(Somehow I feel I am welcomed with a mid finger when I see this at the International Airport in Delhi)
If your mind allows you to take your attention off from your
own temporary glory of walking along the carpeted corridors of the
international airports in Delhi or Mumbai, within that transitory zone you
would come across the works of art done by Indian artists carefully culled and
artistically displayed there in conspicuous and inconspicuous walls and
corners. However, I haven’t yet seen people taking selfies before these works
of art. Instead, they go to the generic yet spectacular gestures and physical
movements captured in fibreglass sculptures and take selfies. Let me tell you,
this is not done by uninitiated folks alone. I have seen reputed gallerists
posing before these sculptural atrocities, taking selfies and posting them instantly
in their social media pages to tell the world that they are on the move! I do
not take pictures in airports. However, these works of art displayed in various
joints at the airports, for me, underline the presence of the invisible
middlemen/women who have ‘arranged’ the procurement of these works. I have felt
this invisible presence of the so called art consultants when I walk through
the hotel lobbies and hospital aisles. I see well known names but sub standard
works. Something has gone terribly wrong in our country.
It is said each public building should invest seven per cent
of its total cost in procuring art as a part of promoting culture in the country.
And they do spend this money on art. But the kind of art that we happen to come
across in the public buildings makes our skin cringe in shame. But there is a
huge danger than the general embarrassment caused by these works of art. The
people from abroad, with a cultural outlook, a museum culture that has shaped
their sensibilities etc., upon seeing these works of art in the airports and
public buildings, could think that this is the kind of art that we still
produce. My readers must remember that it was a couple of months back a British
art critic had rubbished Bhupen Khakar’s show in Tate saying that Khakar’s
paintings were as good as the mediocre artists in London in 1980s. The
foreigners who see Indian art in public buildings and airports would definitely
have the same feeling. They could think that we Indians are still producing
some kind of art that they had already discarded decades back.
(Going with times- manual for Suryanamaskara in IGIA Delhi)
What has gone wrong with our art? Is it because India lacks
in good art; I mean good paintings, sculptures, prints, photography and so on?
Our Prime Minister recently had initiated a ‘Skill India’ campaign. This
campaign comes from the fact that as Indians we have been lacking in the
required skill sets to be at par with the world. The illusionary jump in the job
market, especially in the IT field is purely based on supplementary skills or auxiliary
skills than the primary skills. We are always the supporting staff. Hence, even
if I do not agree with the political policies of the present Prime Minister of
India, I would definitely say that skill development in India is one of the
core areas that needs urgent attention including in the field of fine arts.
Knowingly or unknowingly the Prime Minister has touched upon the crucial
problem that the British education had created in India and later on by careful
strategizing of the western cultural industry aided by their handpicked Indian
artists and intelligentsia in order finish off Indian skills. Without
understanding the kind of trap that they have been walking into, these artists
and intelligentsia worked as stooges for the western cultural interests and
almost killed the fine arts skills of India.
When Lord Macaulay introduced the educational policy for the
colonial subjects in India in 19th century, his aim was clear. He
knew for sure that it was difficult to break the backbone of Indian culture by destroying
its innate skills and concepts. The best way was not only to create ‘Indian
looking and British thinking’ subjects to keep accounts and audits of the
Empire in India and serve it ideologically through education but also to
destroy the confidence of the Indians by making them feel that anything that
was native including language was inferior to whatever English was. More than
creating clerks and administrative staff (the way call centres are created
today by the imperial corporate houses), the British were successful in
creating Indians who felt themselves ugly and less skilled compared to the
technical efficiency that the British people displayed. Our art schools were
conceived as technical education centres where draftsmen were trained to work
for various British departments. Students from the traditional artisanal
families were culled and mentally castrated by inducing them with the western scientific
skills in drawing as well as in conceptualizing. The traditional skills which
had been polished in various schools and gharanas since the Mughal period and
their hybrid varieties both in the fiefdoms and bazaars were in fact creating a
larger climate for the proliferation of visual art which the British had
carefully killed. By making our art and art practices inferior to the western
art, they created a new history in which Indian artists always looked derivatives
of the western masters.
(Inside the Louvre Museum in Paris)
It took many years for our artists aided by the
nationalistic thoughts and later by individualistic pursuits in order to create
Indian art outside the clutches of the western art knowledge and skills. It was
not an exclusionary and parochial practice. On the contrary it was political
and at the same time it was the basic search for human dignity and identity
with which an artist could stand at par with anybody in the world irrespective of
the kind of art education he or she had gained. Depending on the skill sets
that the Indian artists had, and also polishing it for the contemporary purposes
in the light of the imported skills enabled the Indian artists to develop their
art. After Independence there was a surge in Indian art and there had been
various enquiries to find indigenous art expressions, styles and identities
from various parts of India. Under the doyens like K.G.Subramanyan, KCS
Panicker, J.Swaminathan and so on, Indian artists were looking for a cosmopolitan,
egalitarian and dignified Indian art. It was not simply a fight for identity;
it was a sort of reinvesting the faith in Indian traditions, which was
dominantly secular. This high thrust in the field of art, had the momentum been
maintained would have pushed Indian art into the world scenario and the
international cultural attention would have naturally fallen on India. It would
have created huge tourism possibilities and thereby economic prosperity even if
Indian economy was natioanlized and protectionist in nature then.
India would have grown with this attitude; a home, a Bajaj
Scooter and a work of art at home. Had India kept the momentum on the
production of art the way it was in 1970s and 1980s it would have been
possible. The western cultural industry knew the dangers of it. With the advent
of 1990s and also with the opening of global market in India and vice versa,
the western cultural Tsars strategically declared that painting was dead. They
started promoting conceptual art and impermanent installation art. Their
materialistic and philosophical circumstances were conducive to propagate that
idea. But they knew for sure that their museums, which were the backbones of
their natural cultural industries and economies, were filled with paintings and
traditional kinds of art. They also knew that if India becomes the hub of art
making, then the international tourism would turn its attention to India and
Indian artists would rule the world. It was then they acknowledged and approved
certain artists like Vivan Sundaram and literally projected them as the right
kind of artists for India. Vivan Sundarm single handedly worked for the western
interests. He became the proponent of the installation and conceptual art and
encouraged a lot of young artists to abandon traditional skills and get into
the making of impermanent art. In 1990s, he like a fervent missionary did this ‘service’
for the western world. Geeta Kapur, the art critic created an adequate obscure
theoretical atmosphere so that the artists who practiced traditional skills
felt inferior within that climate. Their agenda was later on picked up by Khoj
International and then by the Arts and Aesthetic Department at Jawaharlal Nehru
University.
(1.25 billion people in India. These two people decided what their 'good' art should be. Vivan Sundaram and Geeta Kapur)
When the Indian art market opened up, the western world did
a U-turn which both Vivan Sundaram and Geeta Kapur could not handle. The
western cultural industry declared (not in literal terms) that painting was no
longer dead. It was resurrected. Paintings that depicted the glittering world
of money and power and superficiality of contemporary life were given philosophical
justifications. Everyone painted. Everyone sculpted. Everyone photographed.
Everyone did videos. Everyone did digital works. Everyone did anything that
involved skills. ‘Skill’ was the mantra of the time. Vivan Sundam fell behind
because he was no skill man. But unfortunately, those artists who believed in
Vivan Sundaram and his conceptual practice groped left and right to gain some
foothold in the burgeoning art market of that time. Artists who studied in
various colleges, but unfortunately with less aggression and a lot skill became
assistants to the artists including none other than Vivan Sundaram. Sundaram
even went on to the extent of making works of art based on Ram Kinkar Baij, absolutely
deserting those new converts along the way. He brought out two volumes on the
works of his aunt, Amrita Sherghil, who was definitely not an installation
artist.
I do not believe in conspiracy theories. But I cannot reject
the fact that Vivan Sundarm knew that art with no skill would not last long. If
you remember there was a frantic situation created by Geeta Kapur, Ranjit
Hoskote, Nancy Adajania and their junior versions in the art scene. They were
quoting European critics and philosophers to justify Indian impermanent art.
Without Foucault, Derrida, Agamben, Danto, Guittari and Deleuze Indian art
sounded incomplete. But I demand an answer from the abovementioned people why
they justified Indian art with those philosophical tools that even the west
itself has rejected in due course of time. Indian art is suffering because of
these people. It has to change. India has to find its skills and concepts.
India should be filled with art. Each household in India should have a work of
art. And it is possible, I believe. If the general cultural climate is vibrant
with various kinds of art practices, then I am sure none could be away from
that flow. ‘How good and pleasant it could be before god’ and artist you have a
work of art in your bed room, study room, drawing room and love it the way you
love your beloved. It is possible. It is possible because that is the only way
to save India from the redundancy of visual culture created by Vivan Sundaram
and his ilk, and also from the bigots who create the climate of ‘we’ and ‘they’.
Let’s be the Renaissance people, finding the genius, vouching for them, taking
pride in them and celebrating them. Yes, we do not discard installation art
because that too needs skills and concepts, but definitely not of deliberate
obscurantism .
well written article focusing on the key issues in Indian art, not only of artists like Vivan Sundaram and Art Critic Geetha Kapoor who's involvements in promoting 'Wester or European " thought process in art and cooperating with all such art activities ( remembering 'Timeless Art' at V.T station, Bombay ).
ReplyDeleteyou are right it's time to focus attention on the basic philosophies which distinguish Indian art from western. Impermanent and Permanent....
"""" very true ...They were quoting European critics and philosophers to justify Indian impermanent art. Without Foucault, Derrida, Agamben, Danto, Guittari and Deleuze Indian art sounded incomplete"""".
extremely candid. and essential if we have to recover our very soul.
ReplyDeleteI wonder where would an artist like Subodh Gupta with his art rooted in the everyday life of Bihar , even in the kitchen, figure in this scheme. While I do agree about the acute necessity for a revival of skills, I do not think the basic issue is a conflict between figurative/abstract art and the new forms like installations or video art as both have produced masterpieces. May be what is important is the way in which contemporary art redefines the relationship among life, art and time where skill necessarily plays a part, but only when combined with conceptual strength.
ReplyDeleteWell said!
DeleteYes Johny you are right.
ReplyDelete@K.Satchidanandan, Sir, I am glad that you responded. Let me invite your attention to the book that you had recently edited 'Words Matter'. In this book, except for Anish Aluhwalia's article on the Jaipur Bovine fiasco of Siddharth Kararwal, not a single writer is able to pinpoint the names of the visual artists who have done something towards Award Wapsi or something to that effect. It is not the problem of the writers and intellectuals. Apart from saying 'artists' they are not able to find a single one who came out boldly during those days. Why is it so? Artists are great fence sitters, if not pure cowards. They are happy with the annual ritual on 1st January every year on Safdar Hashmi Day observed in the protected environment of VP House, New Delhi. Radical stance and resistance too have got Brahminical structures in this country, especially in the art scene.
ReplyDeleteSubodh Gupta uses vernacular experiences to create his urban works. Not a problem at all. But he spectacularization of the vernacular has displaced and drained the meaning altogether. Today, his works no longer stand for the vernacular. The worst that Gupta could do was bringing the professional 'eaters' from Bihar and make them eat before an audience as a part of 'performance'. Perhaps, it is an ethical approach that makes my views sound a bit rigid but in fact I am here to debate the reverse imperialism performed by our artists within the post-modern liberalism, obscenely made 'free for all' by the free flow of global capitalism. And if artists could drain the works of art completely of meanings and invest too much into form and the spectacular, then even the right wing will appreciate it, which I feel would exclude large number of artists from the cultural discourse altogether.
You are absolutely right when you say today we need the feasible combination of skill and concepts (which I have been arguing for a long time), the clever domination of concepts has subordinated skills in all spheres of art making. I definitely do not like art comes from the shoulder; I demand a head above it. But unfortunately, we have dissociated head and shoulders now. The neo Brahmnism in Indian art has demarcated 'head born' artists and hand born artists (shiroja and hastaja, if you like). Language is a weapon with which these people subordinate the vernacular. You are the poet who has written the poem 'Tree of Tongues'. You know it....
It is more complex sir, as you know it. We can discuss more as and when.
regards
JohnyML
An excellent, if partial, critique. I thought this entire piece is a rant against the incestuous relationship of the art scene between patrons and "value adjusters" read critics, curators and such similars and their fearful inability to appreciate local value of the artist. To my mind, every artist is local first.
ReplyDeleteThat said, many artists did stick to their core beliefs and value of their art instead of being evaluated and buying into their ratings as provided by the art mart. And they were both western-oriented as well as Indian in their sensibilities. Jehangir Sabawala was one of the former. Manjit Bawa, the latter. Besides, even Raza, who stuck to exploring the bindu reset his own aesthetics after Cartier-Bresson critiqued his work as lacking in construction. He flourished without being overtaken or becoming derivative.
Most Indian installations are unimaginably derivative. I tend to agree with you rather than Satchidanandan on Subodh Gupta's art.
A nativist approach will not work now because the time when the Empire was ruling is over. Too many young art students are anxious to find an identifiable distinctive style rather than evolve it over years and arrive at it. What sells is a signature style has become the credo.
In many ways Kerala's art and writing has managed to absorb without being deformed. Namboodiri's art and literature from OV onwards have striven to say things only to Malayalees. Manipuri theatre has similarly stayed rooted despite being influenced with more modern forms of theatre.
There is issue of propaganda Johny sir .i am not completely angry with this but yes this is an artic who make us to think what is going wrong .where is manipulation .
ReplyDeleteThis is very candid and thought provoking article. Thanks for sharing
ReplyDeleteMind blowing article , well said , u have guts and nuts to criticise the situation, I salute u and also want and waiting for those answers which is asking by you from the above mentioned people.
ReplyDeleteWhat an article Mr. Johny. Absolutely stunning. I find it so difficult for people to understand what real Indian art could be like. The Westernized idea has sunk so deep into the very grains that create and Indian individuality. Above all, wherever money is involved, mediocrity multiplies. I wanted to write to you personally regarding something of absolute importance to Indian art, something that people like those mentioned in your article have tried to bury but somehow i got my hands to it... the work of an amazing Indian master. I haven't been able to find your email id. Would be grateful if you could share with me the same. Am already sharing this wonderful article with as many people i know.... Thank you so much for this amazing revelation. It's about time!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations and wish you the best!
I think you have touched the heart and soul of every Indian Artist through this article who are working with their own skills and involment. I do believe that the energy you may transfer in to your art work if you are working yourself or involved directly not directing only.these so called production houses may produce commercial art or commissioned art but without heart.
ReplyDeleteI am sorry if I have written something wrong.. because I am not a writer, after reading this blog couldn't stop reacting myself .....congratulations and wish you good luck....
Good to see someone doing real critic's work.
ReplyDelete