October 15, 2001
Issue

 

COVER
   

India's bin laden
October 1 in Srinagar was not as dramatic as September 11 in the US. But the attack on the J&K Assembly emphasises the reality that India continues to be a permanent victim of jehad, that the author of the blast is the bin Laden of Kandahar vintage.


 
PAKISTAN
   

Reclaiming The Faith
Despite Pakistan's extremist image, the country is home to a wide cross-section of people holding moderate views on religion. After the terrorist attacks on the US, it is this non-confrontationist lobby that is waging a coup against the militant and vocal religious extremists.

 

 
AFGHANISTAN
 

Ready To Strike
The US strategy to strike the Taliban includes making use of the Northern Alliance, favoured by Russia and Iran and distrusted by Pakistan. In its military pact with the front, the US should keep in mind the future power equations in Afghanistan.

 

 
THE NATION
  End Of An Era
The Congress needs to fill the leadership vacuum created by the death of Madhavrao Scindia soon if it is to remain a force as the Opposition

 
OTHER STORIES
     
 



 
 
Home 
 
 

ARTS: IN CONVERSATION

Pictorial Surprise

 

 

 
  REVEALING PROCESS: (From above) Singh's completed work 'Crossing the Room'; Sheikh works on folding screens with bristling colours; Choudhury's mind thinks in words too

But the works also show that many contemporary artists no longer revere the conventional sketchbook as the only instrument of record. Photographs, collages, videos, CDs, computers or erasable blackboards — all seem to have become privy to the complex processes that define a final work. For instance, Mumbai-based veteran Sudhir Patwardhan, now an ecological crusader, has shown his preference for photography as a formative archive. For the "Footbridge at Ambernath", an anti-romantic take on a messy urban causeway in Mumbai, Patwardhan has bound pencil sketches with colour snapshots of the same scenes. The sketches emoted what the photos could not: a desperate, dissolving city.

The younger artists also had sketchbooks and other categories of priming that were strictly made-to-order. A. Balasubramanium, a Chennai-based minimalist and erstwhile printmaker, had a clever relief of jumbled letters on handmade paper titled "Scattered Conversation" that led to a bigger work, a homage to artist Yves Klein.

A welcome pictorial surprise was sourced by Mumbai kid Anandjit Ray in a seven-page treatise, "A visual example of how a thought or an idea proceeds in my head". In one of the ideas was the facetious evolution of Ganapati or Ganesha whose head has been likened to a man wearing a gas mask or scuba-diving suit or a boar skull. The other idea had a dog that alternatively became a projectile or a bottle container.

Nicola Durvasula of Hyderabad created memorable aphorisms in Hindi, English and French-"Line is just a trace of so much else" and "Space of page, intentional nothingness"-with snippety graphics on the sides. It was another of her pithy titles that managed to echo the spirit of the entire exhibition: "Anything goes in a sketchbook". Even if it is fake.


 
Search    



     METRO TODAY
 
   

MetroScape

Carrier Of An Epic
I compare India to Draupadi in the dice scene of the Mahabharata ... she keeps unfolding," says French scriptwriter Jean-Claude Carriere in mildly accented English and an understanding that extends beyond touristy applause.
more...


Looking Glass

Kolkata Prehistory Park: Evolution Park

Bangalore Gallery: Gallerie Zen

Delhi Handicrafts: Crafts Museum

 

 
    Web Exclusives
DESPATCHES
 

With a dramatic fall in the viewership of Kaun Banega Crorepati, Star makes a last-ditch effort to prop up its ratings. INDIA TODAY's Himanshi Dhawan analyses the revival struggle of the pasha of programmes in
Survival Of The Fittest

 

 
PREVIOUS ISSUE




Click here to view
the previous issue

 

 

 

CONTACT US SUBSCRIPTION PRIVACY POLICY