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Exhibitions
Jayashree Chakravarty’s preoccupations and concerns in her art practice largely address the shrinking natural habitat and water bodies in ever-expanding Indian cities. She lives by herself in a rapidly urbanizing satellite neighbor town of Kolkata in Eastern India, where she watched the rich marshlands of Salt Lake, transform into 'Salt Lake City', now a congested residential neighborhood. Observing the uprooting of wild flowers and grass, some of them part of the local lore and known for their medicinal value, the consequent vanishing of the once abundant animal, vegetal and insect life around her have sharpened her sensibilities and perceptions to the irreparable in nature. Alluding to the cluttered environment of the city, her densely painted monumental canvases explode with excessive imagery, both gestural and visceral. They draw viewers into the vortex of unsettling landscapes that evoke spatial and temporal turbulence.
Her recent soaring installations with long suspended scrolls have nature as both subject and material. Instantly, we seem to encounter a maze created out of an overlay of painted and woven imagery, interlaced and secured between the skeins/skins of pasted paper and fabric. A closer look reveals petals, dry leaves, seeds, stems, roots and plant-remnants embedded into her multi-layered creations that cannot be experienced from any single vantage point. In contemporary times, where industrial materials and technology have opened up possibilities of more varied artistic and conceptual conquests, Jayashree’s hand-made organic forms point at the need to be closer to nature, seeking ways recuperating to recover the self and the world we live in. Through a poetic evocation in her recent exhibition titled ‘Life will never be the same’, Jayashree encapsulates many overlapping emotions and personal experiences. She acknowledges the inevitability of constant change, fundamental to life, and yet she accentuates the lamenting tone pushing forward the potency of the phrase, as if pained by an irreconcilable loss. Simultaneously she expresses a longing to be located in a time and space of a utopian past. Unpretentious and fiercely honest, Jayashree Charkravarty, has raised with utmost humility, the most pertinent question that we must all confront and reflect on– ‘how to live and let live’.
Other Exhibitions
visions of interiority: interrogating the male body - A RETROSPECTIVE (1963-2013)
14 October 2014 - 1 March 2015
You can’t Keep Acid in a Paper Bag - A RETROSPECTIVE (1969 - 2014) in three chapters
26 September 2014 - 21 December 2014
A view to infinity - A Retrospective (1937-1990) Part of Difficult Loves
31 January 2013 - 8 December 2013
the dark loam: between memory and membrane - A RETROSPECTIVE (1930-2016)
24 August 2016 - 20 December 2016
The euphoria of being Himmat Shah A continuing journey across six decades
30 October 2017 - 15 December 2017
VIVAN SUNDARAM, A RETROSPECTIVE: FIFTY YEARS STEP INSIDE AND YOU ARE NO LONGER A STRANGER
9 February 2018 - 20 July 2018
Envisioning Asia, Gandhi and Mao in the photographs of Walter Bosshard
1 October 2018 - 31 October 2018
Kiran Nadar Museum of Art presents इस घट अंतर बाग-बगीचे | Haku Shah 1934-2019 Within this earthen vessel are bowers and groves
10 December 2019 - 8 January 2020
Right to laziness... no, strike that! Sidewalking with the man saying sorry
30 January 2020 - 10 April 2021
Line, beats and shadows – Ayesha Sultana, Prabhavathi Meppayil, Lala Rukh and Sumakshi Singh
30 January 2020 - 10 April 2021
Delhi Modern: The Architecture of Independent India seen through the eyes of Madan Mahatta
13 February 2020 - 28 February 2020
Around The Table : Conversations about Milestones, Memories, Mappings
5 November 2022 - 22 December 2022
Prussian Blue: A Serendipitous Colour that Altered the Trajectory of Art
19 September 2023 - 20 December 2023