wildlife—and its very unmaking. This is his masterful borrowing\, and his personal resistance. \n*Hiraeth\, from Welsh\, is a nostalgic longing\, a bittersweet grief for a place which has been lost to us. \nWritten by Shankar Tiwari 
URL:https://artincept.com/event/hiraeth/
LOCATION:Shridharani Gallery\, Triveni Kala Sangam\, Mandi House\, New Delhi\, 110001\, India
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/sridharani-e-invite-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240708T113000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240731T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20240618T122525Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240625T123129Z
UID:46600-1720438200-1722448800@artincept.com
SUMMARY:CROSSROADS
DESCRIPTION:UPCOMING SHOW \n \n  \nCROSSROADS – ON THE TIPPING POINT\nDesigned and Edited by Prima Kurien\nExhibiting Artists: Abhiskek Dodiya | Brojeswer Mondal | Cyrus | Pankaj Chouhan | Parul Sharma | Ram Dongre | Rinku Chaudhary | Santanu Dey | Savitha Ravi | Sunil Yadav | Viswanath Kuttum \nThe exhibition showcases the evolution of each artist\, whose journey has been closely connected with our vision.\n“Crossroads” launches our new gallery space in Gurgaon that is dedicated to building a vibrant art community in the millennium city. Meticulously curated to communicate our journey of growth\, commitment\, and passion\, the show features 11 artists\, many who have been with us since our inception in 2020. \nThese artists\, who started as emerging talent\, are now at the “tipping point” of launching themselves as mid-career artists. Experience their journey of self-discovery\, vulnerability\, and perseverance\, culminating in expressions that truly define their uniqueness\, strength\, and commitment to the future of art. We are immensely proud of each of their individual journeys and are excited to invite you to experience this beautiful and thoughtful show that will truly move you. \nThe exhibition also serves as a testament to the dynamic interplay between form and substance\, inviting viewers to witness the transformation of abstract ideas into concrete artistic expressions.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/crossroads/
LOCATION:227\, South Point Mall\, Golf Course Road\, Gurugram\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Crossroad-Poster-Square_400.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240405T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240422T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20240320T073218Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240415T120238Z
UID:44976-1712314800-1713812400@artincept.com
SUMMARY:TERRA
DESCRIPTION:TERRA\nCurated by Prima Kurien\nParticipating artists:\nDhaivat Shah l Kumar Misal l Nishchay Thakur l Yash Desai l Zainul Abdeen \nCrust. Let us begin with a provocation: There is no imaginative leap of aesthetic transcendence that waits around to surprise us when we stand before the artworks presented  here. A serrated scrubland of photographs\, prints\, and mixed-media objects\, we are instead introduced to a landscape of disinterred artefacts—talismans caked in mud\, soil\, terra that are equally acute as ecological relics of our time\, as well as philosophically obscure regarding their artistic purpose. This exhibition\, with its empire of geotic territories\, conspires to navigate us through a terrain of environmental speculations\, shifts\, and severances; it is an address to our damaging footprint that has parasitically settled onto terra firma. Peeling away layers of urban settlement and industrial antagonism\, this showcase of artworks leads us to the borders of human intervention and natural phenomenon—a preternatural disquietude where greed and violence carve out an impossibly hostile terrain of biological disaffections and disasters. In encountering such artistic practices\, we find ourselves in the throes of an alienated surrounding that is keen to let us walk around\, only barefoot.   \nMantle. With the formal and conceptual motifs of Dhaivat Shah\, Kumar Misal\, Nishchay  Thakur\, Yash Desai\, and Zainul Abdeen\, we are sprung onto an artistic intent that inexhaustibly ploughs through the surface and depths of the Earth. It is a resilient marriage of form and  pigment speculating upon a tormented landscape that is slowly (yet surely) challenging the terrans and their anthropocentrism. We encounter an archive of gashes and marks—from Dhaivat’s aggressive yet mediated act of altering the representation of landscape in  photography\, to Zainul’s nomado-artistic performance of interacting with seeds\, dust\, barley\, worms\, sand\, and other agrarian ephemera—this is an ontological dance of graphite and pencil that acknowledges a planetary collapse; this is Titian’s unequivocal The Rape of Europa\, an all  too familiar mythology of soil versus blood. Thrust upon a feral existentialism where natural rejuvenation is replaced with foreign hostility\, Kumar’s expressive woodcuts—adversarial hybrid forms that are of the land\, for the land—and Nishchay and Yash’s interpretive abstractions that grieve the loss of our pastoral memory understand the fraught\, even militant aesthetic that defines our terran ecology today. It is the recognition of a tipping point\, an indignant augury of environmental collapse lest we mend our ways.  \nCore. These are artworks that therefore settle on a plane of immanence—an immersion\, an  introspection that no longer refuses to realise the sullying touch humans have left on Terra.  Against our superficial and immediate conveniences\, this exhibition instigates to decipher seismic shifts\, ecological pasts\, and inventive futures that remain undiluted in the passionate artistic visions on display here. This is a treasure hunter’s shipwreck; a glinting  pearl of hope hidden behind the pessimism of whirlpools and thunderstorms where Terra’s  artists embody Italo Calvino’s Mr. Palomar when he says:   \n‘It is only after you have come to know the surface of things… that you can venture to  seek what is underneath. But the surface of things is inexhaustible.’   \nWritten by Shankar Tripathi
URL:https://artincept.com/event/44976/
LOCATION:Shridharani Gallery\, Triveni Kala Sangam\, Mandi House\, New Delhi\, 110001\, India
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/SAVE-THE-DATE-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240303T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240310T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20240222T102202Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240319T193127Z
UID:43853-1709463600-1710097200@artincept.com
SUMMARY:INCEPTION GRANT FINALISTS SHOW 2024
DESCRIPTION:4DSCF197319DSCF199431067DSCF199510ADSCF1941DSCF19625112DSCF1995                    \n\n                                    \n            \n        \n        \nINCEPTION GRANT FINALISTS SHOW 2024 \nArt Incept is pleased to announce the fourth edition of Inception Grant\, bringing together a group of 16 emerging artists\, showcasing multifaceted narratives under the lens of varied creative expressions. \n  \nInception Grant Finalists \nAashish Moga | Abhishek Chakraborty | Aditya Puthur | Agwma Basumatari | liactuallee | Oliva Saha| Poorvi Sultania | Pratap Manna | Rajat Kumar | Saadia Batool | Sakshi Kasar | Salar Marri | Samiran Dey | Sanal Pt | Yash Desai | Zainul Abdeen \n  \nThe Inception Grant\, initiated in 2020 in response to the challenges faced by emerging artists during Covid\, has evolved into a significant stepping stone for South Asian artists\, receiving over 1\,000 applications annually. More than a financial aid\, the grant provides access to our mentors and curators\, facilitating year-long development for awardees. \nIn an exciting addition\, Art Incept introduced the Inception Grant for Art Writers in 2023\, expanding our commitment to fostering diverse voices in the art world. This new initiative complements our mission by supporting emerging art writers in South Asia\, providing them with a platform to explore and articulate the evolving landscape of contemporary art. \nHaving awarded 11 grants and year-long mentorship programs since 2020\, we proudly collaborate with esteemed institutions such as Triveni Kala Sangam and the Amar Nath Sehgal Foundation\, amplifying the grant’s impact. As part of the Inception Grant\, we present the Tacita Dean Award\, selected by renowned visual artist Ms. Dean.  \nArt Incept’s aim remains to foster fresh\, compelling narratives from across South Asia\, shaping the future of contemporary art.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/inception-grant-2024/
LOCATION:Triveni Kala Sangam
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/PUBLIC-INVITE-.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240201T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240204T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20240125T065154Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240129T124629Z
UID:43212-1706785200-1707073200@artincept.com
SUMMARY:India Art Fair 2024
DESCRIPTION:In a State of Flux\nCurated by Prima Kurien\, \nAn exhibit that has brought together distinct visual vocabularies to illustrate the meaning of home\, displacement and migration. Every facet of imagery reflects an artist’s definition of environment and their own interactive function in it. Encouraging us to delve deeper into the complex ideas of shifting cities\, evolving domestic spaces and their impact on the human spirit and mind. \nThere is an innate need to tell a story of a world that was left behind and how its remnants exist in the present. Ram Dongre’s canvases speak of mural traditions that celebrate the wealth of vernacular practices pervading generations emphasising on an intuitive relationship between forms and intangible stories\, whereas Viswanath Kuttum’s creative process delves into the idea of folktales native to the land of Andamans\, a cacophony of forms and ideas that have evolved and mutated with his shift to the metropolis. \nMemory plays an important role in each artwork\, as encapsulated by Ayushi Ojha’s work dissecting the memory of oceanic ecosystems while Santanu Dey’s artworks are visual homages to the might of nature with poetic undertones. These poetic reveries are felt even more deeply in the intricately carved marble works by Cyrus emulating pieces belonging to the lands of yore. \nIn the odyssey to narrate the stories of their surroundings\, Pankaj Chouhan and Brojeswer Mondal view the transient essence of the topographic surfaces as part of their visual vocabulary. Similarly\, Sunil Yadav juxtaposes his perceptions of bucolic settings against cityscapes in his geometric mappings. \nConversely\, going inward Rinku Choudhary’s figurations are firmly planted in the surreal world\, purely cerebral in nature. Subsequently\, this exploration of the inner mind is illustrated through minimalistic drawings by Parul Sharma. \nEncapsulating each artist’s journey\, be it in the corporeal world or metaphysical one\, the\nexhibit ‘In a State of Flux’ consciously deciphers and delineates the power of visual\nstorytelling – unravelling the unique and the universal through the lens of ten individual\nvoices. \nWritten by Juhi Mathur \n  \nCLICK HERE TO SEE THE CATALOGUE FOR “IN A STATE OF FLUX” \n 
URL:https://artincept.com/event/india-art-fair-2024/
LOCATION:NSIC Exhibition Complex\, Okhla Phase III\, Okhla Industrial Estate\, New Delhi\, India
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/WhatsApp-Image-2024-01-25-at-3.35.27-PM.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240129T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20240215T183000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20240118T080401Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240129T123432Z
UID:43083-1706526000-1708021800@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Memory Keepers II
DESCRIPTION:As part of the IAF Parallel\, presenting seven emerging women artists who explore the essence of nostalgia through their contemporary practices. Each artist\, with a distinctive approach\, unfolds the memories\nand experiences that have uniquely shaped her. \nWhat distinguishes this exhibition is the individualistic use of materials and processes employed by each artist. These range from stitching metal sheets to employing cyanotype printing with embroidery\, welding metal to construct scaffolding that symbolizes the coexistence of order and chaos\, engaging in delicate paper cutting\, to using old tetra packs as unconventional printing plates. \nExplore the world full of distinctive creative expressions coming together! \n  \nCLICK HERE TO SEE THE CATALOGUE FOR MEMORY KEEPERS II  \n 
URL:https://artincept.com/event/memory-keepers-ii/
LOCATION:227\, South Point Mall\, Golf Course Road\, Gurugram\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Kishwar_Kiani____He_made_me_do_it__-_SITE3-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20231207T100000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20231210T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20231118T084147Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231127T114306Z
UID:41968-1701943200-1702234800@artincept.com
SUMMARY:WORLD WITHIN WORLD WITHOUT II - MUMBAI
DESCRIPTION:17 contemporary emerging artists respond to the idea of home and the world.  \nCo-curated by Prima Kurien & Rahul Kumar \nExplore the essence of the ever-expanding universe and the interplay between the material and spiritual realms through the lens of contemporary art at our upcoming exhibition\, “World Within…World Without II.” \nThe exhibition delves into the fundamental reality of the cosmos\, shaped by the forces of nature and the profound impact of external influences on our inner world. It contemplates the coexistence of matter and soul\, acknowledging the eternal interdependence and perpetual collision between the outward and inward dimensions of our existence. \nEarly-career artists\, breaking free from traditional norms\, present a diverse array of contemporary art practices. Liberated from conventional influences\, their work reflects an immediacy of response\, displaying vulnerability\, fragility\, and rawness. These artists embark on a journey to find their unique language\, challenging the established norms of the art world and society at large. \nIn its second edition\, the exhibition responds to the dynamic city of Mumbai\, a phenomenon defined by its resilience\, cultural richness\, and distinctive dichotomies. The artworks capture the city’s acceptance\, hope\, and all-pervasive optimism\, mirroring its status as a cultural melting-pot and a highly charged space.  \nJoin us on this exploration of inner and outer worlds\, where art becomes a medium to understand\, question\, and celebrate the intricate dance of existence.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/wwww-mumbai-2023/
LOCATION:IFBE\, 10-12\, Calicut Rd\, Ballard Estate\,\, Mumbai\, Maharashtra\, 400001\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Ram-Dongre-1-scaled.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20231103T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20231106T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20231020T063103Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231025T074928Z
UID:41652-1699009200-1699297200@artincept.com
SUMMARY:The Residue of Space and Body
DESCRIPTION:The Inception Grant Solo Show by Yashwant Singh | Curated by Rahul Kumar \nIn partnership with Triveni Kala Sangam \n  \nIt is fascinating to consider the idea of space\, and when does it really occur. Does it have to be\ncontained in physical boundaries\, or could it be a metaphysical idea? For Yashwant Singh space is\nan ever-changing continuum. He believes that humans are witness to this phenomenon. Having\ngrown up in urban cities and small homes with paucity of space\, he desired to engage with\nlocales where nature took over what was abandoned by the humans. In the process of this\nencounter and dialogue\, Singh found himself a part of the space. A meditative phenomenon\, he\nceased to see himself as a foreign identity. And in doing so\, his art has elements of romanticized\nreminisces of the past\, the déjà vu. He relates his body with the objects and space around it. He\nfinds a rhythm and coordination while wondering\, both physically and mentally. The filtration\nand imagination lead to his imagery where elements from nature often shape space with his\nown body. The use of twigs and grass allows him to explore the possibilities of his medium.\nThere is uncertainty and an unplanned approach through the very process he uses to create his\nwork. The physical manifestation for Singh is through his deliberate bodily gestures. The\nelement of chance is also akin to the very existence of the grass and bushes that grow\nseasonally. They are unplanned\, constantly changing\, and seem to exist without a particular\npurpose. The space they occupy are less interfered with by humans and they largely remain\nunnoticed. Singh creates unique mono-prints in real-size using these found elements. The\nprocess of image making for him is intuitive. The use of soot and carbon as a remanent of fire\nhave natural connotations of the residue\, the distilled matter on one side and the circular nature\nof our cosmos on the other. Metaphorically\, it is a confluence of nature\, body\, and space. The\nmonochromatic works of Yashwant Singh encourage viewers to experience the idea of\noverlapping occurrences and inter-relationships of space and body. \n– Rahul Kumar
URL:https://artincept.com/event/the-inception-grant-solo-show-by-yashwant-singh/
LOCATION:Shridharani Gallery\, Triveni Kala Sangam\, Mandi House\, New Delhi\, 110001\, India
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/yashwant-website-photo-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20231103T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20231106T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20231020T062924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231025T065919Z
UID:41650-1699009200-1699297200@artincept.com
SUMMARY:We Live To Fight
DESCRIPTION:The Inception Grant solo show by Md. Zobayer Hossain Joati | Curated by Prima Kurien \nIn partnership with Triveni Kala Sangam \n  \nTo say that Zobayer’s photographs merely document a sparring culture that has gripped the\nunderbelly of Bangladesh would at best deliver a meek punch to the cheek; the knockout jab\,\nhowever\, comes when we realise what his images truly contain: an unbridled and volatile\ntension that has long gone unnoticed. \nNo more. With We Live to Fight\, Zobayer introduces us to the sweaty and dingy underground\nworld of flexed muscles\, black-and-blue bruises\, and cold staredowns – it is a spectacle\, a\nfloodlit circus of hidden arenas and second-rate halls where we glimpse the fighter in a constant\nstate of preparation for the fight of its life. These are figures that rarely sit idle\, and Zobayer’s\ncamera suspends such moments of exaggerated movement\, teasing the viewer that is ready to\nask for more. In such brooding and dramatic documents\, there emerges an implicit\nunderstanding between us and the photograph: both acknowledge the catastrophic obviousness\nwith which a fight shall end\, and yet\, Zobayer holds back from letting us see the finishing blow.\nHis images spiral us into a rancorous frenzy\, asking\, demanding\, to ‘let them have at it’; behind\ndrawn curtains and locked doors\, we are left to our baser instincts\, and this is where he zooms\nin for the bigger picture. \nZobayer’s camera remains sharply trained on the calculated and reactionary manoeuvres that\nare orchestrated in front of us. The black-and-white photographs – emphasising the timeless\nnature of such a sport and pastime – introduce us to artists\, boxers\, and wrestlers that not only\nhold our attention in a chokehold\, but also honour a legacy of martial arts that has dotted the\nBangladeshi landscape for decades. It is a landscape that continues to nurture traditional\npractices like ‘lathi-khela\,’ ‘boli-khela\,’ and ‘bhuttan\,’ along with modern day boxing and\nwrestling. Gore and glory go hand-in-hand; this is a world where mediated aggression becomes\na source of livelihood\, of upliftment\, of safety\, of pleasure. Zobayer’s images leave us with an\nintimacy of a life that exists beyond a scoreboard. It is what makes his practice dramatically\ninspiring\, for these are images that provide us with a courtside view of the lives of the fighters\,\nand not just the game. No longer impassive and anonymous\, and surrounded by chants and\ncheers (and boos and hisses equally)\, we see the godly deliverance of not a fighter\, but the\nfighter. It is the very story of a resilient nation fighting for its place; a story Zobayer narrates with\nprofound conviction. \nLet’s get ready to rumble\nShankar Tripathi\, 2023. \n  \nThe Exhibition will move to Art Incept\, Gurugram and will be on display until 25th November 2023.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/we-live-to-fight/
LOCATION:Shridharani Gallery\, Triveni Kala Sangam\, Mandi House\, New Delhi\, 110001\, India
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/10-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20231001T110000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20231009T190000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20230907T075638Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230911T063037Z
UID:41112-1696158000-1696878000@artincept.com
SUMMARY:The Love Songs of Errantry : Brojeshwar Mondal and Parul Sharma
DESCRIPTION:Curated by Prima Kurien \n  \n“To paint- as some do\, even today\, taking from colour which\, once applied to the canvas transcends meaning and dissipates our memories- is\, one might say nothing but itself: one imagines that here the immediate exists\, here the veil has been torn open.” \n(Yves Bonnefoy\, “On Painting and Poetry\, on Anxiety and Peace”\, The Love and Lure of Painting) \n  \nThe representation of the exterior world is one of the oldest obsessions of humankind\, rivalling hunger\, thirst\, and procreation\, as it is the closest ally to the “self” that seeks its identity in an individual\, in relation to nature and culture. It is evident that one cannot be exposed to the “self” without exertion. Hence\, one must draw a line to tear through the veil… to break free (from the mirror that imprisons and limits the understanding of the world and hence of ourselves)- to trace life with an astute eye of an errant- dissecting time\, devouring appearances\, and etching the partially-realised and the momentary into visual memory. \nContemporary artists Brojeshwar Mondal and Parul Sharma break free from visual apathy through their explorations of errantry. Mondal commits to it by venturing outside of human settlements- into the wilderness of the lush mountainous landscapes of Siliguri (West Bengal) and patches of verdure in the bustling city of Kolkata (West Bengal). He becomes a soothsayer for his culture(s)- who must dive and divine the often unseen and unperceived moments of nature. Sharma on the other hand\, explores her errantry by scaling the architecture of the city\, to leave behind the pervasive human presence that threatens to engulf her- her ascension into errantry as inevitable as the dystopian future of the city that she leaves behind. \nThe distinct trajectories these artists choose are not the results of detachment from dominant narratives on art or a state of rootlessness but of awareness and acceptance of their relative position as errant within the changing natural and social landscapes of the spaces they inhabit. \n  \nBROJESWAR MONDAL  \nTime present and time past \nAre both perhaps present in time future\, \nAnd time future contained in time past. \nIf all time is eternally present \nAll time is unredeemable. \nWhat might have been is an abstraction \nRemaining a perpetual possibility \nOnly in a world of speculation. \n(T.S Eliot\, “Burnt Norton”\, Four Quartets) \n  \nBrojeswar Mondal (b. 1994\, Siliguri\, West Bengal) delves into remnants and remainders of nature that the uninitiated mind sees but chooses not to absorb or delve into. Traces of nature are committed to paper\, in watercolour\, acrylic\, aerosol spray\, ink and pigment\, often found floating in a vast\, white space. The artist invites us into his carefully curated memories of the fleeting and often disregarded phenomena of nature – the silhouettes of mountains and trees exposed by a sudden burst of light in a nocturnal sky\, the transient colours and reflections of a fast-flowing river\, the constantly shifting sand banks of rainfed rivers\, the moisture collecting on a blade of grass at risk of disappearing into the wet ground below- all find expression in his world(s). \nSuch compositions invite the eye to step into them\, shake off the dust of the mundane and take a stroll through the artist’s visual memories… to give in to the temptation of skipping from one abstract form to another\, of gently tip-toeing on filigreed lines and dewy drops\, to wade into flowing fields of colour\, stop occasionally to dip into vaguely familiar references\, and attempt at holding on to the fringes of meaning he scatters across the composition\, only to find that they slip out of our mind’s grasp like grains of sand\, once we emerge out of his world(s). The instinct to chase after patterns and meaning has the eye wander further into his world(s)-the perfect lure to hold us enraptured\, a bit longer… and to commit to his errantry-a search for purity in nature. \nBy refusing to provide any preemptable strategy or path into his compositions\, the artist seeks to intervene in the meaning-making process. He plays with our inherent need for meaning-making that ends\, despite all our efforts\, with us giving in to his gambit. Upon relinquishing power\, he takes us gently through the rabbit hole\, across lush\, green paddy fields\, into unusual streams and rivers\, over flickering mountainous horizons\, beside remnants of trees and near dewy blades of grass…to a state of being where only our eye exists- a place where everyone travels to but doesn’t quite arrive at. \nCan meaning be nailed down fully and completely\, when it loses its solid anchor- context? In Mondal’s work where only time exists\, it spreads itself out\, daring us to examine the abstract title\, limitless white space\, decontextualised forms\, lines\, and vibrant colours closely.  There is no immediacy in his work\, only the desire for the immediate. In a culture where we are constantly bombarded with visual images and patterns\, Mondal through his explorations of nature\, provides us an absolution from our habit of lazy looking by focusing on the immediate- that which runs the risk of changing. \nMondal’s compositions are slippery paths into his world(s). He tears open the torments of our time… that in looking for meaning and in the search for patterns or pre-existing imageries\, we risk losing the unity-the moment in its entirety\, the only place in which to truly live; that in sketching\, drawing\, painting\, as in breathing\, thinking and creating\, we bring into existence\, a power misperceived\, or partial in understanding- that a landscape is never complete\, that an untrained eye absorbs only but one perspective\, whereas multiple exist simultaneously in a given moment …and that we all limp perilously on the crutches of an incomplete understanding of the world(s) we inhabit and exploit. \n  \nPARUL SHARMA \nAnd I have known the eyes already\, known them all— \nThe eyes that fix you in a formulated phrase\, \nAnd when I am formulated\, sprawling on a pin\, \nWhen I am pinned and wriggling on the wall\, \nThen how should I begin \nTo spit out all the butt-ends of my days and ways? \n(T.S Eliot\, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock) \n   \nA perennial wanderer in cosmopolitan Delhi- a city brimming with and blaring of human presence\, Parul Sharma could have filled her compositions with cramped city views and loud human presence. Instead\, she captures the city- with its partially completed buildings\, its sparse verdure\, its smoggy skyline\, and evidence of social and economic disparities of her time- from the quiet windows and the immuring walls of her home and studio. The only human presence in these intimate settings is the artist herself- pinned down and wriggling on the floor. \nIn Sharma’s current body of work\, the eye saunters into the compositions with no sense of urgency. It casually traces the contours of floating forms\, intercepts and dodges the sharp lines that cleave the space into walls\, a floor\, a roof\, doors\, and windows\, to approach and then poke at the light and dark shadows of the lattice window to turn and find-to its surprise\, a struggling life pinned to the floor. The erratic beating of its heart is the only sound in the space. The pinned wings\, upon realising the presence of an examiner\, renew its efforts to free themselves. \nThe artist offers no gentle path to break out of her compositions. To escape the sound and sight of the pinned and struggling life\, one must clamber frantically up the sharp-edged crevices and corners and slip\, try and wiggle out of the shadows of the lattice windows and get stuck\, slip off the curtains to understand that it is only by scaling up the walls and clutching at the strands of breeze or on an errant cloud that one leaves behind the thwarted human spirit\, and the haze of the cosmopolitan city and its suppressive codes. \nFor Sharma\, architecture is a measure of the fragmented and conflicting worldview it frames. It encloses within it\, the artist’s memories\, fears\, insecurities\, and ever-increasing resentment towards moral and social codes of her time. The architectural features of her confinement provide Sharma\, with an imagination that-though partial and limited\, tempts her to scale up the city -of which she is a resenting resident\, to seek out the wilderness. \nIn Sharma’s compositions\, the angst-ridden creative mind caged within the social codes of a cosmopolitan city that is hurtling headlong into a dystopian future\, taps incessantly at the windowpanes\, pecks away at the lattices of light and dark\, beats her wings against the walls\, and scales up the walled and congested humanscape of Delhi. The golden bird with its wings of gold\, from the prodigious Rabindranath Tagore’s poem\, Dui Pankhi (Two Birds) breaks free of its confinement. In these attempts\, Sharma is an errant who captures songs of freedom within her windows and embraces every hope of verdure that gnaws away at her confinement. \nSharma belongs to a cosmopolitan imagination that moves beyond buildings\, cities\, and continents.  Home and belonging are equated with confinement\, displacement\, and anxiety in her work.  Through errantry\, Sharma frees herself from the constraints of belonging- finding her “self”\, away from the confines of her home and her city. Her work in this context\, offers a critique of the notions of home and belonging\, both often equated with stasis\, stability\, and security. \nIn the bustling capital of the nation-state\, Sharma brings forth the loneliness of the cosmopolitan life where malcontent\, fatigue\, excess and social inequalities malinger and corrode the human spirit. The overwhelming question then\, as the poet T.S Eliot poses in The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock is whether we dare to amble further into Sharma’s compositions\, to break through the veils of concrete\, bricks\, steel\, and glass\, to scale up the pervasive humanscape around us\, to discover epiphanies of our own\, or do we choose to turn back to retreat to our confines! \n  \n–  Shruthi Issac \nShruthi Issac spearheads the museum initiatives as Director- Collection Museum Initiatives and Curator – The Roohi & Rajiv Savara Family Collection at the New Delhi-based The Savara Foundation for the Arts. She completed her Masters in Museum Studies from The Johns Hopkins University – USA and her M. Phil and Masters degrees in French and Francophone Studies from the Jawaharlal Nehru University\, New Delhi.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/the-love-songs-of-errantry-brojeshwar-mondal-and-parul-sharma/
LOCATION:Bikaner House\, Pandara Road\, India Gate\, New Delhi\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20230802T180000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20230810T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20230708T105756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230804T150018Z
UID:39514-1690999200-1691697600@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Where do I belong…home. heart. history.
DESCRIPTION:Solo show by Savitha Ravi\, curated by Rahul Kumar. \n\n        \n            \n                                                \n\n                                        \n                        savitha and ariba solo show preview images (1)savitha and ariba solo show preview images (10)savitha and ariba solo show preview images (9)where di I belong\, exhibition display image 5where di I belong\, exhibition display image 6savitha and ariba solo show preview images (5)savitha and ariba solo show preview images (4)savitha and ariba solo show preview images (3)savitha and ariba solo show preview images (2)where di I belong\, exhibition display image 13where di I belong\, exhibition display image 18                    \n\n                                    \n            \n        \n        \n\n  \nThe literal sense of the word place has been interpreted in many different ways. It is multidimensional\, often complex construct that is used to characterize the relationship between people and spatial settings. It also denotes unique characteristics that some geographic locations have and some do not. Expanding this to the realms of psychology and imagination\, it is a feeling or perception held by people\, interestingly\, not by the place itself. \n  \nWhat makes space a place?  \n  \nOne of the oldest tenets of science and geography\, place is defined as “a space with meaning”. An area having unique qualities with interconnected associations. Further\, a sense of place is the emotion someone attaches to an area based on their experiences. Place can be applied at any scale and does not necessarily have to be fixed in either time or space. \n  \nSavitha Ravi grappled with the question of where she belongs. Having migrated from her birth-city and eventually settling in a whole new place\, she often wondered where she came from. What are the cultural attributes\, art and design aesthetics of that place? And\, what does it even mean to belong to a geographical location? She discovered her family native place. The ancestral home now ceases to exist and there is nothing that remains to call her own. Her physical possessions are now all in a city that has no historical connections to her family. As such she finds herself dealing with a deep sense of rootlessness. She feels like a sort of a nomad who built her life ground up\, severing all her family histories. For Savitha\, this obsession to find a home for herself lead to her art practice. She feels most at home while creating. The very process allows her the search for space\, having reasons to belong\, and establishing attachments. For her\, the sense of belonging first comes with a place\, then its people\, their culture\, and eventually the habits we form. It is but poetic circle of life – with no worldly possessions\, one gets on the path of discovery and accumulation\, and then restart with nothing again. And in that context\, one is constantly trying to find the place where one belongs with respect to the place where we once belonged. \n  \nFinding forms in the in-between \nThe desire to find her one’s place is a powerful force that drives Savitha to explore and create. Her print making process is a unique one\, where she uses discarded tetra pack to make ‘plates’. The imagery often has references of her home town\, the house of her grandfather. She finds herself in a dreamworld\, suspended in a desire that cannot quite take precise shape or form. This sense of being caught ‘between worlds’ inspired her to create large-scale scrolls on cloth. She used each and every plate she has ever made to print a myriad of images. The prints contain various patterns and forms\, each one representing a moment in her journey towards self-discovery\, or maybe writing an autobiography\, one page at a time. Are the works a reflection of liminal spaces\, yearning to take form? \n  \nThere are several metaphorical engagements in the current body of work by Savitha. By the canal invites viewers to experience the fleeting moments through her eyes and a reminder of the transience nature of life\, just like the flowing water. Reflections of houses are mere illusions\, almost melting away in the ripples of canal water. Feeling of nostalgia and unattainability are at play. Hiraeth by the Canal explores the longing for a home that never existed. Is ‘home’ a place for solace or escape? \n  \nSavitha skillfully presents morphed impressions\, often juxtaposing the urban reality she is living with imagined views of her village. Morphing realities is about the change in the view outside the window of her studio\, albeit seen through the lens of an imagined world. Yet another work uses traditional games from her childhood. Layered with architectural associations\, the repetitive patterns refer to the act of playing the games requiring taking turns and repetition to win. The act of everyday commute also became a source of archive for Savitha. The city is in a constant state of metamorphosis. Over the years\, sometimes within days\, new things appear and what existed recedes into nothingness. The familiar things that gave her a sense of reassurance no longer exists. And what gets created in her works now is dipping into her vivid memory that allows for the emotion to come through more than the actual object as it was. On the way then is neither a documentation\, nor a dream. It is neither imagined\, nor real. Much like her overall practice\, Savitha takes us on a tour to her family’s heritage\, making us view her world through the lens of nostalgia\, and constantly interrupting us with her contemporary realities. \n  \nRahul Kumar \nJuly 2023
URL:https://artincept.com/event/where-do-i-belonghome-heart-and-history/
LOCATION:Shridharani Gallery\, Triveni Kala Sangam\, Mandi House\, New Delhi\, 110001\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20230802T180000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20230810T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20230708T105526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230804T150057Z
UID:39512-1690999200-1691697600@artincept.com
SUMMARY:The Wound Is The Place Where Light Enters...
DESCRIPTION:Solo Show by Ariba Akhlaque | Curated by Prima Kurien | In partnership with Triveni Kala Sangam \n\n        \n            \n                                                \n\n                                        \n                        ariba preview image 4ariba preview image 3ariba preview image 2ariba preview image 1ariba solo show display images 4ariba solo show display images 1ariba solo show display images 3ariba solo show display images 6ariba solo show display images 2ariba solo show display images 3                    \n\n                                    \n            \n        \n        \n  \nThe wound is the place\, where light enters… \n“I said: What about my heart?\nHe said: Tell me what you hold inside it? \nI said: Pain and sorrow.\nHe said: Stay with it. The wound is the place where the Light enters you.”\n-Rumi \nIn between remembrance and loss\, a consciousness exists shaped by cultural background\, personal\nexperience & social influence – Ariba’s work stems from here. \nThis body of work celebrates memories of the bygone as well as imagined archives created by\npersonal objects – a dried rose\, an old postcard\, or a broken tile -that simultaneously trace\, grief\, loss\,\nand celebration- the language of nostalgia. \nAriba Akhlaque (1994)\, is a multi-disciplinary artist based in Karachi\, Pakistan. She graduated from\nthe Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture\, majoring in printmaking and new media art. \nShe has exhibited widely- at Haam Gallery in Lahore\, Chronos exhibition- in Brazil\, Art Incept grant\nexhibition- in New Delhi\, amongst others.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/solo-show-by-ariba-akhlaque/
LOCATION:Triveni Kala Sangam
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230328T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230502T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20230613T022117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230613T034555Z
UID:38166-1680003000-1683050400@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Unseen City
DESCRIPTION:Previous image\nNext image \nOutsider-Insider \nSantanu Dey refers to himself as a triple migrant. From Calcutta to Baroda and then to Delhi\, he is familiar with three cities. This has not caused him misery\, but joyful discovery. His life\, as his art reveals\, was enriched\, not restricted\, with each transition. He grew up in Calcutta\, studied art in Baroda and eventually\, began working and living in Delhi. As he ‘breathed in’ each new location\, he began to metabolize it in his mind\, peel it off\, slough it off its stereotypes and condense it into a place uniquely his own. Such realisations have driven him to become a spectator from the edges as an outsider-insider\, always watching and commenting. His latest piece of art is more rebuke than ode to the metropolis. \nSantanu adeptly anchors himself as the urban sutradhar\, the narrator. To do this\, he weaves his migrant-self with the use of scrolls. For the first\, his ploy is using soft\, white dhoti lengths. Dhotis are not as common as in cities as they once were. People wear them mostly for formal occasions. Who else can relate to a dhoti then\, but a migrant who is reminded of someplace else? \nSimilarly\, his nonsensical scrolls convey an urban buzz\, evidence of being alive but not yet pounded into the melting pot. Santanu then assigns the role of cradling a scroll to these dhotis-the sort used by ancient story tellers. The dhoti scrolls in this series can therefore also be valued as self-portraits of him at work. \nBotanical and industrial residues converse with him eloquently throughout. Santanu deploys carbon black from printing and photocopying machines in various works\, combining it with fine line drawing. He forages for this material from neigbourhoods far from his home\, asking facilities to keep them safely for him to collect. What seems to be a charcoal pencil in the hands of an artist are often particles of pollution\, contained as a second life inside his work. In one of these\, a beautiful river is interrupted by man-made effluents in an ink\, foil and carbon shimmery sludgy. An emissions cloud erupts over the countryside. For Santanu\, such materials are more than just an artist’s tool. They are a means to peel off and examine the ironic history of most major metropolises. In work after work\, his use of discards memorialize the origin of cities as polluting industrial stretches\, vital for production and economic growth. Chucks of these were eventually cannibalised and cleaned up for the newly emerging urbanites to flourish in. Gentrification drove industry to the edges since it was now seen as an urban contamination. Yet\, as Santanu’s work so eloquently brings to the fore\, effluence can be hidden\, but it isn’t easy to abolish. The planet’s resources continue to be strained\, for people shall consume. \nThrough visual cues\, Santanu repeatedly emphasizes the idea of urban dystopia. Colour is his biggest tool- he barely uses any\, stripping the landscape of an important attribute. He incorporates the materiality of the city into several pieces–by using archival printing ink and industrial paint\, for example. His application of such atypical artistic materials is recognition of them as building blocks of any metropolis. By repeatedly using these in multiple ways\, he imagines primacy for manufacturing again\, a punchy re-think of drudgery and toil. \nSantanu’s use of materials encodes urban faultlines. A small paper work employs ‘titch buttons’ strewn in a cluster at the bottom. These buttons are the mechanisms that connect two pieces of fabric\, allowing them to form a whole. Yet\, they are “synthetic\,” as he refers to them\, similar to lab diamonds. In other works\, horizontal sheaths of gold foil scornfully symbolizes not desirable riches but in-your-face extravagance. As he sees it\, such luxurious luminosity is a mirage. It conceals the city’s daily filth and sweat\, it’s disorder and discordance\, the messiness that lights its fire every day. It tramples the vegetal forms that spring to life\, leaving behind their woody presence when their purpose is over. Through his work\, Santanu recovers space and legitimacy for multiple histories. This is the essence of his work: devotedly constructing other ecospheres. \n– Bharati Chaturvedi
URL:https://artincept.com/event/unseen-city/
LOCATION:Stir Gallery\, 2 North Drive\, DLF Chattarpur Farms\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230328T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230502T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20230605T053223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230605T092016Z
UID:37830-1680003000-1683050400@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Inception Grant Finalist Show 2023
DESCRIPTION:Previous image\n												Next image \nThe Inception Grant was set up to recognize and support young emerging talent in visual arts. \nThe Grant is open to contemporary artists between the ages of 21-35 years from South Asia with one category of the grant focused on India. The grant has been designed to be more than just financial aid to artists – awardees have access to our mentors and curators who assist them to develop their practice further through the year. \nWe have received more than 250 applications from all over India and this year we are honored to have the support of British-born visual artist\, Tacita Charlotte Dean CBE\, RA. Tacita is reviewing the shortlisted finalists to select the artist to get the Tacita Dean Inception Award 2023. The award comes with a cash grant\, a mentorship program by Art Incept\, and a solo show in 2023! \nOur internal jury will select a shortlist that will be presented at the Grant show in March 2022. Our jurors are Roobina Karode\, Manisha Parekh and Ranbir Kaleka.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/inception-grant-finalist-show-2023/
LOCATION:Stir Gallery\, 2 North Drive\, DLF Chattarpur Farms\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221210T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221211T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20221210T031328Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230605T052946Z
UID:28610-1670670000-1670796000@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Deconstructed Landscapes
DESCRIPTION:𝘊𝘰𝘮𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘵𝘰𝘨𝘦𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳 𝘪𝘴 𝘫𝘶𝘴𝘵 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘣𝘦𝘨𝘪𝘯𝘯𝘪𝘯𝘨… ⁣\n⁣\nDeconstructed Landscapes is a collaboration between four galleries\, Anant Art\, Art Incept\, Exhibit320\, and Latitude 28\, as a part of Triveni’s “Gallery Nights” weekend where galleries remain open till 10:00 pm. ⁣ \nA landscape is a relationship between the surrounding environment and the spectator. In essence\, it is a scene\, a synthesis of forms\, a reflection of the sociopolitical landscape\, and a dialogue that the observer establishes. It can also be an internal excavation of memories and experiences in one’s life. Thus landscapes cannot be defined or contained within strict parameters. Through the exploration of the artist’s imagination\, this exhibition brings together works that encourage the viewer to think beyond the implied etymological meaning of the word. Through their different perspectives\, the artists create an array of scapes that reflect their internal and external understandings of their surroundings and the time in which they live. \n⁣
URL:https://artincept.com/event/deconstructed-landscapes/
LOCATION:Shridharani Gallery\, Triveni Kala Sangam\, Mandi House\, New Delhi\, 110001\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221112
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221221
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20221102T074313Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230608T120514Z
UID:24820-1668211200-1671580799@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Spaced Out
DESCRIPTION:Previous image\n												Next image \ncontemporary artists exploring space as a metaphor \nArchitecture is a practice of space making. It is simply creating inhabitable enclosures\, and yet it is layered with multitudes of contexts. Layout and form\, material and textures\, relation to the location of the build structure\, and the very purpose it serves\, all contribute to the understanding and perceptions of space. Architecturally\, there are elements of science and maths\, symbolism\, and collective cultures\, that influence the articulation of a constructed ecosystem. But extending the‘spatial’ conversation beyond the strict confines of the discipline\, it opens up a whole new world of imagination. \nSpaced out conceptually explores the idea of space and associated emotions in distinct ways. Multidisciplinary artists respond to and investigate concepts\, express ideas\, and depict notions of how and when the association of architectural space becomes a metaphor and when does it take thereal form. Practitioners using a wide variety of media and processes present a cohesive\, yet multifaceted works of art. \nSpace awareness begins earlier than we think. It often grows out of mythic memory\, rituals\, and sometimes merely with thought. I find myself fortunate to work with investigators who are engaged with these interests. They provoke concepts of space-meaning through depicting its ideas in theirrespective creations. It is also my hope that the cross-sectioning of the choice of artists and art works will speak for itself\, and become the basis for further enquiry. The works transmit values of social\, psychological\, and spiritual\, which are virtually endless. \nWhat do we lose when we strip space of these meanings? \nAbhishek Dodiya uniquely layers his idiom by the use of scrap metal. He is rooted to both\, the shipbreaking yard at his home town in Bhavnagar and the family profession of fabricating welded iron furniture. This portrayal of dismantling and reconstruction carry forward the history of the material. Metal sheet that made an erstwhile ship\, now makes a house\, both as a metaphor and through the act of the artist’s hands. Debasish Mukherjee in contrast investigates the built environment\, strongly layered with socio-cultural fabric of the city of Banaras. He is engaged with the ideas of preserving memory through object making. He is himself intrigued with the starkness of the dualities that the ancient city beholds\, that of age-old history and the now\, of life that is constantly juxtaposed with death. His works puts in focus singular architectural elements that carry his personal nostalgia. \nThe play of light\, its simplicity and drama are captured in the graphite renditions of Dilip Chobisa. He explores the mystery to reveal the hidden forms\, distinguishing it from what is revealed. He consciously disregards the laws of architecture\, yet creates an order of intrigue and curiosity. His drawings are defined by light or the lack of it\, suggesting dark silences and pronounced emptiness\, challenging the limits of perception and makes visible the possibility of space beyond the definition. On the other hand\, M. Pravat has been exploring expressions of a city under construction. His interest in this subject comes particularly from the discord between the city as it appears in masterplans\, in popular desires\, and in contrast of the actual physical experience of it. He expressesthis dissonance we experience in our everyday lives with brutal intensity\, sometimes from the intimacy of a home or at an urban scale of the city itself. Textures and material processes are significant in the art of the Pravat. Through the systematic process of undoing and destruction\, heasks how could these forces be measured? \nMartand Khosla explores urban continuity and transformation\, as both complement and counter to his experience building in contemporary India. He initially pursued art to explore how construction- fuelled employment\, shapes identities and nostalgia. Situated as both participant and observer\, he employed tools of the State\, such as the ubiquitous rubber stamp\, to render its imprint on lives within traditional definitions of power and dispossession. His works traverse the lines between sculpture and object\, movement and remnant\, material and memory. Inspired by his studies of repetition and the human churning of industrialization\, he replicates the micro-processes of macro- construction. And simultaneously\, he moves from the lens of authoritarian power to its dispersion\, exploring the transformations that lay in between. Likewise\, Neelesh Yogi uses delicately formed paper sculptures. The objects created in his works are mostly man-made\, but often juxtapose the traditional with contemporary. The current series references the architecture of Bengal. Neelesh has explored the traditional buildings in the city\, in particular the home of Rabindranath Tagore. His works create a nostalgia by weaving architectural elements from the heritage sites of the city. The saturated blue tones achieved through cyanotype printing evokes a sense of darkness opening doors for interpretation of a silhouette or as a metaphor for degeneration of our cultural legacy. \nNeyeti Chada’s works are recordings of the basic formalism in the urban environment. Her practice extends to various mediums and formats\, from printmaking\, sculpture\, and photography to site- specific installations. The recent set of works is a series of collages featuring Balsa wood and Isograph pen on Paper\, looking into the metabolic character of a city. Like a breathing organism\, a city that is endlessly morphing and evolving. The works incorporate original photographs layered with drawings and materials such as balsa wood\, ink\, and Gouache. For Pratap Moray art is a means to document and contemplate the changing infrastructure and landscape of the city. He uses a range of mediums including archival ink\, engravings\, and digital photography to create his artworks. His preoccupation with Mumbai’s architecture began during his childhood when his family relocated tothe city. From congested lanes and tilted old buildings to the gentrification and displacement experienced by the city’s dwellers\, the subjects of his works are mostly inspired by his own experiences with the unique urban make-up of the city. \nMust space be an enclosed\, three dimensional one? Could a unidimensional wall denote space? \nCan space even be metaphysical? Can it be boundary less?Do the elements contained within an architectural creation evoke associations of it? \nHow would one react to the play of light within a given physical construct of space? \nDoes perspective play a role to view image of a room as multidimensional? \nCan memories of a lived experience create déjà vu and perception of the very space while being physically absent from it? Does scale hold significance in the context – astronomical\, earthly landscapes\, a building\, or anthill? \n…let us find out through the presentations at ‘spaced out…’ \n– Rahul Kumar
URL:https://artincept.com/event/spaced-out/
LOCATION:Stir Gallery\, 2 North Drive\, DLF Chattarpur Farms\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/DSCF3960-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220902
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220910
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20220818T010637Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230608T120454Z
UID:17973-1662076800-1662767999@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Songs From My Homeland…a memoir of life and rituals
DESCRIPTION:Previous image\n												Next image \nA solo show of Viswanath Kuttum\, curated by Rahul Kumar. \nViswanath Kuttum tells stories without ending them. His paintings places imagery in unique context that is at once familiar and strange. He was born and grew up in the Andamans at a time when the island state was still pristine and untouched by changes in the name of development. While cellular technology had entered the lives of the locals\, it had not taken over it. The everyday life\, celebrations during festivals and weddings\, rituals for death and birth\, they all became his key references. He reminiscences them with nostalgia in his art. \nKuttum began to work at a local auto-repair shop at a young age. He needed to financially support his family\, but he enjoyed the process of applying paint on repaired vehicles. He was also a keen participant in decorations at all the local festivities at his village. These activities proved to be the initial training ground for him for the arts. He candidly confesses having little interest in studies. This\, combined with a deep passion for drawing and painting made his choice easier for a career as an artist. Kuttum migrated to mainland India for higher studies against all odds. Settling down in the city was daunting and exciting at the same time. It was only natural for the fast-paced life and the urban environment to have a deep impact on the impressionable mind. His early work began to respond to this new life around him\, but deep within he yearned for the memories from his childhood. It was also his need to do something different. He found many of his contemporaries using the same point of reference in the art they produced. Politics and social structures of contemporary urban life played a significant role in his works then. However\, he questioned what was truly his own\, unique only to him. And this desire for ‘immediacy’ of inspiration took him back to his homeland. \nHis paintings are monochromatic with a pale\, yet restful background\, evoking a sense of warmth of the pleasant weather of his village. The minimalist and uncluttered works also refer to the unpolluted air he was used to. He began to create images of his homeland with enthusiasm to convey of its simplicity. The lifestyle may seem ‘backward’ but on closer inspection its magical qualities will reveal. The various rituals performed in his village are an ode to nature. One of the significant annual events involves a large-scale celebration with participation of friends and family alike. On the terrace of the house a clay pot with a rock is placed\, filled with rice-grains and turmeric. The pot is closed with a red cloth and covered with a basket. This ensemble remains untouched for the entire year\, after which all the old objects are put in the local lake and a new one is set up for the year to follow. This is accompanied with a customary dance performance by the men-folk of the house. Animal slaughter is an integral part of the culture. If the wishes come true\, a goat is offered to the gods. \nIn his recent works\, Kuttum interprets the silent moments between the ‘characters’ in his frame. The unspoken words between the performer and the animal\, right before the act of slaughter; the unsaid emotions of the priest as he offers the hibiscus flower before performing the prayers; and even the imagined dialogue between man and plants before harvesting. He is interested in the in-betweenness and the transitional\, one that is neither in the present nor in an imagined space. There are metaphors at play when he makes broken objects\, like a tattered basket. Commonly used and an integral part of life in his village\, the damaged basket symbolises the imperfection of life itself. Kuttum’s occasional painting involves a busy cluster of juxtaposed elements\, quite contrary to the usual singular bold element. He has also experimented with an uneven silhouette of the canvas itself. These have a direct motivation from his own state of mind. A restless and emotionally heightened psyche has a direct impact on the format of his image making. \nSongs from my homeland…a memoir of life and rituals is a celebration for Kuttum. He takes us to his village\, on a guided tour\, and makes us privy to his lived and imagined emotions. There are moments that are tranquil yet sombre\, there are sentiments of contemplation. \nRahul Kumar
URL:https://artincept.com/event/songs-from-my-homelanda-memoir-of-life-and-rituals/
LOCATION:Shridharani Gallery\, Triveni Kala Sangam\, Mandi House\, New Delhi\, 110001\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/kuttum-logo-9.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220824
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220921
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20220818T005618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230608T120548Z
UID:17969-1661299200-1663718399@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Memory Keepers
DESCRIPTION:Previous image\n												Next image \nA geometric abstraction by 6 emerging women artists. \nNostalgia is a feeling that is built by memories – it reminisces on moments that passed a long time ago. Nostalgia often is sweet going back to memories and experiences of simple times\, most often related to our childhood. However\, nostalgia can also be a little sad when people or spaces that are related to those memories no longer exist.Memories shape us. Many define our future. Yet today creates our memories for tomorrow! \nMemory Keepers brings together six early career women artists who explore this idea through their contemporary art practices. The memories and experiences that shaped them are distinctively their own. What is distinct about this show is that each artist uniquely employs material and process – from stitching metal sheets\, to cyanotype printing with embroidery\, fresco treatment on MDF and using old tetra packs as printing plates.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/memory-keepers/
LOCATION:Stir Gallery\, 2 North Drive\, DLF Chattarpur Farms\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220731
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220807
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20211114T131344Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220729T074242Z
UID:9913-1659225600-1659830399@artincept.com
SUMMARY:World With-in…World With-out
DESCRIPTION:17 contemporary artists respond to the idea of home and the world.\nCo-curated by Prima Kurien & Rahul Kumar\nThe ultimate reality of the universe\, which is ever-expanding and is still being discovered\, is understood through its material and formal existence. Man\, by nature\, is ever interested in the study of matter\, its properties\, possible reactions to imposed processes\, and eventually uses this knowledge to exploit the ‘resources’ for its own benefits. Our planet (and beyond) was formed by chance and not by design. Of course\, this is true for those who believe in the big bang theory\, by far the most credible scientific explanation of how the universe was created. And ever since its inception\, till this fleeting moment\, the physicality of the cosmos is changing. Innumerable forces are at play that impact these ‘outwardly’ shifts and mutations. \nSoul\, however\, defines the essence of all matter. It is normally associated with the living energy but metaphorically could very well extend to the non-living too. This energy\, unlike the physical manifestation\, is believed to be eternal and immortal. Our thoughts\, emotions\, and psychological reactions to stimuli\, all form our ‘inwardly’ being. This intangible energy is stored in the form of thoughts\, both lived and imagined. And unlike the physical being\, this energy can move in multiple dimensions. Scientific study is yet to discover even a fraction of how this aspect of our exitance operates. \nYet\, both worlds are eternally interdependent. And at a macro level of understanding\, the individual soul of all matter is made of the same reality\, the cosmic energy\, forming the singular ‘whole’. There is an entire world that exists ‘within’\, and this is highly vulnerable to external forces. Every act of distress that is witnessed in the outside world leads to a fractured and wounded inside world. The corollary is equally true – what transpires within the intimacy of the inside world leads to all our actions and manifestations in the outside.Are these to be experienced differently then? Or\, is there seamlessness? How does one transition from the ‘out’ to the ‘in’? or is there even a distinction? \nThis exhibit intends to explore these ideas through contemporary art practices of early-career artists. Each practitioner in the group uniquely employs material and process. The formal concerns and motivations are uniquely their own\, delinked from any hegemonic reference of its previous generation or schools of thought. While they are all rooted\, the practices are liberated from the patronage of scholarship and highbrow western culture. The exhibition includes works created during the self-imposed isolation (owing to the COVID19 pandemic)\, adding a distinct layer to their interpretations. \nMulti-disciplinary in nature and experiential in format\, there will be two distinct areas\, each focussing on the ‘aatmmann’ (the inward) and ‘brahmmann’ (the outward) respectively. \n\nAbhishek Dodiya\n\nAbin Sreedharan\n\nBrojeswer Mondal\n\nChandan Bez Baruah\n\nCiby Samuel\n\nCyrus\n\nKumar Misal\n\nMoumita Basak\n\nNishchay Thakur\n\nPankaj Chouhan\n\nParul Sharma\n\nRachita Dutta\n\nRinku Choudhary\n\nViswanath Kuttum\n\nSantanu Dey\n\nSavitha Ravi\n\nShubham Kumar\n								 \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n\n						Previous\n						Next
URL:https://artincept.com/event/world-with-inworld-with-out/
LOCATION:Bikaner House\, Pandara Road\, India Gate\, New Delhi\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220428T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220501T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20211119T050906Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230608T120535Z
UID:9923-1651143600-1651428000@artincept.com
SUMMARY:India Art Fair
DESCRIPTION:Previous image\n												Next image \nArt Incept was at the India Art Fair 2022 and showcased the works of 8 extremely talented and sensitive emerging artists. The exhibition booth was designed by Prima Kurien and curated by Prima and Rahul. \nDuring the Art Fair\, Art Incept launched our limited edition portfolios in partnership with our artists. These portfolios were designed for young collectors and was available at an extremely attractive price hoping more young enthusiasts start their journey as collectors! \nAbhishek Dodiya\, Brojesjwer Mondal\, Cyrus\, Kumar Misal\, Parul Sharma\, Santanu Dey\, Viswanath Kuttum and Zarrin-Fatima Shamsi.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/indian-art-fair/
LOCATION:NSIC Exhibition Complex\, Okhla Phase III\, Okhla Industrial Estate\, New Delhi\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/DSCF8760-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220328T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220502T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20211119T044821Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220507T212905Z
UID:9921-1648467000-1651514400@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Inception Grant Finalist Show 2022
DESCRIPTION:The Inception Grant was set up to recognize and support young emerging talent in visual arts. \nThe Grant is open to contemporary artists between the ages of 21-35 years from South Asia with one category of the grant focused on India. The grant has been designed to be more than just financial aid to artists – awardees have access to our mentors and curators who assist them to develop their practice further through the year. \nWe have received more than 250 applications from all over India and this year we are honoured to have the support of British-born visual artist\, Tacita Charlotte Dean CBE\, RA. Tacita is reviewing the shortlisted finalists to select the artist to get the Tacita Dean Inception Award 2022. The award comes with a cash grant\, a mentorship program by Art Incept\, and a solo show in 2023! \nOur internal jury will select a shortlist that will be presented at the Grant show in March 2022. Our jurors are Roobina Karode\, Manisha Parekh and Ranbir Kaleka.
URL:https://artincept.com/event/inception-grant-finalist-show-2022/
LOCATION:Stir Gallery\, 2 North Drive\, DLF Chattarpur Farms\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/PSX_20220430_201326-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20211029
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211201
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20211025T104020Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211027T094055Z
UID:9628-1635465600-1638316799@artincept.com
SUMMARY:...of meditative gestures
DESCRIPTION:An online exhibition \nby SHAHANSHAH MITTAL\n“My recent body of work is an ongoing exploration of the works and lives of saints. I am particularly interested in the writing of Swami Vivekanand\, couplets of Kabir\, and poems of Bulleshah. Unintentionally\, all of this becomes a part of my work. Text and references to script in my work emerge from what I read and listen to. The intent is not to make it legible\, but an uninterrupted flow of my emotion and environment. And other recognizable motifs\, like a flower\, remind me of nature\, as though saying “I am ready to blossom.”  Each work in this series is a visual diary of my exploration. My ideas evolve as I apply my sense of order and play to the image and material at hand. I may start with an idea in mind\, but somewhere as I go along\, intention and chance take over\, giving it a new direction. I am never quite sure how a painting will look until it is finished.” \n– Shahanshah Mittal \nMemory of my Kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″\nWhen I look back at my past\, the years that I spent alone in Delhi\, there was nothing on my mind then\, except to paint. My teacher and professional guide suggested that I spend time working with the medium to discover the secrets and hidden meaning of the painting. In the process\, I realized that my daily chores\, my mundane surroundings\, began to reflect in my art. The texture of concrete walls\, random patterns on the road outside my house\, and even the rhythm of the music I would put on in my studio… I painted it all. I do not paint with a preconceived plan or thought. This method is liberating and I thoroughly enjoy the freedom and allow things to flow in a natural way. \n          Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 40 x 72″             Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 40 x 72″                Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on canvas | 40 x 72″             Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 40 x 72″             Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″             Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″       \n          Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 30 x 42″             Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 30 x 42″          Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 30 x 42″       \nMusic\, nature\, and spirituality draw my attention. I recreate a microcosm world that is layered with my vision\, and the core reason for my art to be abstract. I intend to communicate a feeling rather than a precise meaning. My work attempts to create an environment that I find within myself; they represent an internal world that I am attempting to externalize and share. Most of my paintings are minimal in approach. I see them as balanced imagery\, yet full of rhythm and asymmetry. Maestro and music exponent Hariprashad Chaurasia said “… my instrument is simply a piece of bamboo. The sound is straight from nature and it connects me to nature.” Similarly\, I like to work on paper\, a medium with which I feel completely liberated. I want to understand the music of nature more deeply with the help of my art. \n          Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″             Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″             Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″                Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″             Memory of my kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″       \nMemory of my Kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″\nMemory of my Kolkata | Dry pigment on mount board | 36 x 56″\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://artincept.com/event/of-meditative-gestures/
CATEGORIES:Online Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210927
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211031
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20210828T052533Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230608T120731Z
UID:8964-1632700800-1635638399@artincept.com
SUMMARY:and...there was light
DESCRIPTION:Previous image\n												Next image \n‘and…there was light’ \nBut there\, ahead\, a beam of lightPeered through the darkness of the nightAnd granted to me clearer sightThat I might be set free.– Robert S Bise \nWe understand the importance of light when we are in darkness. What does darkness mean to us? Metaphorically\, it can exist in multiple forms…a closed mind and an unkind heart\, or in the evil actions we take and hurtful words we speak. It need not be simply the absence of light. A tiny virus can push the world into darkness. Our senseless consumption and the absence of care for the planet is nothing but an accelerated race into darkness. \nBut without light can darkness even be experienced? Light is needed to cast a shadow and it in this contrast that the we ‘see’ both light(ness) and dark(ness). Besides\, we owe all life to that beam of light. It is our singular source of energy that is essential to produce food and nourish our souls. It is that silver lining of hope. It is the reason we look forward to a new day. It is the reason that causes the night to turn into day! \nWhat is light to you? Where do you find the source of light? Where would you want it to lead you? Do you believe there is light that shines within? Is light a tool for your work\, a subject\, or an inspiration? Or is it a metaphor for hope. \n‘and…there was light’ celebrates light in all its possible interpretations. A tightly curated exhibition will include early-career practitioners from the finalists of the first edition of the Inception Grant. Artists across disciplines and genres are invited to respond to this idea in their own unique style. \n  \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://artincept.com/event/and-there-was-light/
LOCATION:Stir Gallery\, 2 North Drive\, DLF Chattarpur Farms\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210630T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210630T080000
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20210630T045439Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211025T103829Z
UID:7965-1625040000-1625040000@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Breath of Art
DESCRIPTION:“Art is something that makes you breathe with a different kind of happiness!”  \n– Annie Ambers \n  \n  \nThe human race has been at a war. This time with a virus that has challenged the way we live! And this time\, one that has created a new normal for us. One that has altered the very fundamentals of our approach to coexist with nature. As we continue to come to terms and deal with an unprecedented emotional unrest\, don’t we just crave for a bit of fresh breath of energy? \nWe cannot give you better air or a virus-proof existence\, but we can uplift your spirits and help you ‘breathe’ with a “different kind of happiness”! \n  \nBreath of Art is a show that attempts to reenergize a space with art – art that inspires\, works that are refreshing\, and practices that have the ability to make you think! The show brings together seven emerging artists working in varied formats and with distinct thematic framework. They tied together with a common objective of invigorating your senses with fresh energy and unfamiliar perspectives. \n  \nRAM DONGREUntitledOil on Canvas70 x 45″\nSANTANU DEYMelting Stomach\, 2020Burnt wood and graphite42 x 48 x 3″\n  \nSANTANU DEYFolded Land\, 2020Mixed Media on Acid-Free Paper12 x 24″\n  \nSANTANU DEYThe Moon Comes to my Balcony\, 2020Burnt wood and graphite25 x 41 x 5″\n  \nRAM DONGREUntitledOil on Canvas67 x 48″\n  \nDEEPAK KUMARKingfisher\, 2019Acrylic on Canvas60 x 50″\n  \nDEEPAK KUMARForgotten Homes\, 2020Repurposed Wood46 x 73 x 3″\n  \nDEEPAK KUMARUntitled\, 2020Acrylic on Repurposed wood and metal48″\n  \nVISWANATH KUTTUMLife and rituals\, 2020Mixed Media on Board30 x 30″\n  \nVISWANATH KUTTUMNot Convoluted -I\, 2017Paraffin and Bee wax\, resin\, Double Boiled Linseed Oil\, Brown Powder on Paper Board15 x 15″\n  \nVISWANATH KUTTUMNot Convoluted – II\, 2018Paraffin and Bee wax\, resin\, Double Boiled Linseed Oil\, Brown Powder on Paper Board15 x 15″\n  \nVISWANATH KUTTUMLast Thirst\, Taste and Juice\, 2020Paraffin and Bee wax\, resin\, Double Boiled Linseed Oil\, Brown Powder on Paper Board38 x 46″\n  \nVISWANATH KUTTUMMeditative Eye II\, 2020Parafin and Bee wax\, resin\, Double Boiled Linseed Oil\, Brown Powder on Paper Board44 x 92″\n  \nSHAHANSHAH MITTALI celebrate Myself\, 2015Acrylic on Canvas60 x 30″\n  \nSHAHANSHAH MITTALLanguage of Existence\, 2018Mixed Media on Canvas36 x 56″\n  \nSHAHANSHAH MITTALLanguage of Existence\, 2020Dry Pastels on Paper Board15 x 14″\n  \nSHAHANSHAH MITTALLanguage of Existence\, 2020Dry Pastels on Paper Board15 x 14″INR 25\,000\n  \nSHAHANSHAH MITTALLanguage of Existence\, 2020Dry Pastels on Paper Board15 x 14″\n  \nSHAHANSHAH MITTALLanguage of Existence\, 2020Dry Pastels on Paper Board15 x 14″\n  \nSUNIL YADAVArchaeological Survey\, 2020Mixed Media on Canvas48 x 72″
URL:https://artincept.com/event/breath-of-art/
LOCATION:Triveni Kala Sangam
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Breath-of-Art.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210403
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210511
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20210824T070259Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211025T103830Z
UID:8913-1617408000-1620691199@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Boundaries Unbuilt 2
DESCRIPTION:Abhishek Dodiya | City Scape 2021 | Mixed Media on Wood\n  \nAbhishek Dodiya | City Scape 2021 | Mixed Media on Wood\n  \nAbhishek Dodia | Urban scape | Metal Scraps\n  \nGhanashyam Latua | Khoai Landscape X | Pen\, Ink and Pin-Work on Paper\n  \nHarish Ojha | Neighborhood | Archival Paper on Board\n  \nMudita Bhandari | Nesting | Terracotta\, Paper pulp and cement\n  \nNilmoni Chatterjee | Urbanscape | Solid Wood and Metal\n  \nNilmoni Chatterjee | Where is my home-2 | Soilid Wood and Iron\n  \nSavitha Ravi | The Corridor | Intaglio Print\n  \nSavitha Ravi | The Ideal Home III | Intaglio Print\n  \nShiv Lal Saroha | Acrylic and Charcoal on Canvas\n  \nSoma Surovi Jannat | A patch of deep blue sky has been broken through a thick cover of grey cloud | Pen on Handmade Paper\n  \nSoma Surovi Jannat | When time takes the last breath | Pen on Handmade Paper\n  \nSunil_Yadav | An Archaeology of a New Identity | Mixed Media on Canvas\n  \nSunil Yadav | Mixed Media on Canvas\n  \nVanshika Rathi | Highways across Oceans | Handcut Archival Paper\n  \nVijaya Chauhan | Innovative Eye 4 | Stoneware\, Terracotta\, Iron and Wood\n  \nViswanath Kuttum | Life and rituals | Mixed Media on Board\n  \nYash Pal | The Rusted Wall | Mix Media on Mount Board\n  \nYash Pal | Mix Media on Mount Board
URL:https://artincept.com/event/boundaries-unbuilt-2/
LOCATION:Stir Gallery\, 2 North Drive\, DLF Chattarpur Farms\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/File_000__2_-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210324
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210401
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20210907T031939Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240417T121618Z
UID:9078-1616544000-1617235199@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Still Life
DESCRIPTION:The process of living is tinged with uncertainty\, an uncertainty made\nmore palpable in daily events\, encounters\, and tragedies. Its basis is\nthe acceptance of universal frailties\, the loss of all things. A house is\nbuilt; it corrodes in rain and sun\, is beaten by seasonal changes.\nOrganic growth rises in its crevices. Every day it dies a little more.\nTill walls cave in\, brick turns to dust\, and fresh life replaces\ncompletely\, till even the plants die and disappear into earth and soil\nleaving but one reminder: Youth is but a minor itch\, it passes; the\nprogression of ageing is unforgiving as ever. Still\, evolutionary loss is\ncomforted by time’s elongated length. People feast before extinction\,\nfind God in belief; they migrate in hope. Tradition and custom\nintervene. Mosque\, temple\, and church are clothed in conforming\nuniforms. Games are invented to enlarge purpose\, create conflicts\,\nelongate life. Ageing\, decline and demise are accorded personal time\nframes\, accelerated for some\, stretched and seemingly limitless for\nothers. We live\, we learn to love because we are dying. The\narcheology of cities\, the rise and decay of architecture\, the dimming\nfocus of design and material objects\, private transformations and\npublic cultures\, the physical residue of all that manifests as life and\nmaterial\, transforms from birth to love to struggle to dissolution\, to\nloss and memory\, finally to recall and remembrance. Things die\,\nthere’s grief. Things remain beautiful\, even in sorrow. \n-Gautam Bhatia \n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAAmbitionMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIABig BusinessMixed Media on Paper\n  \n  \nGAUTAM BHATIACall of NatureMixed Media on Paper\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nGAUTAM BHATIACurse of Common PlaceMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIACycle of WealthMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIADeath of BirthMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAEnd of ReligionMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAFamily ReunionMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAFeasting ExtinctionMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAGoing NowhereMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAHouse of CardsMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAInnocence of LossMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIALabor of LoveMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAThe MakerMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAPainterMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAReviving FaithMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAThe Birds have FlownMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAThe Birth of DeathMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAThis Is LifeMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAUnwashed CityMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAWriterMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAPrayerBronze\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIASelfie Circa 1930Bronze\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAselfie Circa 1950Bronze\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAUnveiledBronze\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAToothpaste of MigrantsBronze\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAWomen of FaithBronze\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAHung ParliamentBronze\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAGame of ThronesMixed Media on Paper\n  \nGAUTAM BHATIAMercy KillingMixed media on paper
URL:https://artincept.com/event/still-life/
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Family_Reunion.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210308
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210309
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20210824T045641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220507T220131Z
UID:8875-1615161600-1615247999@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Inception Grant Finalist Show 2021
DESCRIPTION:Keerti Pooja | Etching Aquatint on Paper and Clot\n  \nBebek Kalyan Roy | Spine Tree | Mix Media on Board\n  \nAnupama Alias | Surviving Phase 2 | Watercolor On Paper\n  \nBrojeswer Mondal | Pen and Ink on Paper\n  \nBrojeswer Mondal | Acrylic on Choksi Board\n  \nChandar Panjre | Elements of Village | Kantha Fabric\n  \nChandar Panjre | Dehati Brand | Kantha Fabric\n  \nGhanashyam Latua | Khoai Landscape I | Pen\, Ink and Pin-Work on Paper\n  \nHasmukh Makwana | Soul Scan | Rice Paper and Ink on Canvas\n  \nHiral Chaudhari | Mixed Media on Paper\n  \nJyotiprakash Sethy | Soft Pastel on Mount Board\n  \nNeelesh Yogi | Thora hai Thore ki Zarurat Hai | Paper\n 
URL:https://artincept.com/event/inception-grant-finalist-show-2021/
LOCATION:Stir Gallery\, 2 North Drive\, DLF Chattarpur Farms\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210219
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210329
DTSTAMP:20260405T034628
CREATED:20210828T025407Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211025T103830Z
UID:8938-1613692800-1616975999@artincept.com
SUMMARY:Desolate
DESCRIPTION:An exhibition that attempts to explore the extension of  image-based practices through materiality and technique. \nCurated by Rahul Kumar  \n  \nThe curatorial framework for this exhibition is two pronged: conceptual & emotional  reference to the idea of desolate\, and exploring the genre of image-based art.  \nWith the advent of the COVD-19 pandemic\, humanity has experienced isolation like never  before. But what does solitary mean to us?  \nDoes it imply a sense of freedom\, or does it evoke loneliness?  \nDoes it infer hierarchy\, or is it about a feeling of being left-out?  \nDoes it mean strength in standing tall\, or does it encourage looking inward?  \nSelected early to mid-career artists from all across the country react to this impression in  their own ways.  \nAll the practices included in this show are also bound by the use of photography as an  element in their works. There are photographers who present images on the idea and notion  of desolate itself. And then there are artists who merely use image as a component in their  work. The exhibition attempts to explore this extension of image-based practices through  materiality (variety of surfaces to print images)\, as also the techniques used in the process  of producing the works.  \n  \nANDHIKA RAMADIANAquaticDigital Print on paper20 x 16 ′′\n  \nANDHIKA RAMADIANCuriosityDigital Print on paper20 x 16 ′′\n  \nANDHIKA RAMADIANCycleDigital Print on paper20 x 20 ′′\n  \nANDHIKA RAMADIANStuckDigital Print on paper20 x 20 ′′\n  \nJIGNESH PANCHALLanguage of the Wall set of 9 \, 2020Mixed Media on Paper12 x 8 ′′\n  \nRANJEET SINGHThe Black Truth Project 14\, 2018-2019Archival Print on Paper20 x 14 ′′\n  \nRANJEET SINGHThe Black Truth Project 2\, 2018-2019Archival Print on Paper20 x 14 ′′\n  \nRANJEET SINGHThe Black Truth Projects 3\, 2018-2019Archival Print on Paper20 x 14 ′′\n  \nSAMANTA BATRA MEHTAThe Last of the Uncolonized Lands #6\, 2010C Print30 x 30 ′′\n  \nSANJAY DASCosmic RythmArchival Print on Paper50 x 40 ′′\n  \nSANJAY DASPrayer Flags 1Archival Print on Paper33 x 22 ′′\n  \nSANJAY DASSerenity 1Archival Print on Paper22 x 33 ′′\n  \nSANJAY DASSerenity 2Archival Print on Paper22 x 33 ′′\n  \nSANJAY DASUntitled 1Archival Print on Paper30 x 45 ′′\n  \nSAVITHA RAVIIdeal Home 1\, 2019Intaglio Print31 x 22 ′′\n  \nSAVITHA RAVIIdeal Home II\, 2019Intaglio Print31 x 22 ′′\n  \nSAVITHA RAVIReflection of Rain set of 6 \, 2019Cyanotype on Woodcut Print13 x 9 ′′\n  \nSAVITHA RAVIRemembrance- Places\, Objects and Feelings set of 4 \, 2019Cyanotype on Intaglio Print13 x 19.5 ′′\n  \nSAVITHA RAVIThe Corridor\, 2020Intaglio Print21.5 x 42 ′′\n  \nSAVITHA RAVIThe Ideal Home III\, 2019Intaglio Print21.5 x 21.5 ′′\n 
URL:https://artincept.com/event/desolate/
LOCATION:Museo Camera\, Shri Ganesh Mandir Marg\, DLF Phase IV\, Sector 28\, Gurugram\, Haryana\, 122002\, India
CATEGORIES:Gallery Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artincept.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Curiosity-scaled.jpg
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END:VCALENDAR