Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Christo and Indian Artists: The Love-Hate Relationship



Christo Vladimirov Javacheff aka Christo 1935-2020)

In history some deaths are events and some others are not. Deaths can never be farcical because they don’t occur a second time for the same person; some deaths are enacted twice for legal-economic reasons. We are talking about normal deaths. Looking at the social media response towards the death of artist Christo Vladimirov Javacheff aka Christo, it seriously feels a notch less than being an event. Things were not the same with Maya Angelou and Marquez; people all over the world had gone crazy with affected grief disseminated like a mocking virus. Christo, the Belgium born French artist was an artistic phenomenon like Marcel Duchamp and Joseph Beuys though he has never been celebrated like the former duo.

It would be interesting to see the impact and influence of Christo among the Indian artists. Till mid-1990s, art historical information and the details regarding contemporary experiments with art in the West and the powerful Eastern countries like China were a highly guarded secret in the Indian art scene. Affluent and lucky seniors were able to travel abroad and could get firsthand information about contemporary art. The catalogues that they had brought to India were treated like top secrets. By the second half of the same decade the impact of globalization was slowly seeping in; in the case of art it was through the libraries.


(Wrapped Coast)

Two books made available to the major libraries in India, namely Janson’s History of Modern Art and Hans Werner Holswarth’s ‘ ‘Modern Art’ published by Taschen, a German publishing house started in 1980 giving a tough competition to the till then unrivalled British art publishing house Thames and Hudson, established in 1949. These two books covered modern western art from Impressionism to mid-1990s along with the monographs and the art movement based studies published by both Phaidon and Thames and Hudson. It was in these books for the first time that the Indian artists came across the works of Christo.

Oil painting was seriously challenged at that time by the youngsters and many were greatly influenced by the works of Duchamp and Beuys. Still the galleries and other art establishments were not ready to shake off the grip of the oil painting genre, and had considerably controlled the meagre art market that they themselves were instrumental in making. Young art graduates were converging in Delhi and Mumbai and were seeking opportunities to practice alternative art. The economics of art market was still a hard nut for them to crack and the only way left to them was to challenge that economy both in theory and practice. Inspired by the theories of conceptual art, ephemeral art, happening art, process art and the early beginnings of performance art heavily documented in the above -mentioned books, the contemporary artists started meandering through the world of ephemeral art and conceptual art; perhaps that was the starting point of installation practice in India.


(Wrapped Reichstag’ (1995)

Robert Smithson, Christo, Hans Hacke, Vito Acconci, Chris Burden, Anne Menderita, Marina Abromovic, Richard Lang, Tony Crag, Richard Long, Anselm Keifer, John Baldasseri, Meret Oppenheim, Richard Serra and so on were the most inspiring figures and it was seriously difficult for the artists to emulate any of those artists within the given socio-economic and cultural scenario. A proper milieu and platform were needed but the extreme grip of the art market did not allow any of these conceptual works to be displayed in their galleries. Hence, the young artists had to live a double life; day time painters and night time conceptual artists. Christo could have been the easiest one to mimic but such mimicry would have landed the artists in the hands of law for the ruling conservative environment.

The most attractive part of Christo was his gradual progression in art that he had started with his French wife and collaborator artist, Jeanne Claude. The available images and information regarding Christo’s work were the ‘Wrapped Coast’ (1969), Valley Curtain (1970), Running Fence (1972), The Umbrellas (1984-1991) and so on. His masterpiece, ‘Wrapped Reichstag’ (1995) came after a prolonged legal fight with the German parliament for almost 12 years. A book detailing the legal proceedings of the twelve years were published in a book form and it was made available in the Central Lalit Kala Akademi library. This was a major source of inspiration along with a monograph on the life and works of Hans Hacke. Artists could allow themselves to be influenced by those artists from the conceptual stream who did material based works that could have been contained in the galleries. Vivan Sundaram is a pioneering figure in the installation art in India while N.N.Rimzon could ideate in the line of Tony Crag and Richard Lang, a few emerging feminist artists could think in the lines of Abromovic and Carole Schneemann. Artists like late Shantanu Lodh and Inder Salim started performing like Vito Acconci and Chris Burden.


(The Umbrellas (1984-1991)

None dared to go in the path opened up by Robert Smithson though some bold attempts were done by an artist named Umesh Madanahalli whose earth based action, process and performance pieces were a new breakthrough in Indian art in the late 1990s. Land and environment art became a fad later on in the new millennium with the art market opening up globally and letting the Indian art reach new heights. Christo still was an enigma for the Indian artists. Christo’s Umbrellas in Japan and the US could have inspired Antony Gormley to do his Horizon Field Project in Austria. In India none touched Christ using the same aesthetical mode. But his methodology was largely followed till one artist came up and did something similar to Christo but in a miniature scale.


(Horizon Field by Antony Gormley)

Christo started covering up objects and houses and later on huge buildings; the progression was gradual and the engineering involved was phenomenal. Christo-Jeanne Claude liked changing the familiar into unfamiliar. He made everything an obscure object of desire. In obscurity there were aesthetics and a threat; a challenge and an incomprehensible phenomenon. The covering process itself was quite challenging but the process defined his art than the covered up object. It was a sort of impermanent art which could exist only in documents and photographs. He rendered his art a sort of de-commodified anti-art. He needed funds to make his art and he couldn’t have sold his works to any collector for their sheer de-objectified nature. But patrons thronged up to support him for the challenge was universal and once in a life time opportunity.


(Les Moulins by Shilpa Gupta)

Following Christo in his methodology was Subodh Gupta whose works using cast bronze or aluminium started off in a small but human scale only to grow in size as the years progressed. Gupta’s idea was make the obvious more obvious yet strange for their sheer shock value and curiosity. Christo was definitely not attempting to shock but making the impossible relent. There was something Promethean and Hemingwayesque about Christo’s works. But Gupta’s are products that challenge the viewers with their unnatural thingness. Then came another Gupta, Shilpa Gupta. She covered the objects confiscated by the airport security personnel with band-aid clothes, erasing their brand and use values. One could see and feel the shape but couldn’t have used or experienced. The experience remained in the very act of seeing it. Shilpa Gupta was Christo-like here in this body of works but she moved away from it as she had taken it as a one off project, perhaps less lucrative as far as the market was concerned.


(Installation by Subodh Gupta)


Covering the objects and obscuring the identity, as an artistic strategy was not entirely new with Christo. In art, the Indian artists had previous encounters with the works of Georgio de Chirico and Rene Magrette. Encounters with the works of Philip Guston, Otto Dix and George Gross also had given some idea of masking the faces and obscuring the identities in their paintings. Henry Moore’s sculptures also had given the viewers a sense of wrapped up sculptures during the major part of the 20th century. Imagine someone in India attempting a Christo act in the art scene. First of all it would be treated as a criminal act; even if it is not taken so, it would take many of years for people to even recognize a wrapped object as a work of art. We should not forget that these are the days we see a lot of Christo works in real time; the black body bags in the corridors of Covid-19 hospitals.

-          JohnyML









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