Saturday, 25 May 2013

SKETCH BOOK STORIES



My stories are for you all, just walk about with them and surely you will be surprised. Splashing my thoughts on pages of this sketch book was not a mere performance for me. It gives me delight to my soul and to my dreams.Some are on your face images, some just play with your doubts. But none is without a story. It's my solemn affair with my profession as an Artist that compelled me to come up with this body or to say properly, had an adventure with my thoughts and the materials.

Right from pen and ink, pastel, acrylic or charcoal on paper are there to explore. The combination of soul, hand and the tools, turn a mere piece of paper into something magical, at least for me!
I missed no moment to enjoy my affair with this sketch book.



Monday, 13 May 2013

GOOGLISED ART


INGLORIOUS BUSTERD, Pen & Ink on printed paper

Rightly said by some art critics and curators in India and abroad that art is now more global than ever. It's more influenced or just taken from another source.....credit to the internet. Now that we are exposed to millions of images on the net and all that is easily accessible to artists of all genre and ages. Art students in different colleges and polytechnics now rely heavily on the net rather than on their imagination or instinct.

Just with a simple click get more images and ideas than a normal human brain. Soul is dead and mouse is ruling the art world now. Manipulate, collate, crop, chop or simply filtered images are painted or drawn on canvases. Fuck the real artist inside you...just surf baby, that's the motto of our time.

Friday, 19 April 2013

INDIA ART FAIR...A Visual Saga!



INDIA ART FAIR SAGA 1, pen & ink on paper, artist : Soumen Bhowmick 2013

Hard to let go of those glasses of Absolut vodka, the martini...the scotch or that moheto. Dreams half broken like those glasses which felled on the floor at the lounge of the India Art Fair. Feels cheap sometime to be a drunk art lover...a title so enviously guarded by many. Those moments of drunken bliss and philosophies were so tempting to be repeated year after year.

Observations from the India Art Fair:

There are more people in the isles than in the booths.
The best place to meet collectors is in the loo.
More people look at the work label than the work itself.
More people are buying art with their cameras than with their wallets.
People love to collect cards and any other material that is free.
A diet of chocolate and chips is a healthy art fair diet.
Wednesday is the new Saturday.
People watching is a favorite pastime.
People spend 80% of their time visiting 20% of the booths.
People want to see edgy but buy safe.
People ask for exactly the size of work that you do not have.
Lots of famous artists make lots of bad art.
Bad art sells.
This gallerist is brain dead.

By : Soumen Bhowmick
       Visual Artist & Writer
       April, 2013


INDIA ART FAIR SAGA 3, pen & ink on paper, artist : Soumen Bhowmick 2013

The Fair, The Boozes, The Art and The Business

What Happened to India Art Fair?

I do not know at first, because I was struggling to have a VIP entrance to the fair since its inception at Pragati Maidan.  I was not allowed by the door keepers they kept on saying that it is for the VIP.  I guessed at that time might be there would really be a very interesting thing happening inside where no artists are allowed and only the VIPs.  I waited for a while and try to see who these VIPs are. Gosh! I was astonished to see that they are only artists with a card in hand and they were escorted inside.  I asked the gate keeper what was that, he said that it is a VIP entrance, I asked him again do you know that he is VIP? He said yes because he had that card...Oh! That is the case give me that card I also wanted to go inside I replied... he said no, because you are not VIP, how I replied, he said because you do not have a card... hmmm! That’s sounds interesting. Then I called my collector who was also there as a VIP and also a participant curator, he said you wait I will arrange it to you.  And then suddenly from no where someone came and called my name in.  I looked at the door keeper in delight... he just smiled and let me in...

What and where I am entering too I didn’t knew till I felt that these fairs are not for the artists they are only for having wine, dine and have party, I saw not a single work that had inspired me a bit, it looked like a haat of Kolkata bazaar or in fact any where in India.  Every pickle, every vegetable was polished and put up with its entire price tags... hmmm! That’s interesting, now people do not have to ask for the prices anymore, I thought that there would be number of potential buyers but I ended up in the VIP lounge which was exclusively for someone who want to drink seriously.

Ha ha ha... I drowsed myself and went home...

And what about art... who cares? It is a good fun to go to the VIP entry and then drowse oneself with wine and come back home with empty mind...

The second and third art fair I didn’t got the passes so I went there spending 200 Rs. flat yet I ended up drowsed again because someone was there to give me VIP lounge entry and I was drunk again and went back to home with empty mind...

In fourth fair my dear friend had given me the VIP pass to get into the fair to view the works for the first time... as I went past the stalls I found only the master’s were looking great with their works but the contemporaries were all the same... looked like a solo show for the entire art fair... another experience I wanted to add then VIP lounge came again... and again I went empty mind to my home...

Fifth fair I was not willing to go... then suddenly I got a card... I got suspicious why? Why again? Yet I went there when I was getting interested in the art works... again the VIP lounge came and again I went empty mind to my home for all the three days... Ha ha ha

INDIA ART FAIR SAGA 2, pen & ink on paper, artist : Soumen Bhowmick 2013

What is serious about India Art Fair?

The seriousness about India Art Fair is the VIP lounge; the wine, the beer, the boozes and the boosts.  Every artist try to get the VIP pass to get the first day entry so that they could meet important people who buy art, so that they could able to introduce their works to them.  But instead much of the artists were in the VIP lounges laundering and talking rubbish, collecting information and puking.

And what about the works... they all vanished from the minds because of the simple fact that after five years of art fairs it is still a haat.

Galleries participate and they go but the owners of the Art Fair becoming scum of the corporate rules the artists...  and pick a handful of them who sells... I am not against the selling and buying of art works, but my suggestions that if you remove the VIP lounge from the fairs do people will be interested in going there and visiting there. I guess participant artists would not like to go there.  Anyway hope for the best as the boozes flow, minds will be kept empty...

By : Rahul Chaudhury
       Visual Artist & Writer
       April, 2013

INDIA ART FAIR, pen & ink on Fair Booklet,
artist : Soumen Bhowmick 2012


Wednesday, 6 February 2013

'V' series article with AFP magazine, Hong Kong


'V' 

'V' here stands for Vendetta and Vigilante. My series of B&W drawings and paintings are inspired by the English movie of the same name, V for Vendetta is a 2006 dystopian thriller film directed by James McTeigue. The common mans fight against the different social diseases or malice is predominant here. It's satirical depiction of social upheavals and voice for change around the world. It's the contemporary fight for change for political situations as well as economic security. Funny yet raw in essence the drawings will definitely make your heart aware of the predicament of the masses. The common man acts as the vigilante here, voicing and fighting against oppression of all kinds and various social, political and economic malices.
It’s a satirical depiction of social upheavals and voice for change around the world. It’s the contemporary fight for change for political, social and economic security. Funny it might look yet raw in essence. The drawings will definitely make your heart aware of the predicament of the masses around the world. The commonman acts as the lone vigilante here. Voicing and fighting against oppression of all kinds. We suffer from an insecurity of living our life humanly. Dreams are crushed even before they are given shape. Ideas lay scatted unattended on the path of corruption and manipulation.

One can live in this world but surrounded by fear and scared of truth, looking only at a hopeless dream of sanity. The cause to fight for justice and equality in the society is an immortal journey. Pursued for ages by mankind. In this series of work, swords are always drawn, a great battle of individuals is raging all over the space. It’s a battle for change. A call to fight corruption, lies and evils in all shapes and colours. The slogan raised here is “Let the overthrow of old world of malices be traced on the palms of your hands”.
We are looking for heroes among us but powers who thrive on corruption and insecurity are crushing them all the times. Revolution of ideas and free speech is in danger in this era of faceless ideals. What are we standing for; has honesty, truth are just alien to man now. Times are charged with change in the air. But it is not easy for us to know what we want; indeed, we may well want something, yet still remain in a state of negativity, a state of dissatisfaction, for we may as yet remain unconscious of new positivity. Striving for a pure state of stability is a myth, yet it’s our humanly duty to fight for at least a bit of it in this world. The fight is immortal and that makes this series V immortal as well.



Monday, 20 August 2012

JOURNEY OF A LONER



My steps dissolving into a space that evaporates into thoughts I do not think…
– Octavio Paz

This free world… And its enormous labyrinthine space, my soul dissolving into it, evaporating into multitude of forms as testimony to my thoughts. Being out there, with my arms ever spreading out to embrace the limitless expanse of possibilities, I would say I am a creative citizen of this free world, always working towards creating new vistas of human endeavours. My ideas, colours and lines – my art – has been the most enlightened form of self-expression.
A Bengali in origin, I come from Kolkata. Did my BFA from College of Art, New Delhi in 1997. I first saw my dreams taking shapes when I won the “Vice-Chancellor’s Award”, the highest award of excellence, while in my final year. Thus, my journey into the professional creative world began in the year 1997. With every passing day, ever since, I have learned and earned everything that I could, immersing myself in all hues and colours – that is my world, my art.
I am involved primarily with painting and teaching as a Lecturer in College of Art, New Delhi. I worked for various publishers & NGOs from India and abroad as a Illustrator, Cartoonist and Designer, like: Times of India, Business Standard, Down to Earth, Life Positive, Computers Today, D.A.V.P., CII, Rupa & Co., Macmillan, Orient Longman, Oxford University Press, National Book Trust, Goodword Books, Harcourt Educational Publishing (Heinemann/Ginn & Reed, UK), Glen Tree Publishing (UK) and Pioneer Book House (Dubai), TERI, CSE, Manushi and Nirantar. Illustrations give wings to the imagination of children and allure their thoughts making it an essential part of the learning process. However, conceptualizing the theme and creating the visuals is not an ordinary job. I find children book illustration the most challenging and enjoyable creative job besides painting.
One needs to keep few important things in mind, before taking the plunge into the world of children books. The delicate and finicky world of children presents with lots of challenges. Especially if you are an Illustrator, dealing with images of the children’s world. Whenever I go through a new manuscript for any children book, the first thing that comes to my mind, is my own childhood days. It’s a dream world of infinite possibilities, with adventure, action, unknown beasts and colours. I always keep in mind a child’s mindset, before starting my drawings. Based on the initial writings, I try to put my own know-how of the children’s world into use. Try to do as much justice to the writer’s words, blending with my own views of he same. But take care to make it look humorous and funny with some elements of surprise put in. I have illustrated couple of books, which incorporates values of saving our environment using some elements of fun. I feel strongly regarding environmental issues. Teaching also gives me a lot of satisfaction, feels the joy of giving back to the society.
Recently during the 2008 World Book Fair, two of my illustrated books-“Bunbun and The Mango Tree” and “Toru Nanu and Hipu” done for Khaas Kitaab got selected for the 100 Best Children Books exhibition, from all over India, organised by AWIC and NBT.

Painting for me is the only source of feeling alive in this mundane world of despair and ignorance. I try to spend most of my time in my studio, doing paintings or drawings with new materials and new ideas, with stress on experimentation. Presently working on a series of paintings and drawings for my various upcoming shows in India and abroad. Had my first Solo show-“Circus of the Absurd” at Lalit Kala Akademi gallery, New Delhi during March, 2010. Also participated at the “Animamix Bienniale,” MOCA Shanghai 2009-2010.
My style of work got much appreciation from galleries and curators from Israel, Italy, Germany, China and South Korea apart from galleries in Delhi. My paintings and drawings got much appreciation from Prof. Victoria Lu, Creative Director, MOCA Shanghai (She is the first female Art Critic and Curator in the Chinese Contemporary art world), Ms.Vittoria Biasi, Professor of art, Curator and Art Critic from Italy and In-Sang Song, Creative Director of Seoul Art Center, South Korea.

This is the only process which gives my life a sense of meaning and I do believe painting made my life more sincerely truthful to myself. I just paint to feel free of all pain and desperation of this rusted life of ours. Like to explore the world with colours and lines. I find the use of line very intriguing. I believe in the strength of lines, it can create simplistic wonders of enormous value. Colours of limited volume and used with absolute justice to the subject can make it very purposeful at the end. Breathing life to my semi-abstract body of works is some time very time consuming and delightfully painful.
Like to experiment with various kinds of medium and surfaces. With my present series of work, I am working in acrylic, soft pastel, pen and ink on paper primarily. I am working in an abstract form but with figurative elements. In this series some of which are black & white while mostly color works, painstakingly drawn imagery often featuring hybrid creatures, partly human and partly animal. Sometimes there is no classification between the clown and the tigers, they change forms and get inter mingled, to surprise the audience. There is a juxtaposition of fact and fiction in my imaging with a touch of humour and satire. My characters perform their role in the circus of absurd within the urban arena. Because I get inspired by the daily nuances of the big city. Here my clowns or tigers and skeletons take on different characters of acrobatic performers. Influences of Indian folk and tribal art is visible but with a contemporary and global nuance.
In my present series of paintings and drawings, I have shown Man-kind’s constant fight with his inner dilemmas and the ultimate victory of truth and goodness. In this case I treated the subject with a social commentary style in the form of pictorial depiction. It’s a blend of satire and irony of our present day predicaments. One will find a clown or two struggling with four tigers. The clown uses golden daggers to fight with the tigers. The tigers personify the various vices of our own self, like - lust, anger, fear and envy. The golden swords are here to show truth and purity of heart one needs to use to overcome all this weaknesses. The tigers are heartless, selfish and materialistic, although they have a royal presence. A duality of character is visible in this case. They deceive the society and the circus shows there various characteristics at various times. Whereas the clown uses his sword made of gold to kill the tigers during the show. Shown cities being destroyed, faith being plundered by the tigers.
It also a part of the show. The tigers play with our innocence at every step of life. Sometimes impersonating the clown, to deceive us of reality. The imposter is shameless to play the role of a pure soul. But it didn’t last long and the clown takes back his reign of goodness after much struggle, with the help of a golden sword. You need a pure golden heart and faith to kill the tigers amidst us. During this ongoing contradictions and power play, the circus in itself becomes enriched with various emotions. I tried my best to capture all this intricacies in this series of works.
Here gradually the performance overwhelms the reality and in itself becomes reality. The ‘Sadhu’ and other characters have a certain role to play here. I have shown a boat in most of the paintings or drawings, to show homeland and our place in this world. It is made of wood, showing vulnerability. Sometimes it has got wheels, to show its unstable or flowing. This Circus of the Absurd is the circus of our physical word.
Absurdness is now so common and obvious around us. The various acts of absurdity by the clown and the tigers gives one a feeling of dark humour and sometimes fantasy, but it all is so true.

My works are in the collection of ART ALIVE GALLERY, COLLECTOR'S STOP ART GALLERY, DELHI GYMKHANA CLUB, AIFACS, HABIART FOUNDATION, many private collections in INDIA, NORWAY and CANADA.

Tuesday, 24 July 2012

FIREBALL FROM HELL


Rules are yet to be broken in hell,
Still very nascent, drowned in its own glory.
The DEVIL risen.
Asked me, if I would take his place.
The eternal tortuous fire of hell is burning me down,
High and brighten by our failed souls.
I was preparing myself for this day of reckoning.

I was thrown out to earth
to burn down the proclaimers of modernity.
Hell was good,
Really comforting for the duality of my soul.

One aspire to achieve the impossible
And the other surrounded by failure of heart.
Devil loves blood of change,
For it flows without questioning the creator.

The smell of burning flesh, empty bowls of solace,
False promises, wandering souls, tired eyes full of tears.
Torn apart,
Tortured views of that helpless fellow on the street.
It's hell out there.
Just cheated our senses to make one feel comfortable
With all that gory happenings.

Now I am ready; the FIREBALL.
Hell has created me.
Time to burn down the scums of million years of dusted living.
Terrible will be my justice,
No mercy, no tears, no pity, no fear,
Just tonnes of burning heads rolling on the ground of temptation.
Chopped down views of mediocrity is no mean to save oneself.

My eyes are full of vengeance.
They are burning for ages,
Behold the soul, for I am the FIREBALL from HELL!

Sunday, 17 June 2012

CIRCUS OF THE ABSURD



This new series is the second phase or part of my earlier series by the same title. During
this time lots of new experiences and emotional turmoil’s played its definite role to shape
this new range of works on paper. Mainly pen & ink and mixed media. Done over a period of two years, fuelled by innumerous socio-political consequences globally and its impact was dramatic on my work.
The contemporary daily upheavals in the Indian scenario, telling instances of helpless souls and their struggle for mere survival.
Now the struggle is not internal but with external elements of our society. The tiger here plays the role of the more identifiable face of social evils – Corruption, Terror, Poverty, Deceit, Injustice, Nepotism and Aimless Growth. Sometimes the images disturb your established norms of Visual acceptance. Well, that’s exactly I want to achieve, shaken and stirred and served raw on a platter of undaunting flow of emotions. The Clown here is me and you, the commonman . Tired by its own conformity and dualism. It tries to break free through the mess, with the use of the golden sword. Trying to force ones way forward, with an endless jest for true liberty.
The new man (Clown) emerges out of pain and blood, to claim his rightful place of honour. Here an amount of movement is created with the images of the butterfly, the symbol of freedom and innocence. It’s truly honest and beautiful, but sometimes it’s nauseatingly repulsive. The butterfly plays with the clown and creates an environment of challenge and tranquility at the same time.

Although it’s all very ABSURD in the fist glance, the path is laid for DREAMS to step out, to shake the hollow regime of DISHONEST Tigers.

Just make way for the CLOWNS!










Tuesday, 12 June 2012

CLOWN HEADS

A series of pen & ink on paper. This series is an extension of my previous series 'CIRCUS OF THE ABSURD'.
I started working on this series of drawings on paper based on my personal experiences in various forms. Street urchins forced to perform acts of jugglery in front of the public just to earn a piece of bread (roti). Even doing terribly difficult and fantastic acts of acrobatics. Small kids with an innocent smile on their face doing the impossible. Farmers committing suicide, with debt to follow up by the helpless family. Homeless on the streets of our cities. Migrants with punctured dreams. All unsung souls who die, trying to achieve that minimum sanctity of humanness. They are my inspiration, my ‘CLOWNS’. The golden sword or dagger has its own role to play. It gives judgement. It takes the test of purity. The golden sword is alive, does its own tricks. The clowns are tragic, funny, nauseating, cruel, sad, happy and above all humane. I want to put some questions of important issues through my art. In this series of ‘CLOWN HEADS’, the question of minimum humane existence is dissected in different forms. The clowns are faces among us, seen everyday in different forms and situations.



The series of ‘CLOWN HEADS’ stands on an understanding of daily exploration of our soulless journey towards attaining nothingness. “It’s a small world”, its an old joke, but you wouldn’t want to paint it. Or rather want to paint some crucial moments from its vastness. The ‘CLOWN HEADS’ are visual traces of imperfect frameworks for negotiating the complexity (and perhaps meaninglessness) of existence – a symbolic vastness within the greater vastness of this physical world. It’s a galactic pile-ups of reality – meditating prisms to which someone, somewhere, is still clinging. The elements facilitate engagement at all levels of consciousness, being provocative in nature.

‘CLOWN HEADS’ series is based on our inner turmoil’s and its struggle with various elements, influenced my forces of society, norms of survival, rules of coordinated etiquette’s, economic pitfalls, political lies, back stabbing idiots, race to success…what not may be the right question.
One might ask why only heads…well, the head including the face is the real mirror of our soul. We read hundreds of faces in our daily life. Still we remember few, sometimes none. The head or face strikes you first and has its own story to tell. ‘CLOWN HEADS’ is an assemblage of strange contradictions of contemporary life. Some faces will remind you of the friend you just met on the streets or may be the stranger who just made you laugh with his uncommon acts. Among millions of faces, some are truly memorable, for reasons unknown to us. Just too hard to erase from ones memory. Why we treasure them is truly mysterious. That unknown connection maybe known as human bonding, so prehistoric yet surviving the troubles of our time. This element of mystery make our life naturally liveable. That slight twist of eyebrows, that cunning smile, the pale look, happy faces hiding everything beneath them, the anger blowing hot faces, old and tampered faces and some many of them. Scratched, curved, chiseled, moistured, painted, pampered, injured, glorified and drowned in pain, faces unlimited.




These ‘CLOWN HEADS’ are common faces with uncommon stories carved on them.
Raw in appearance and bold to the core. The colourful apppearance is deceiving to our eyes. Painted to hide something…mysterious. Clown paints his face to appear funny or appropriate for the show. The show is supreme for him, an every day challenge. Here some accessories are part of the show, the golden swords, the trapeze, the umbrella, the bicycle, the arrows, the ball, the ladder, the golden daggers and the golden guns. They keep popping up here and there to test the clown’s faith and to make the show more thrilling. ‘CLOWN HEADS’, simply put are just spontaneous images of raw experiences. Hope and failure, life and death, are spread across the lines and colours of this series of work on paper. The material used is least important. The cause becomes supreme, transforming your routine space and time to a new level.

The clown heads have another aspect to them. The Buddha eyes with dream like aura make you think why peace suddenly. Well the clown is meditating, one with the self. He is vulnerable but determined. He is on the path of self exploration to explore the world in a more divine way. The void in him is taking a form of solace. The monk of his soul is questioning the meaning of worldly encounters. Ready to take on pain with very little effort. Finding the Shangri-La within oneself is the endless journey of all humans.

My clown heads will make you travel through many aspects and feelings of a clown’s (nayak) life during and after the show. It’s for the viewer to explore. Let it be mystified for time to reveal its true meaning.

(*Upcoming Series...on its way!)







Wednesday, 16 May 2012

V - Series on paper

'V' 

'V' here stands for Vendetta and Vigilante. My series of B&W drawings and paintings are inspired by the English movie of the same name. The common mans fight against the different social diseases or malice is predominant here. It's satirical depiction of social upheavals and voice for change around the world. It's the contemporary fight for change for political situations as well as economic security. Funny yet raw in essence the drawings will definitely make your heart aware of the predicament of the masses. The common man acts as the vigilante here, voicing and fighting against oppression of all kinds.


 'V' - Pen & ink on paper, Year : 2012, By Soumen Bhowmick
  

Saturday, 24 March 2012

ARTIST BIO



Born       
1975 - Kolkata, West Bengal, India

Art Education    
1997 - B.F.A., College of Art, New Delhi
            
Award 
1997 - Vice-Chancellor Award, College of Art, New Delhi

Art Camps 
2015AIFACS, All India Artist's Camp
2009 - AIFACS, All India Artist's Camp        
2007 - Delhi Gymkhana Club

Art Workshops   
2009 to 2016 - Conducted painting workshop at National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), New Delhi
2014 - Participated in Poster Design workshop conducted by State Resource Centre, Jamia Millia Islamia and Ministry of Human Resource Development, New Delhi
2008 - Participated in World Tea Party art workshop conducted by Habiart Foundation at Travancore Palace, New Delhi, during the Contemporary Art Fair India
2007 - Conducted art workshop as Director-Art, for Sahitya Kala Parishad,
New Delhi

1994 - Participated in Artists Illustration Workshop, organised by India International Rural Cultutral Centre, sponsored by the Ministry of Welfare, Government of India, New Delhi

Solo Exhibitions

2016 - "Chronicles of V", Triveni Gallery, Triveni Kala Sangam, New Delhi
2014 - "Head Tale", Triveni Gallery, Triveni Kala Sangam, New Delhi
2010 - "Circus of the Absurd", Lalit kala Akademy, New Delhi

Group Exhibitions
2015 - “AIFACS, Exhibition of Paintings & Sculptures”, Senior Camp & Junior Artists, New Delhi 
2014"Within Reach V" by Gallerie Nvya, New Delhi
2014 - "Aqua Aegis Fete" by Gallery Sree Arts at IGNCA, New Delhi
2014 - "Art Bodies" at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
2012 - "Synthesis" by Gallerie Nvya, New Delhi
2012 - "Within Reach III" by Gallerie Nvya, New Delhi
2012 - “Emergings” a group show at Artizen Art Gallery, New Delhi
2012 - “Creative Idioms” a group show curated by Seema Subbanna at DLF Promenade, New Delhi

2011 - “Kindling Expressions” open call, group exhibition with Gallery Ensign, New Delhi
2011 - “Contrast” a group exhibition of Paintings & Sculptures at 

Lalit Kala Akademy, New Delhi
2010 - “AIFACS, Exhibition of Paintings & Sculptures”, Senior Camp & Junior Artists, New Delhi 
2010 - “Balti Blast Water Conservation Art Show”, organised by Kala Care Group at Lokayata Art Gallery, New Delhi
2008 - “Pen & Brush Magic” an exhibition of Children’s Picture Book Illustrations, by AWIC at AIFACS gallery, New Delhi
2008 - “Ananya” an overview of contemporary Indian art by Bajaj Capital Art House, curated by Sushma Bahl at Visual Art Gallery, New Delhi
2008 - “Rainbows in the Sun” by Gallery Pioneer, Planet Art & Ishat Art at Lalit Kala Akademy,
New Delhi
2007 - Delhi Gymkhana Club by Urusvati Art Gallery   
1994 - 1997 - Annual Exhibition, College of Art, New Delhi  

Participations (National) 
2011 – "Nouvelle", a celebration of art with Gallery Ensign, New Delhi
2010 - 200 Days to Go (XIX Commonwealth Games 2010 Delhi)
2009 - Contemporary Art Fair (Habiart Foundation)
2009 - Art Expo India (Mumbai) Exhibited with Art Inc Gallery, Delhi

Participations (International)   
2011 - Bennial of Illustrations Bratislava (BIB), Slovakia Represented India
2009 - Animamix Bienniale (MOCA Shanghai) China, Curated by 
Prof. Victoria Lue
2008 - NAMBOOK (Seoul) Represented India for the 4th Nami Island International Children’s Book Festival, Seoul, Republic of Korea 

Judged 
2010 - Wildlife Trust of India, inter school art competition
2009 - India Meteorological Department, inter school art competition
2009 - Shriram College of Commerce (Artisia), inter college art competitions
2007 - MTNL Perfect Health Mela, inter college art competitions 

Institutional Profile
2014 - 2016 - Visiting Faculty, Creative Painting Department, National         Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), New Delhi
2011 - Visiting Faculty, Smart Hobby Ideas, New Delhi
2011 - Visiting Faculty, Apeejay Stya University, Haryana
2010 - Visiting Lecturer, Amity School of Fine Arts, Noida                
2010 - Visiting Lecturer, South Delhi Women’s Polytechnic, New Delhi
2008-2011 - Lecturer (Full time), College of Art, New Delhi
2005-2007 - Lecturer, Wigan & Leigh College, New Delhi 

Collections
Art Alive Gallery, Collector’s Stop Gallery, Delhi Gymkhana Club, Vijay Kumar Aggarwal, AIFACS, Community Against Drunken Driving (CADD), Habiart Foundation, private collections in India, Switzerland, Norway and Canada

Friday, 23 March 2012

MY JOURNEY



A Visual Artist, Academician & Writer from New Delhi (India).
B.F.A. from College of Art, New Delhi, 1997.


My steps dissolving into a space that evaporates into thoughts I do not think…
– Octavio Paz

This free world… And its enormous labyrinthine space, my soul dissolving into it, evaporating into multitude of forms as testimony to my thoughts. Being out there, with my arms ever spreading out to embrace the limitless expanse of possibilities, I would say I am a creative citizen of this free world, always working towards creating new vistas of human endeavours. My ideas, colours and lines – my art – has been the most enlightened form of self-expression.
A Bengali in origin, I come from Kolkata. Did my BFA from College of Art, New Delhi in 1997. I first saw my dreams taking shapes when I won the “Vice-Chancellor’s Award”, the highest award of excellence, while in my final year. Thus, my journey into the professional creative world began in the year 1997. With every passing day, ever since, I have learned and earned everything that I could, immersing myself in all hues and colours – that is my world, my art.

I was involved with teaching as a Lecturer with College of Art, New Delhi. I worked for various publishers & NGOs from India and abroad as a Illustrator, Cartoonist and Designer, like: Times of India, Business Standard, Down to Earth, Life Positive, Computers Today, D.A.V.P., CII, Rupa & Co., Macmillan, Orient Longman, Oxford University Press, National Book Trust, Goodword Books, Harcourt Educational Publishing (Heinemann/Ginn & Reed, UK), Glen Tree Publishing (UK) and Pioneer Book House (Dubai), TERI, CSE, Manushi and Nirantar. Illustrations give wings to the imagination of children and allure their thoughts making it an essential part of the learning process. However, conceptualizing the theme and creating the visuals is not an ordinary job. I find children book illustration the most challenging and enjoyable creative job besides painting.
One needs to keep few important things in mind, before taking the plunge into the world of children books. The delicate and finicky world of children presents with lots of challenges. Especially if you are an Illustrator, dealing with images of the children’s world. Whenever I go through a new manuscript for any children book, the first thing that comes to my mind, is my own childhood days. It’s a dream world of infinite possibilities, with adventure, action, unknown beasts and colours. I always keep in mind a child’s mindset, before starting my drawings. Based on the initial writings, I try to put my own know-how of the children’s world into use. Try to do as much justice to the writer’s words, blending with my own views of he same. But take care to make it look humorous and funny with some elements of surprise put in. I have illustrated couple of books, which incorporates values of saving our environment using some elements of fun. I feel strongly regarding environmental issues. Teaching also gives me a lot of satisfaction, feels the joy of giving back to the society.
Recently during the 2008 World Book Fair, two of my illustrated books-“Bunbun and The Mango Tree” and “Toru Nanu and Hipu” done for Khaas Kitaab got selected for the 100 Best Children Books exhibition, from all over India, organised by AWIC and NBT.

Painting for me is the only source of feeling alive in this mundane world of despair and ignorance. I try to spend most of my time in my studio, doing paintings or drawings with new materials and new ideas, with stress on experimentation. Presently working on a series of paintings and drawings for my various upcoming shows in India and abroad. Had my first Solo show-“Circus of the Absurd” at Lalit Kala Akademi gallery, New Delhi during March, 2010. Also participated at the “Animamix Bienniale,” MOCA Shanghai 2009-2010.
My style of work got much appreciation from galleries and curators from Israel, Italy, Germany, China and South Korea apart from galleries in Delhi. My paintings and drawings got much appreciation from Prof. Victoria Lu, Creative Director, MOCA Shanghai (She is the first female Art Critic and Curator in the Chinese Contemporary art world), Ms.Vittoria Biasi, Professor of art, Curator and Art Critic from Italy and In-Sang Song, Creative Director of Seoul Art Center, South Korea.

This is the only process which gives my life a sense of meaning and I do believe painting made my life more sincerely truthful to myself. I just paint to feel free of all pain and desperation of this rusted life of ours. Like to explore the world with colours and lines. I find the use of line very intriguing. I believe in the strength of lines, it can create simplistic wonders of enormous value. Colours of limited volume and used with absolute justice to the subject can make it very purposeful at the end. Breathing life to my semi-abstract body of works is some time very time consuming and delightfully painful.
Like to experiment with various kinds of medium and surfaces. With my present series of work, I am working in acrylic, soft pastel, pen and ink on paper primarily. I am working in an abstract form but with figurative elements. In this series some of which are black & white while mostly color works, painstakingly drawn imagery often featuring hybrid creatures, partly human and partly animal. Sometimes there is no classification between the clown and the tigers, they change forms and get inter mingled, to surprise the audience. There is a juxtaposition of fact and fiction in my imaging with a touch of humour and satire. My characters perform their role in the circus of absurd within the urban arena. Because I get inspired by the daily nuances of the big city. Here my clowns or tigers and skeletons take on different characters of acrobatic performers. Influences of Indian folk and tribal art is visible but with a contemporary and global nuance.
In my present series of paintings and drawings, I have shown Man-kind’s constant fight with his inner dilemmas and the ultimate victory of truth and goodness. In this case I treated the subject with a social commentary style in the form of pictorial depiction. It’s a blend of satire and irony of our present day predicaments. One will find a clown or two struggling with four tigers. The clown uses golden daggers to fight with the tigers. The tigers personify the various vices of our own self, like - lust, anger, fear and envy. The golden swords are here to show truth and purity of heart one needs to use to overcome all this weaknesses. The tigers are heartless, selfish and materialistic, although they have a royal presence. A duality of character is visible in this case. They deceive the society and the circus shows there various characteristics at various times. Whereas the clown uses his sword made of gold to kill the tigers during the show. Shown cities being destroyed, faith being plundered by the tigers.
It also a part of the show. The tigers play with our innocence at every step of life. Sometimes impersonating the clown, to deceive us of reality. The imposter is shameless to play the role of a pure soul. But it didn’t last long and the clown takes back his reign of goodness after much struggle, with the help of a golden sword. You need a pure golden heart and faith to kill the tigers amidst us. During this ongoing contradictions and power play, the circus in itself becomes enriched with various emotions. I tried my best to capture all this intricacies in this series of works.
Here gradually the performance overwhelms the reality and in itself becomes reality. The ‘Sadhu’ and other characters have a certain role to play here. I have shown a boat in most of the paintings or drawings, to show homeland and our place in this world. It is made of wood, showing vulnerability. Sometimes it has got wheels, to show its unstable or flowing. This Circus of the Absurd is the circus of our physical word.
Absurdness is now so common and obvious around us. The various acts of absurdity by the clown and the tigers gives one a feeling of dark humour and sometimes fantasy, but it all is so true.

My works are in the collection of ART ALIVE GALLERY, COLLECTOR'S STOP ART GALLERY, DELHI GYMKHANA CLUB, AIFACS, HABIART FOUNDATION, many private collections in INDIA, NORWAY and CANADA.


Monday, 27 February 2012

THE MYSTERY BEING AN ARTIST

 What really makes you call yourself an Artist?

Dwell into this everlasting query of mine and realized to take my mind a little deeper into the unknown, than the normal being. Artist is not a single word. It’s a combination of so many moments of revelation, that I seized to explain any of them.

What it feels like to wake up every morning with a mind full of ideas, banging the wall of your head with their bone crushing urge to conquer the world. Sometimes vomiting the excess glory through one’s moments of loneliness and tears of lost love. Being an Artist is like on a never ending roller coaster ride, through the wilderness of uncharted territories of one’s fears and doubts. That flicker of hope always urges me to chase it to the last. The edge of excellence is so beautiful and unnerving. Yet, I always try to touch that with my invisible fingers of art. The mind of an artist stroll through the uncharted lanes and by-lanes of every day life. Get inspired by the ordinary to create the extraordinary.

Talking to yourself to understand the lines and colours better is not a mere practice, it’s a  ritual of excellence. That’s the mystery of being an Artist. With a more severe urge for heart wrenching exploration still waiting…!

THE UNDEFEATED



Poking my mind with a question,
To defeat time.
Seldom being answered by the almighty.
Towards the end of a session of madness with colours,
I suddenly realised to delink my mind from the body of hope.
Screamed out my fears of failure.
Fought the nightmares to the abyss.
Embraced the golden sword of hope,
And become undefeated!

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

EMERGINGS

EMERGINGS
a group exhibition of paintings & drawings

ARTIZEN ART GALLERY 
Peareylal Bhawan, 2 Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg.
New Delhi - 110002.
(*Metro Station : Pragati Maidan)


http://www.onlineexhibitions.in/demo.php

Colours of India, Rajya Sabha TV coverage of EMERGINGS group show. 





Emergings - Art Exhibition. 
A group exhibition of nine artists showing their creative journey.

Participatings Artists

Cedric Van Eenoo (USA)
Prakash Das Khandey
Rajesh Kumar Mishra
Sanchit Jain
Santosh Kumar Sahani
Shyam Sharma
Soumen Bhowmick
Veerpal Singh
Vikrant Singh Rathore


Cedric Van Eenoo, from the United States of America has exhibited his works all over the world and the only country he has not exhibited in is India. So now he is here with his abstract creations. Black is dominating colour of his work. In smaller sizes but with ample abstract emotions.

Prakash Das Khandey, is exhibiting his realistic works of Indian themes. Very rustic in nature. The works are very colourful and also in B&W. Figurative in nature.

Rajesh Kumar Mishra, is experimenting with water colour on paper. Very surrealistic works, dream like. Very subtle handling of water colour.
Sanchit Jain, is a young artist of this lot. Still learning her tricks with art. But with lots of promises.

Santosh Kumar Sahani, a real gem from Darbhanga, Bihar. Very rustic flavour and honest with his canvases. His fisherman tales are full of pain and surprises. It's very deep with emotions. The canvases are colouful but at the same time tells you a journey of creative endeavour.
Shyam Sharma, a senior artist from Delhi is showing his drawings with pen of faces on paper. One can see the intensity of mixed emotions among the faces.

Soumen Bhowmick, is a another artist who is deeply rooted with social and economic issues. Exhibiting his works from CIRCUS of The ABSURD and CLOWN HEADS series here. All the works are on paper. Handling issues close to his heart only and being truly honest with them.

Veerpal Singh, is a photographer and digital artist. Showing two of his digital artworks. Monuments of Delhi and its people are very dear to him. Always experimenting with his themes and technology.

Vikrant Singh Rathore, from Rajasthan is another of our artist showing his canvases with ample spread of colours. Abstract and geometrical play of images on canvases are his forte.

PRESS CLIPPINGS

HINDUSTAN TIMES


WHAT'S HOT, TIMES OF INDIA

PUNJAB KESRI

DAINIK JAGRAN

Tuesday, 27 December 2011

BUTTERFLY DREAMS - Seies on paper



BUTTERFLY DREAM 1- Pen & ink on paper



We are all dream chasers. Dreams of variuos hues and colours, scarry or intimidating, soothing or enticing. They all revolve around our life like an invisible universe of its own. Dreams invade our senses and play with it. Torture us to create and challenge our own desires. It releases havoc in our system to challenge the physical world.
Dreamers are there in plenty. But few make their dreams true. Guts, pain, tears, love and hate are the ingredients of a perfect dreamer. One needs them to touch the midas end. In this series of work on paper using pen and ink, I tried to catch that foreplay between man and his dreams, but the outcome is unnown.
The love between man and the unknown takes a beautiful meaning here in the form of a 'Butterfly'. The butterfly appears in all its avataars of a fearsome beauty and sometimes a docile one or an unknown dream, which just being missed by man.


BUTTERFLY DREAM 2, Pen & ink on paper

BUTTERFLY DREAM 4, Pen & ink on paper

BUTTERFLY DREAM 3, Pen & ink on paper

Saturday, 26 November 2011

KINDLING EXPRESSIONS - Press Coverage of the group exhibition

PRESS COVERAGE of the KINDLING EXPRESSIONS art exhibition at Gallery Ensign.
ART NEWS - AIFACS Journal

THE STATESMAN - Aruna Bhowmick, Art Critic




Thursday, 20 October 2011

KINDLING EXPRESSIONS


Gallery Ensign
presents

KINDLING EXPRESSIONS
An exhibition of artworks by 6 promising artists


Opening preview 21st October, 6.30pm onwards
Exhibition duration: 22nd October to 26th November 2011.


New Delhi: Gallery Ensign presents a group exhibition of artworks by 6 promising artists Bhanu Prakash, Jagadish Dhyan Sreyas, Monika Bijlani, Ravi K, Soghra Khurasani and Soumen Bhowmick. The exhibition entitled ‘Kindling Expressions’ is curated by Seema Subbanna and will be at Gallery Ensign, B-17, Geetanjali Enclave, New Delhi – 110017, from 21st October to 12th November 2011.
Says Seema Subbanna, Exhibition Curator & Director Gallery Ensign: “Kindling is the stage of beginning, it is to inspire, to encourage and to stimulate. Expression is a medium of communication, of thoughts, ideas and feelings. Together, however I perceive them to be a stage where the artists find a route to walk on and a path that can lead them to anything they wish to achieve.”
The exhibition is a culmination of an open call project created by the gallery for emerging artists last summer. After receiving applications from artists across various genres; the chosen artists were selected as they each represent the expression to communicate thoughts, ideas and feelings that the gallery perceives as promising and forth achieving.

While Ravi K and Bhanu Prakash have made their dreams, memories, hues, thoughts and above all, innocence flow in their particularly original, affectation- less labour of love.
Ravi entices his viewers with his synthesis of folk and pictorial elements in objects – animated and inanimate ones. While Bhanu Prakash, who hails from Chattisgarh transports you to the days of innocence, the traditional charm of the village, its earthy fragrance, its golden fields, its peace, tranquility, warmth and just simple life.

Soumen Bhowmick’s works “Clown Head” and “Butterfly Dreams” series look as complicated as they are actually simple. His use of liberal doses of colour goad the viewers to read between the lines. Soumen pushes the envelope by paving a rather different track – by employing symbols that encounter you with their funny-ness, and at the same time introduces to the pain his clowns (also deployed in the butterfly dreams) hide beneath their hideous, toothy grins.

Monika Bijlani’s digital abstracts form out of her concern for environment, hence a fish recurs silently, in a dilemma to find clear water. “Silent Whispers”, “Freedom in captivity”, “Dressed in black” are mainly her environmental concerns though one can draw several meanings out of her multi-layered, neat, symphony with judicious mix of hues. What makes her digital paintings worth watching is their unpretentiousness, sobriety and minimal services taken by colours.

Jagadish Dhyan Sreyas attempts to bring a smile to the viewers by altering the use of five elements and yet make some statements. For instance he utilises fire, earth, water, air and sky in ‘speaking posture’ in his jars which for him is a symbolic of human body, and creating diverse effects. An ambitious astronaut once, who was fast at mathematics and physics, pulls with him the logic of algebra and the fondness for ‘space’ and “solves” his problems as he puts it.

Soghra Khurasani who enriched her bachelors’ degree with masters in printmaking from MSU, Baroda, uses a spectacular blend of traditional means like woodcut prints and etchings and newer mediums likes serigraphy and digital print that lend her mammoth works awe. She manages the large sizes with landscapes, topography and compositions. And she chooses societal oppression to speak her heart.

The exhibition aims to create a platform for artists to express themselves, their medium and their works. And it brings together a perfect blend where canvases, paper works, digital media and print making come together to speak art to the viewer.

Address: Gallery Ensign, B-17, Geetanjali Enclave,
New Delhi – 110017.
Tel: 91 11 46564790 / 64996900, Fax: 91 11 46564790
Email: galleryensign@gmail.com
Website: www.galleryensign.com