Manisha Gera Baswani has an MFA from the Jamia Millia Islamia
University (1992). She studied in Paris on a scholarship from
the French Government in 1993. She is a recipient of the National
Scholarship for young emerging artists (1991-93), and the Junior
Fellowship (1995-97) from the Government of India.
She has exhibited in solo shows at the Shridharani Gallery,
Triveni, Delhi (1994,1998), in Bombay with Gallery Chemould
(2000) and in Madras with Apparao Galleries (2001). She has
also participated ingroup shows in Amsterdam, Dubai and Berlin.
In 1999, she was invited to lecture at the National College
of Art, Lahore and Indus Art College, Karachi. She has worked
as the As Creative Director on Gita-Govinda, the multi-media
joint project by IGNCA, India and Xerox, USA, designing the
range of art motifs and icons. This path breaking fusion of
culture and technology continues to travel to leading institutions
of the world.
"Painting is the ambrosia for the mind," says Manisha,
for whom the act of painting is a 360-degree exercise allowing
for meditative time, structured discipline and immense personal
gratification. Ramachandran, one of the leading contemporary
masters, is Manisha's guru and greatest inspiration. Her early
works comprised imagery one found in Indian miniatures and Buddhist
murals, that she abstracted to evoke the expression of a contemporary
context. A global citizen Manisha is equally at home with Hollywood,
MTV and icons such as James Bond and Elvis. Her recent body
of work brought together her earlier engagement with icons,
heritage and spaces, by creating relief backdrops by placing
different surfaces against each other.
She explored 'space' with this recent series, exhibited at
Gallery Chemould, inspired by her visits to heritage sites and
palaces in India, in particular, the 'Sheesh Mahal' in the Red
Fort of Agra. Old havelli's and palaces carry particular motifs
and decorative architectural details like jharokas, jaalis or
latticework, and inlay work, that tends to create an element
of 'hide-and-seek', which is experienced by the viewer walking
through room after room. She used particular materials to mimic
this architectural effect. The interplay with the Sikishi board,
for instance, (a Japanese art material made from fine handmade
papers laminated to hard board backing and traditionally used
for Sumi painting, haiku, calligraphy, and watercolor painting)
creates a split surface and adds visual dimension, wherein mounts
and frames cease to be mere props and become extensions of the
work itself. Another material used is the Sanjhi jaali with
mirror attached behind it, the entire form inviting the viewer
to engage and self-reflect.
Visit: www.manishagerabaswani.com