The Avid Gaze
November 21 - December 11, 2008
Thus far Kiyomi Talaulicar's pictorial quiet has found itself
placed slap bang in the middle of abstraction. But with The
Avid Gaze one intends to relocate her works in the pacifist
idiom. That said, no efforts have been directed towards entirely
uprooting her linkages with abstraction. The two dispositions
coexist, and allow the artist's new body of work to be read
in a manner more vigorous than that allowed by mere rhetorical
exchanges, which labour unendingly over matters of luminosity
and other such.
Pacifism, of course, is easier said than done. And in Talaulicar's
quasi-abstract still-lifes we witness this tussle, followed
by a steady migration towards equilibrium. In the interiority
of these paintings, composure is groomed by painterly qualities
such as patience. With the application of each restrained layer
the artist endeavours to countervail pessimism and other signs
of discord that may have inflected her milieu, her temperament,
and subsequently her work. At the end of this fairly longwinded
route Talaulicar's paintings appear as though they have been
cured by the sun and roundly weathered by the biosphere.
Since the politics of the personal was first thrown into relief,
we have rarely encountered a dearth of anti-war sentiments in
the contemporary arts, both Indian and otherwise. At the nucleus
of Talaulicar's work rests the philosophy of pacifism, which
announces itself as restraint in the business of everyday life.
In her practice, the artist conveys this trajectory by yielding
to her honed creative instinct. Surrender is critical to all
artistic progress and process but often this natural arc is
disrupted when foresight is blockaded by the temptation to fall
in line with faddish manoeuvres. Talaulicar chases this principal
plot of capitulation with an eye that gathers details.
Gitanjali Dang
(Exerpt from the essay Synecdoche Pacifism by Gitanjali Dang
)