(Himmat Shah)
Himmat means ‘courage’ and ‘Himmat Shah’ means ‘courageous
sculptor’. By the time you come out of the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, Delhi
where a massive retrospective of the veteran sculptor, Himmat Shah, titled
‘Hammer on the Square’ is currently on, you would definitely say, “He was quite
courageous.” Fifty years of active sculpting, mural making and drawing have
finally brought him the due recognition, which has been evading him for a long
time. Like a hermit, Himmat Shah was living in the Garhi studios for many
number of years, making works, telling stories both spicy and serene to all age
groups of visitors and celebrating life in its simplicity till the market boom
brought him money and the freedom to relocate himself in Jaipur. The
retrospective at the KNMA has around 300 works of Himmat Shah of which as the
website of the organization claims, 215 belongs to the museum itself. Such a
vast collection should be anybody’s pride possession especially when the
totality of its presentation is met with wider awe and acclamation not only for
the artist but also for the collector.
The stories yarned by Himmat Shah have caught many an
unsuspecting listener into the web of it and made him or her, a permanent
admirer of the artistic and narrative genius of the artist. Interestingly,
Himmat Shah’s sculptures and the drawings that often triggered the sculptural
renditions do not have this narrative verve as their static nature itself is
quite magnetic and thought provoking. The early drawings abundantly displayed
(must be the result of the bulk buying which is called ‘buying the studio’) show
the young artist’s experimental itching that moves from mere line games,
structural drawings and very figurative and expressionistic erotic drawings.
And one would be enthralled to see corresponding sculptural formations
displayed tastefully in the galleries. There are so many photographic
documentations of the artist with his contemporaries, spending lighter moments
as well as involved in the working process. These works and documentations
together make this show worth visiting.
(Hammer on the Square by Himmat Shah)
Famous for his ‘heads’, Himmat Shah’s oeuvre however does
not start or end with heads. Taking inspiration from the post-Rodin modernist sculptors
like Brancusi, Tatlin, Epstein and many other minimalist sculptors the second
phase of Himmat Shah’s sculptures are mostly unlike the well-known Himmat Shah
works. The idiom and also the mind that had inspired those works seem to be
absolutely different from what we know of him today as the artist was trying to
make a point or asserting his presence in the very sculptural scene of India in
1960s and 70s. Hailing from the Baroda school, Himmat had already gone through
the phase of making murals and metal based sculptures, perhaps inspired by
K.G.Subramanyan, and also worked with architects in Ahmedabad. The metal
sculptures of this time also prove that Himmat was not yet at peace with
himself.
The minimal sculptures that parody and also sincerely follow
the western modernist sculptural idioms tell us how Himmat was caught between
two different worlds. And his self-doubts were not really ‘performed’ in
sculptures but had found their way into the drawings. Each sculpture in this
genre has a small metal flag flying atop curiously suggesting their Indian
origin. May be he was trying to tell the world how sculptures imitate the
temple architectural forms in their very organization or it could be a
surreptitious critique on the growing right wing ideologies within our country.
But so long as we do not know the political leanings of the artist in details
we cannot just pin this point on his sleeves. Though the artist is famous for
his erotic bend of narratives, his sculptures do not present or represent any
of these the way Picasso used to do in his sculptures. There is also a
Giocometti phase in Himmat’s works where the contours of the bodies that he
created as well as the very volume of the sculptures go very lean, rugged and
thin. They may not be evoking the existential feel which the Giocometti
sculptures would evoke even by a fleeting look because Himmat seems to have not
continued that existential ‘thing’ in his sculptures his Swiss counterpart had
followed.
(Heads by Himmat Shah)
Himmat as a true modernist has followed the steps of Picasso
who had been inspired his findings of the tribal sculptures. Perhaps, our
artist might not have felt the same need to drink from the same source as
Picasso had done, but he definitely has taken a lot of inspiration from the ‘heads’
that Picasso had done especially in his paintings. In Himmat, I should be underlining,
we see the flowering of human heads into a different spring. Himmat makes the
heads again and again at different periods, going back and forth in his
inspiration, tries out different materials, compositions, styles and so on,
only to achieve the same brooding results, an array of heads, that has made his
hallmark style noted and famous. They look like the skulls of some beings once
inhabited the planet earth or some alien planets. They strangely resemble the
human beings but their contours are defined differently. Himmat draws the
features minimally using dots and lines; he leaves the hagiographic details
alone and at times nullifies them. They are suppressed, compressed, elongated,
pulled and pushed- but they still have the brooding look.
The more you look at the heads of Himmat Shah, the more you
come to know about their presence and after sometime you feel that it is not
you who watch them but you become the object/subject of their watching,
observes his friend and contemporary, Krishen Khanna. It is true that we also
feel the same. The heads are beautiful at times, they are broken and bruised at
other times, they are cut into two but not yet parted, and yet other times they
are bleeding to eternity. They look like the fossils of some warriors who have
fought greater wars to establish the kingdom of thinking. They are done in
different mediums and for Himmat nothing excites him more than the basic medium
of clay does. Most of his works are fashioned in clay and baked. He literally ‘works’
on clay and he makes ‘war and peace’ with clay. When the same works are casted
into bronze and also works are done for bronze casting, they have a different
feel about them. In KNMA you have it all.
(Himmat Shah with his mural in Ahmedabad)
I remember sending one work of Himmat Shah to Kerala for a
buyer which was sourced from Delhi. One of my friends had promised me to ferry
to Kerala by train. It was at that time I heard that Himmat’s works were sought
after by the buyers. Something was being cooked up. Nobody was writing about
Himmat but everybody was saying he/she should have a Himmat work. This added
interest in Himmat had brought him once again into the focus from his almost
recluse life in Jaipur. People started visiting him and in one of those visits
that I did with the biggies of contemporary art including Subodh Gupta, he told
the gathering that at least we all should go to London as it was a great place
to visit. Perhaps, Himmat was making a joke. He had gone there for a knee
surgery and he was very impressed by the city of London. Most of us had even
lived there for some time and Himmat was absolutely oblivious of the fact that
these youngsters were spending most of the time travelling in other countries
than sitting in their studios working. Himmat still remains a simple man though
less active in his sculptural production.
KNMA is a rich organization but unfortunately it has not
brought out any brochure or hand out material for the show. There are some
hefty volumes produced in the last couple of years and all of them are
collector’s items, and obviously not meant for research purpose. One of the
book claims that each book has a different terracotta element on the cover
specially done by Himmat himself. And the books being limited editions and
collectors’ items, they are definitely going to rot in some shelves. KNMA
should bring out readable and handy volumes about the artist for the use of the
public as well as the researchers. A book becomes worthy of being called a book
only when it is opened and read. A collectible book is not a ‘read’ book. A
collectible book is a show piece that serves the purpose of boosting somebody’s
ego. Those people may make money out of Himmat’s works in the coming years who
have these works and books in hand. But the artist would die so would his
memories if you do not produce history that is worth reading. Surprisingly,
even the website of the KNMA has only one image of the show. Is it stinginess
or arrogance? If it is for a selected few, then why show at all?
Absolutely agree with your concluding remarks...
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