Navel one and the many
Drawings & sculptural installations
13 March - 4 April, 2007
Anant Joshi has often arrived at his drawings and paintings
from forms and spaces that he sculpts or constructs. He uses
carefully selected toys that he breaks apart, paints over and
re-contextualizes (a process of de-construction and then re-construction
within his own space and context.) At times he creates mini-dioramas
using packing materials like thermocol, crates and boxes. He
throws light off of these staged "backdrops", casting
shadows and silhouettes, which have on occasion worked to induce
ideas for paintings and drawings.
These studio practices often serve as the initial trigger for
a concept or a form to emerge, inspiration often being drawn
from the changing in social morals that initiate him to co-operate
with the demands of these constantly changing diaromas. He addresses
issues like mass-scale movement of populations, mediated images
of bodies in collective social/political protest actions and
cultural/economic processes that tend to mark the quality of
human life. Today, with television and print media playing an
active role of mediating between the private, the personal and
the public experience, these hybrid notions of belonging are
zoomed in to the scale of haziness or at times radiating the
consciousness to the level of isolating the private to the domain
of public spheres.
When Anant Joshi received the two-year scholarship to live
and work at the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam, after having graduated
from the J. J. Collage of Art, Mumbai, he used the time and
resources available to make spectacular installations. He crafted
his own ceramic objects, using both recognizable and unrecognizable
shapes, creating forms, casting shadows and reflections with
these shapes and objects.
In the current exhibition, Joshi's occupation with creating
this "spectacle" continues: the multi-layered/sensory-filled
works hope to create experiences that hit at the deep, dark,
violence of the mundane acceptance of our individualistic schizophrenic
everyday urban lives. In Navel: One and the Many, hybrid creatures,
bulbous minaret-like ceramic forms, and the sharp razor-blade
screen, come together in a dramatic theatre of public/private
protest.