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Generation vexed

In the last couple of years, more and more artists of the younger generations have chosen to wear their politics on their work-sleeves.

Updated on: Aug 20, 2010 11:56 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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In the last couple of years, more and more artists of the younger generations have chosen to wear their politics on their work-sleeves. A show of five below-40 artists at Exhibit 320, a new entrant on Lado Sarai's Gallery Mile, highlights such political statements with high drama.

HT Image
HT Image

None of them shy away from hitting out at the violence and gutlessness that seem to have become commonplace in Whining India. And they do it with some relish. There's Rajesh P.S.'s genuflecting wooden man whose iron backbone wouldn't bend over, Akshay Rathore's glowing ball of barbed wire, Tarun Jung Rawat's menacing raven as a 'bird of will', Vyom Mehta's 'chandelier' of glowing battle-tanks, and Hetal Chudasama's bed under a field of low-hung needles.

Rathore, 31, says he was disgusted with the art that followed the India Shining spiel half a decade ago. “There were hardly any questions of identity raised at the time,” he says, as Tarun Jung Rawat, 36, nods in agreement.

So this set of five artists, picked over the summer by gallerist Rasika Kajaria and curator Ranjita Chaney, have reacted to the conspiracies of silence.

Art Makers 2, at Exhibit 320 till August 31. 10.30 am to 6.30 pm, except Sundays.

 
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