
It8217;s 2000. In a Mumbai bus, as a moustached Anant Joshi is discussing his big plans for the future, his enthusiasm is infectious.
Cut to December, 2003. A slickly groomed Joshi, sans moustache, in addition to enthusiasm, is wearing his best grin ever. Being the recipient of the Prix De Rome, one of the most prestigious awards in Europe, is reason enough for this young painter-turned-installation artist to bring out the bubbly.
Take Mumbai-based Sudarshan Shetty, for instance. His recent solo exhibition 8216;Consanguinity8217;, was hosted by curator Peter Nagy8217;s Nature Mort in Delhi in collaboration with Bose Pacia and he has been showing abroad for the past 10 years. However, he believes that Indian contemporary art is now finally getting its place in the sun. 8216;8216;There8217;s a new energy and a genuine interest that goes beyond just being politically correct by including 8216;Asian8217; representatives. But this is just the beginning. We have a long way to go before we come on par with countries like China and Korea,8217;8217; says Shetty, citing South East Asia8217;s economic edge as a reason for their one-upmanship over their Indian neighbours.
In fact, where the attraction for South East Asian art has stemmed, Europe is still curious about Indian art. 8216;8216;One of my strengths is being able to use my identity as an Indian to differentiate my work from other European artists8212;and I don8217;t mean playing the exotic card,8217;8217; says Joshi, whose two years at the Rijksakademi Amsterdam gave him ample time to explore. He is now even more eager to get back to his Amsterdam studio and bury himself in work8212;given that funding for the arts is the last thing on the list of economic priorities.
8216;8216;Using a representation of a cricket field as his next work, Joshi was noticed for his sensitive and multilayered installation 8216;Black to Play and Draw8217; that showed at 8216;subTerrain artworks in the cityfold8217;, an exhibition curated by Geeta Kapur at the House of World Culture, Berlin. Typifying a new and encouraging trend that has taken hold of the Indian art scenario, Joshi, like his contemporaries Mumbai-based digital artist Shilpa Gupta a Tate Modern favourite and Delhi-based sculptor and performance artist Subodh Gupta, is one of the chosen ones.
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USUAL SUSPECTS
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Wonder who8217;s showing abroad this season? |
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Very often young and promising talents get singled out from well-curated, larger Indian exhibitions showing abroad. They may not get a solo exhibition right away but become part of other larger curated European shows, which, nonetheless, presents them to a broader spectrum of viewers,8217;8217; says Peter Nagy, an American curator. Nagy, settled in India since 1992, opened Nature Mort in 1997 and will be launching Show Room, a non-profit gallery, this month.
According to Nagy, it is visiting museum curators like Alanna Heiss, director of PS One in New York, who started the ball rolling and now even private galleries from the US and Europe are showing keen interest.
8216;8216;It8217;s an extension of what is happening to Indian literature and cuisine, curators are being more responsible and looking at Indian art,8217;8217; says Nagy who is planning a large show with Anita Dube and Subodh Gupta in a Vancouver gallery for the coming year. Heiss8217;s January show in Lisbon will also feature Indian art.
As Patel points out, 8216;8216;Today, younger artists like Atul Dodiya and Shetty can look forward to international recognition in their 30s, whereas artists of our generation had to wait much longer.8217;8217;