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This is an archive article published on November 16, 2014

Questioning Legacies

The exhibition at Pathways Art Gallery, Pathways School, Gurgaon, is on from November 16 to 26.

Gogi Saroj Pal; Nati Binodini Kamdhenu. From mythical to the bold, Gogi Saroj Pal celebrates different faces of a woman in a retrospective .

The nondescript lanes of East of Kailash lead into the home of Gogi Saroj Pal and her husband Ved Nayar. The greens step into the basement, an open studio for young artists. This is where the couple allows students to work and practice their art. “Young artists often find it difficult to afford a studio,” says Pal. She occupies a studio on the ground floor, where students can drop-in for advice and discussions as well. In the ’70s, the duo was famous for drawing room exhibitions at their Tara Apartment home. “There were hardly any galleries back then,” says Pal, looking at an unfinished canvas with a women protagonist that hangs on her easel.

Women have been her leitmotif for decades now — as Kinnari, the mythical bird-woman or Kamdhenu, the wish-fulfilling cow. The voluptuous bodies have been nude — sensual and brazen. At her retrospective at Pathways Art Gallery, their different faces painted over four decades come together, from gouache to oil and ceramic.

Her second retrospective in three years is sourced from her private collection. The oldest is a pair of profiles, watercolours painted with woman heads from 1973. If a 1985 work has a curvaceous beauty in a cloudy surrounding, the winged Kinnari flies from a 1989 gouache into a starry 2012 work. The satirical Nati Binodini appears traditional, and in All These Flowers Are For You she is in the verandah with flowers in the backdrop. “I’m fascinated by social links and their mythological values. My work is an investigation into whether we are carrying dead weight of folklore and beliefs. We should not just carry on with legacies, but question them,” says the 69-year-old.

The exhibition at Pathways Art Gallery, Pathways School, Gurgaon, is on from November 16 to 26.

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Vandana Kalra is an art critic and Deputy Associate Editor with The Indian Express. She has spent more than two decades chronicling arts, culture and everyday life, with modern and contemporary art at the heart of her practice. With a sustained engagement in the arts and a deep understanding of India’s cultural ecosystem, she is regarded as a distinctive and authoritative voice in contemporary art journalism in India. Vandana Kalra's career has unfolded in step with the shifting contours of India’s cultural landscape, from the rise of the Indian art market to the growing prominence of global biennales and fairs. Closely tracking its ebbs and surges, she reports from studios, galleries, museums and exhibition spaces and has covered major Indian and international art fairs, museum exhibitions and biennales, including the Venice Biennale, Kochi-Muziris Biennale, Documenta, Islamic Arts Biennale. She has also been invited to cover landmark moments in modern Indian art, including SH Raza’s exhibition at the Centre Pompidou in Paris and the opening of the MF Husain Museum in Doha, reflecting her long engagement with the legacies of India’s modern masters. Alongside her writing, she applies a keen editorial sensibility, shaping and editing art and cultural coverage into informed, cohesive narratives. Through incisive features, interviews and critical reviews, she brings clarity to complex artistic conversations, foregrounding questions of process, patronage, craft, identity and cultural memory. The Global Art Circuit: She provides extensive coverage of major events like the Kochi-Muziris Biennale, Serendipity Arts Festival, and high-profile international auctions. Artist Spotlights: She writes in-depth features on modern masters (like M.F. Husain) and contemporary performance artists (like Marina Abramović). Art and Labor: A recurring theme in her writing is how art reflects the lives of the marginalized, including migrants, farmers, and labourers. Recent Notable Articles (Late 2025) Her recent portfolio is dominated by the coverage of the 2025 art season in India: 1. Kochi-Muziris Biennale & Serendipity Arts Festival "At Serendipity Arts Festival, a 'Shark Tank' of sorts for art and crafts startups" (Dec 20, 2025): On how a new incubator is helping artisans pitch products to investors. "Artist Birender Yadav's work gives voice to the migrant self" (Dec 17, 2025): A profile of an artist whose decade-long practice focuses on brick kiln workers. "At Kochi-Muziris Biennale, a farmer’s son from Patiala uses his art to draw attention to Delhi’s polluted air" (Dec 16, 2025). "Kochi Biennale showstopper Marina Abramović, a pioneer in performance art" (Dec 7, 2025): An interview with the world-renowned artist on the power of reinvention. 2. M.F. Husain & Modernism "Inside the new MF Husain Museum in Qatar" (Nov 29, 2025): A three-part series on the opening of Lawh Wa Qalam in Doha, exploring how a 2008 sketch became the architectural core of the museum. "Doha opens Lawh Wa Qalam: Celebrating the modernist's global legacy" (Nov 29, 2025). 3. Art Market & Records "Frida Kahlo sets record for the most expensive work by a female artist" (Nov 21, 2025): On Kahlo's canvas The Dream (The Bed) selling for $54.7 million. "All you need to know about Klimt’s canvas that is now the most expensive modern artwork" (Nov 19, 2025). "What’s special about a $12.1 million gold toilet?" (Nov 19, 2025): A quirky look at a flushable 18-karat gold artwork. 4. Art Education & History "Art as play: How process-driven activities are changing the way children learn art in India" (Nov 23, 2025). "A glimpse of Goa's layered history at Serendipity Arts Festival" (Dec 9, 2025): Exploring historical landmarks as venues for contemporary art. Signature Beats Vandana is known for her investigative approach to the art economy, having recently written about "Who funds the Kochi-Muziris Biennale?" (Dec 11, 2025), detailing the role of "Platinum Benefactors." She also explores the spiritual and geometric aspects of art, as seen in her retrospective on artist Akkitham Narayanan and the history of the Cholamandal Artists' Village (Nov 22, 2025). ... Read More

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