ONE LIFE ON EARTH
06 - 30 August 2008
Dhruvi Acharya's 'One Life On Earth', like her previous work,
is rooted in personal experience. In the current set of acrylics
and watercolours, however, she erases all biographical reference,
offering instead a series of meditations on vital political
issues of our time: the continuing denial of equality to women;
the burgeoning cult of violence across the globe; and the rapid
deterioration of the environment.
She eagerly devoured Amar Chitra Kathas as a child, and now
returns to them in a critical frame of mind, uncovering the
sexism ingrained in these comics and, by extension, in the myths
and folk tales they retell. Moving to the sound effects that
punctuate her boys' favourite superhero stories, she finds them
less like absurd caricatures than gruesome premonitions.
Her own asthma and her father's pulmonary affliction are points
of departure for an engagement with environmental crises. In
considering the preciousness of clean air, she envisions a world
entirely depleted of oxygen. Within this dystopia, some humans
adapt by growing botanical extensions which allow them to breathe,
while the rest, dependent on the mutants, become buyers, scavengers,
hunters and harvesters.
The surfaces of these images are deceptively placid. On closer
examination, they reveal a complex, layered and precise application
of paint; figuration which synthesises varied influences, from
Indian miniatures through cartoons to contemporary advertising;
and a carefully ambivalent delineation of victims and oppressors
that calls attention to our complicity in the disasters threatening
our existence.
Girish Shahane