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Atul Dodiya
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"For a figurative painter like me, the reality is slightly different. I live in Ghatkopar, my figures are Indian in the sense that they would be dark skinned and they portray the life in India that includes the poverty, the concerns and the reality. But I don`t make any political statements."
Born in Mumbai in 1959, Atul Dodiya, one of the most sought after contemporary artists today, completed his Bachelor in Fine Arts from the...
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"For a figurative painter like me, the reality is slightly different. I live in Ghatkopar, my figures are Indian in the sense that they would be dark skinned and they portray the life in India that includes the poverty, the concerns and the reality. But I don`t make any political statements."
Born in Mumbai in 1959, Atul Dodiya, one of the most sought after contemporary artists today, completed his Bachelor in Fine Arts from the Sir J. J. School of Arts in 1982. He says, "I was passionate about painting from childhood. I come from a liberal Kathiawadi family and was brought up on old Guru Dutt (Legendary Indian Film maker) movies and classical music of Kumar Gandharva (Classical Singer). Even though nobody in the family has an aesthetic background, they were very supportive. When I was 13, my father, a civil contractor, bought me a first class local train pass, so that I could go for art exhibitions. One of my elder sisters wanted me to be an architect. But I failed my Secondary School Certificate exams twice because I was weak in math. Finally, they allowed me to join the Sir J.J. School of Art."
Atul met his wife Anju --- also an artist --- at the Sir J. J. School of Art where he used to teach after completing his graduation. She was his student. "We are critical of each other`s work. It`s a great thing because it means a lot to have an opinion you can completely trust, coming from someone who understands you completely and knows what you are trying to say",
Both work out of what used to be Atul`s father`s home in Ghatkopar, in Central Mumbai. "While I work, neighbors keep coming in to look at my paintings and comment on them. These people, with their various priorities and concerns, do not come to the painting with any prejudice. They may say the work look like their bed cover. I do not consider their response useless. It can be hilarious and also very enlightening," he says.
Atul came into prominence in 1999 with his series on Mahatma Gandhi, where the painter sought to reconstruct images from a forgotten biography of the leader. His watercolors led the Mahatma out of the tumultuous pages of history into the gentle sepia-washed terrain of his canvas. Gandhi was given a new lease of life with sensitive brush strokes. A rich burnt sienna reaffirmed the strength and spirit of Gandhi beneath the frail `minimalist` body. Luminous yellow-whites merged into deep ambers. Says Atul, "There was a strong sense of aesthetics running through Gandhi`s life --- whether it is khadi, (homespun fabric) his choice of dress, the architecture of the Sabarmati ashram, fasting, non-cooperation or the charkha (the wheel used for spinning the yarn). He had a fine artistic way of doing things."
His other series that got him international acclaim was the Bombay:labyrinth/laboratory show at the Japan Foundation Asia Center in Tokyo. It included a selection of the artist`s paintings on store shutters, and other works created with ready-made objects that, reflect his concern with Indian middle-class aspirations and the impact of globalization on traditions underlying each individual reality, evoking images of closure, disruption and the storm beneath the calm," affirms Atul.
At most times, a pluralist and fragmentative mood dominates his compositions, with his images telling stories as he goes along. Atul draws heavily on historical influences that he both accepts and internalizes. Unlike earlier painters, there is no interrogation of western influences of artistic statement.
Reality affects his sensibilities a lot, and thus his art. Confesses Atul, "It is impossible to close your eyes to the world around you, however much you try. The blasts in March 1993 affected me a lot. They shattered my sense of wholeness and peace. They made me realize that certain truths have to be faced. They are reflected in my paintings in the form of peeling plasters and cracks."
Rendered in bold realism and drawing on pop art iconography, Atul`s work reveals his attempt to go back to his roots. Like his exhibition on kitsch art, that he held in New Delhi some years ago. He says, "In India, the majority live with this kind of gaudy chamkila (shiny) stuff - it is very normal. I do enjoy it. I explore the visual possibilities. I also like what they do with space, form, texture, and I like the colors of kitsch,"
But the turning point in his work, says Atul, was his trip to the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. "I saw paintings from the early Renaissance onward to modern times. I was overwhelmed by the thickness of the centuries old paint, and wondered how could my work begin to measure up to the masters. I learnt to see things differently, not merely to create within a context, but to crate a context." For almost three years after he returned, he began questioning the relevance of his work. "And then memories of the young boy who drew for the sheer joy of it, penetrated his bleakness. Paris was so different from Mumbai, from my reality, that my art and that of the Masters had to be different too."
When Atul came back, his work had changed. He dropped the earlier photo realistic approach to replace it with a more flexible mode. The result was the 1994 `The Bombay Buccaneer`, an oil, acrylic and wood on canvas effort, a take off on the poster for the film `Baazigaar`.
In 1999, the artist won the Sotheby`s Prize for Contemporary Art. He says, "It was a great feeling. It is nice to know people are interested in my work and the fact that I attempt to create a new image."
The crowning glory was his works being shown at the Tate Museum, London, in 2000, as part of the exhibition `Centuries Cities: Art And Culture in Modern Metropolis`. He is one of the Indian artists whose work was shown at the museum as part of a major exhibition on nine cities of the world.
A slow worker, Atul does about six to eight paintings a year. He works on one painting at a time, for two months, for eight to ten hours a day. Every two years he holds an exhibition. "I experience the pain and suffering when doing a painting and feel drained after finishing it. An image remains in my mind for about three years before I put it down. It undergoes several modifications."
When he is not painting, Atul likes to travel. "But the last three or four years have been so hectic. I have not had the time. I do have a passion for reading and watching films. I place Satyajit Ray films on top of the list. They are marvelous; his vision of life and command over the technique is unique. Then there are others like Tarkovsky, Antonioni and Kurosawa."
One day he wants to make a film. "I think cinema is a complete medium without, sound, visuals or movement," he emphasizes. He is influenced by work of painters like M.F. Husain and Bhupen Khakkar. "There is a lot of fun in Khakkar`s work. He depicts it the way I am familiar with. There is a lot of Indianness in his works. If you go to rural India, you will find things exactly the way he has portrayed them."
Besides having held several solo exhibitions in Mumbai, Kolkata, New Delhi and Amsterdam, he has participated in many group exhibitions both in India and abroad. Atul Dodiya lives and works in Mumbai.
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Born
January 20, 1959
Mumbai
Education
1991-92 Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris
1982 Bachelor of Fine Arts (Painting), Sir J.J. School of Art, Mumbai
Exhibitions
Selected Solo Exhibitions
2017 'Atul Dodiya |...
Selected Solo Exhibitions
2017 'Atul Dodiya | Girlfriends: French, German, Italian, Egyptian, Santiniketan, Ghatkopar', Vadehra Art Gallery, Mumbai
2015 Mahatma and the Masters, Galerie Daniel Templon, Brussels
2014-15 '7000 Museums: A Project For The Republic of India', Dr. Bhau daji lad Museum, Mumbai
2013-14 'Duplicator's Dilemma', 10 Chancery Lane Gallery, Central, Hong Kong
2013 'Experiments with Truth: Works 1981-2013', National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), New Delhi
2013 'Atul Dodiya', Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati
2012 'Scribes from Timbuktu', Galerie Daniel Templon, Paris
2011 'Bako Exists. Imagine', Chemould Prescott Road, Mumbai
2010 'If It Rains Fire', Nature Morte, Berlin
2010 'Malevich Matters and Other Shutters', Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi
2008 ‘Pale Ancestors’, Bodhi Art, Mumbai
2007 ‘Saptapadi – scenes from marriage’, Vadhera Art Gallery, New Delhi
2006 ‘The Wet Sleeves of My Paper Robe’, Singapore Tyler Print Institute, Singapore, Mumbai and new York
2005 'Cracks in Mondrian', Bose Pacia, New York
2004 Faculty of Fine Arts, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Vadodara
2003 'Broken Branches', Bose Pacia. New York
2002 'E.T. and Others', Walsh Gallery, Chicago
2002 'E.T. y los otros', Espacio Uno, Reina Sofia Museum, Madrid
2002 'Lives and Works in Bombay', Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai
2001 'Bombay: Labyrinth/Laboratory', The Japan Foundation Asia Center, Tokyo
2001 The Fine Art Resource, Berlin
2001 Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
1999 Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi
1999 Herwitz Gallery, Ahmedabad
1997 Centre of International Modern Art (CIMA), Kolkata
1999,97,95,91,89 Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
1993 Gallery Apunto, Amsterdam
Selected Group Exhibitions
2017 'Interpositions: Replaying the Inventory', Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA), New Delhi
2016 'Mysteries of Organism', Akara Art, Mumbai
2015 'Remembering Bhupen', Sarjan Art Gallery, Vadodara
2014 ' Zameen', Art District XIII, New Delhi
2013 'Ideas of the Sublime', presented by Vadehra Art Gallery at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
2013 'Still Life', Gallery Art Motif, New Delhi
2016 ' Touched', Galerie Mirchandani + Steinruecke and Max Mueller Bhavan, Mumbai
2012 '2012: A Further Global Encounter', Grosvenor Vadehra, London
2012 'Aviraam: Celebrating the Pioneer Spirit- SH Raza at 90', presented by The Raza Foundation at Visual Arts Gallery, India Habitat Centre, New Delhi
2011 'Pause: A Collection', Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai
2011 'Narrations, Quotations & Commentaries', Grosvenor Gallery, London
2011 'Indian Rainbow', Luce Gallery, Torino
2011 'Against All Odds: A Contemporary Response to the Historiography of Archiving Collecting, and Museums in India', Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
2011 'Of Humour, Wit & Satire', Gallery Threshold, New Delhi
2010-11 'A Collection', Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai
2010-11 'Monumental', Walsh Gallery, Chicago
2010 'Orientations: Trajectories in Indian Art', Foundation 'De 11 Lijnen', Oudenburg, Belgium
2010 'Inside India', Palazzo Saluzzo Paesana, Turin
2010 'Freedom to March: Rediscovering Gandhi through Dandi', presented by Ojas Art at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
2010 'Looking Glass: The Existence of Difference', Twenty Indian Contemporary Artists presented by Religare Arts Initiative, New Delhi in collaboration with American Centre; British Council; Goethe-Institut/ Max Mueller Bhavan, New Delhi
2010 'Symbols and Metaphors', Centre of International Modern Art (CIMA), Kolkata
2009-10 'All That Is Solid Melts Into Air: Indian Contemporary Art in Global Times', Lakeeren, Mumbai
2009 'Progressive to Altermodern: 62 Years of Indian Modern Art', Grosvenor Gallery, London
2009 'Divagations: Spaces of Possibility', Raza Foundation Awardees Show, Art Alive, New Delhi
2009 'Life is A Stage', Institute of Contemporary Indian Art (ICIA), Mumbai
2008-09 'Body Chatter: An Exhibition of Contemporary Indian Art', Walsh Gallery, Chicago
2008-09 'Where In The World', Devi Art Foundation, New Delhi
2008 'Material/Im-mmaterial', Gallery Collection, Bodhi Art, Gurgaon
2008 'Anxious', Galerie Mirchandani + Steinruecke, Mumbai
2008 'Modern and Contemporary Indian Art', Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi
2008 'Multiple Modernities: India, 1905-2005', Philadelphia Museum of Art, USA
2008 ‘Frontlines: Notations from the Contemporary Indian Urban’, BodhiBerlin, Berlin
2008 'Portrait of a Place', Rob Dean Art Gallery, London
2007-08 ‘India Art Now: Between Continuity and Transformation’, Province of Milan, Milan, Italy
2007 ‘Horn Please: Narratives in Contemporary Indian Art’, Kunstmuseum Bern, Switzerland
2007 ‘Young Guns’, Institute of Contemporary Indian Art (ICIA), Mumbai
2007 ‘Private / Corporate IV’, Daimler Chrysler Contemporary, Berlin
2007 ‘Hungry God : Indian Contemporary Art’, Busan Museum of Modern Art, Busan, South Korea
2007 ‘Fashioning The Divine’, Auckland Art Museum
2007 ‘Here and Now : Young Voices from India’, Grosvenor Vadehra, London
2007 ‘Gateway Bombay’, The Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, MA
2007 ‘After Shock: Conflict, Violence and Resolution in Contemporary India’, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK
2007 ‘New Narratives: Contemporary Art form India’, Chicago Cultural Centre, Chicago
2007 ‘Urban Manners: Contemporary Artists from India’, Hangar Bicocca, Milan
2006 ‘Edge of Desire: Recent Art in India’, Berkeley Art Museum, Berkeley, National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), New Delhi, National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai
2006 ‘India Express: Sacred and Popular’, The Helsinki City Art Museum,Helsinki
2006 ‘Hungry God: Indian Contemporary Art’, Arario Beijing, China
2006 ‘El Filo del Deseo - Arte Reciente en India’, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey MARCO, Mexico
2005 ‘I Con: India Contemporary’, collateral event, 51st Venice Biennale
2005 – ‘Bhupen Among Friends’ Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
2004-06 ‘Edge of Desire: Recent Art in India’, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth; Asia Society Museum, New York; Tamayo Museum, Mexico City; Museum of Contemporary Art (MARCO) Monterrey, Mexico; Asian Art Museum of San Francisco; Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto
2004 ‘Interlude in Sri Lanka’, Guild Art Gallery. Mumbai.
2004 ‘Androgene’, India Habitat Center, New Delhi.
2004 ‘The Search’, paintings from National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai, Omni Society for Fine Arts, Muscat, Sultanate of Oman
2004 ‘ZOOM! (Art in Contemporary India)’, Museo Temporario / Culturgest, Lisbon.
2004 ‘Masala’, Diversity and Democracy in South Asian Art, William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut Storrs.
2004 ‘Vanitas Vanitatum’, Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai.
2004 ‘South Asian Masters at Alhamra’, Alhamra Center, Lahore.
2003 'body. city: siting contemporary culture in India', House of World Cultures, Berlin
2003 ‘Under the Skin of Simulation’, Three Contemporary Painters from India, with Shibu Natesan and Surendran Nair, Fine Art Resource, Berlin
2003 ‘SubTerrain’, Artworks in the cityfold, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin.
2003 Portraits of a Decade, 10th anniversary show, CIMA Gallery, Kolkata.
2003 ‘Crossing Generations: diVERGE’, Forty Years of Gallery Chemould, an Exhibition Spanning Four Generations of Artists, National Gallery of Modern Art, Mumbai
2003 'Sub Terrain: Artworks in the cityfold' ,House of World Cultures. Berlin
2003 'The Tree from the Seed', Contemporary Art from India, Henie Onstad Center, Oslo
2002 ‘Secular Practice: Recent Art from India’, Contemporary Art Gallery (CAG) Vancouver
2002 ‘Capital and Karma: Recent Positions in Indian Art’, Kunsthalle, Vienna
2002 ‘New Indian Art: Home - Street - Shrine - Bazaar- Museum’, Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester
2001 'The Mega Wave' Yokohama Triennale. Yokohama, Japan
2001 'Century City : Art and Culture in the Modern Mrteopolis’, Tate Modern, London
2001 Moving Ideas: A Contemporary Dialogue with India, OBORO, Montreal
2000 ‘Shatabdi – Reflections on a century past’, Centre of International Modern Art (CIMA), Kolkata
2000 ‘Embarkations’ – The Millennium show ,Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai
2000 ‘Kala Ghoda – A Meeting Place’, collaborative installation with Architect Rahul Mehrotra, Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
2000 ‘Family Resemblance’, Birla Academy of Art and Culture, Mumbai
1999 ‘Water color and Contemporary Painting’, Gallery Art Motif, New Delhi
1999 ‘The Art of Charity’, organized by Sir Jamsetjee Parsee Benevolent Institution at Sir J.J. School of Applied Art, Mumbai
1999 CIAF ’99 – Contemporary Indian Art Fair, organized by Apparao Galleries, Apollo Apparao Galleries, Mumbai
1999 Singapore Indian Fine Arts Society at CJIMES, Singapore
1999 ‘Legatee – Sir J.J. School of Art’, The Fine Art Company, Mumbai
1999 ‘Icon of the Millennium’, organized by Lakeeren Gallery at Nehru Centre, Mumbai
1999 ‘Watermark', Watercolor show organized by the Fine Art Resource, at Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1999 ‘Two for Two Thousand’, Art Today, New Delhi
1999 ‘As You Like It’, organized by Vadehra Art Gallery, Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1999 ‘Kalchakra’, A Benefit event for the Elephanta project organized by INTACH - Mumbai
1999 'Ideas and Images', Mumbai Magazine, National Gallery of Modern Art ( NGMA), Mumbai
1999 'Humour on Line', Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai
1998 ‘Recent Works : Six Artists’, Gallery Espace, New Delhi.
1998 ‘Artists for a Substantial World’, Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
1998 ‘Contemporary Indian Art’, organized by Vadehra Art Gallery, Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1998 ‘SPIN’, Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai
1998 ‘Cryptograms’, Lakeeren Gallery, Mumbai
1998 Multimedia: Art of the 90s, Centre of International Modern Art (CIMA), Kolkata
1998 Wilberding Collection of Contemporary Indian Art, NGMA, Mumbai
1997 'Out of India: Contemporary Art of South Asian Diaspora’, Queens Museum of Art, New York
1997 'Tryst with Destiny: Art from Modern India', Singapore Art Museum, Singapore
1997 'Indian Contemporary Art: An Overview', The Fine Art Resource, Berlin
1997 'Epic Reality: Contemporary Narrative Painting from India', Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, Texas
1996 'Chamatkara: Myth and Magic in Indian Art', curated by Centre of International Modern Art ( CIMA )Gallery, Whitley’s Art Gallery, London
1996 'Cinemascape: Artists' Tribute to 100 years of Cinema', Lakeeren Gallery, Mumbai
1995 ‘Postcards for Gandhi’, Sahmat, Safdar Hashmi Memorial Trust, New Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore and Ahmedabad
1993 ‘Reflection and Images’, Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi and Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1993 ‘HelpAge India’, Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1993 ‘Trends and Images’, Centre of International Modern Art (CIMA) Gallery, Kolkata
1992 ‘Exposition Collective’, Cite International des Arts’, Paris
1992 ‘Inaugural Exhibition’, Husain ki Sarai, New Delhi
1991 ‘HelpAge India’, Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1991 ‘State of Art : Computer Aided Paintings’,, Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1990 ‘Gadhyaparava’, Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
1989 ‘Indian Eclectics’, organized by French Embassy and Sanskriti Art Gallery
1988 India / Contemporary Art, World Trade Center, Amsterdam
Participations
2016 'No Parsi is an Island', National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai
2016 'A History. Contemporary Art from the Centre Pompidou', Haus der Kunst, Munich
2016 'A Jouney is the Destination: The Artist Journey between Then and Now", Jehangir Nicholson Gallery, Mumbai
2015-16 'After Midnight: indian Modernism to Contemporary India 1947/1997', Queens Museum, New York; Bhau Daji lad Museum, Mumbai
2015 ' Artist Making Movemen', 2015 Asian Art Biennale, National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, Taiwan
2014 'Post-Picasso: Contemporary Reactions', Museum Picasso of Barcelona, Barcelona
2014 'Is It What You Think ? Ruminations on Time, Memory and Site', Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA), New Delhi
2014 'Drawing 2014: 7 Decades of Indian Drawing', The Exhibition Hall, IGNCA, New Delhi
2014 'UNE HISTORIE (art archi design / des annees 80 anos jours)/ A HISTORY (art architecture design, from the 80s to now), Musee National d'Art, Moderne Centre Pompidou, Paris
2013 'Aesthetic Bind: Cabinet Closet Wunderkammer', on the coccassion of 50 Years of Contemporary Art at Chemould Prescott Road, Mumbai
2013 'The Sahmat Collective: Art and Activism in India since 1989', Smart Museum of Art at University of Chicago, Chicago
2013 Donation Floerence et Daniel Guerlain, Galerie Du Musee Et Galerie D'Art Graphique, Level 4, Centre Pompidou, Paris
2013 ' The Drawing Wall', Lalit Kala Akademi and Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi
2013 'Midnight to the Boom: painting in India after Independence, from the Peabody Essex Museum's Herwitz Colelction', Salem
2012-13 Kochi-Muziris Biennale 2012, Kochi
2012-13 7th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art (APT7), Gallery of Modern Art, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane
2012 'Fourteen Stations', part of Project CINEMA CITY: Research Art & Documentary Practices presented by Ministry of Culture, Government of India and National Gallery of Modern Art at National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai
2012 'Art for Humanity', Coomaraswamy Hall, Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya, Mumbai
2012 ‘To Let the World In: Narrative and Beyond in Contemporary Indian Art’, as part of Art Chennai, Edition II at Lalit Kala Regional Centre, Chennai
2012 'Crossings: Time Unfolded, Part 2', Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA), New Delhi
2012 ' How Am I ? Narratives about the Search for Identity in Different Realities', Kastrupgardsamlindgen, Copenhagen
2012 'INDIA: Art Now', Arken Museum of Modern Art, Copenhagen
2011-12 'Shadow Lines: India Meets Indonesia', part of Biennale Jogja XI at Jogja National Museum, Yogyakarta
2011 'Homespun', Devi Art Foundation, New Delhi
2011 'Watermark II', Galerie Mirchandani + Steinruecke, Mumbai
2011 'Paris-Delhi-Bombay', Centre Pompidou, Paris
2011 'Of Gods and Goddesses, Cinema, Cricket: The New Cultural Icons of India', Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
2011 'Time Unfolded', Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA), New Delhi
2011 '1:3:1- Part II', W+K Exp, New Delhi
2011 'The Intuitive: Logic Revisted', from the Osians Collection at The World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland
2010 'Finding India: Art for the New century', presented by Sakshi Gallery at Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Taipei
2010 'Art Celebrates 2010: Sports and the City', represented by Vadehra Art Gallery at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi to coincide with the hosting of the Commonwealth Games
2010 ‘The Silk Road’, part of Saatchi Gallery, London collection at Lille3000 in Lille, France
2010 'The Empire Strikes Back: Indian Art Today', The Saatchi Gallery, London
2010 'Urban Manners 2', SESC Pompeia, Sao Paulo, Brazil
2009 'Conflicting Tales: Subjectivity (Quadriology, Part I)', Burger Collection, Berlin
2009 Moscow Biennale, Moscow
2009 'India Xianzai: Contemporary Indian Art', Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Shanghai
2009 'Contemporary Indian Art: Open Your Third Eye', National Museum of Contemporary Art, Seoul
2009 'ARCOmadrid', Spain presented by curator Bose Krishnamachari for 'Panoroma: India'
2009 'Contemporary Art from India', Palais Benedictine, Fecamp, France supported by Gallerie 88, Kolkata
2008-09 ''Modern India', organized by Institut Valencià d'Art Modern (IVAM) and Casa Asia, in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture at Valencia, Spain
2008 'Chalo! India: A New Era of Indian Art', 5th Anniversary Exhibition, Mori Art Museum, Japan
2008-09 ‘Expanding Horizons: Contemporary Indian Art’, Traveling Exhibition presented by Bodhi Art at Ravinder Natya Mandir, P.L.Despande Kala Academy Art Gallery, Mumbai; Sant Dyaneshwar Natya Sankul Art Gallery, Amravati; Platinum Jubilee Hall, Nagpur; Tapadia Natya Mandir Sports Hall, Aurangabad; Hirachand Nemchand Vachanalay’s, Solapur; Acharya Vidyanand Sanskrutik Bhavan, Kolhapur; PGSR Sabhagriha, SNDT, Pune; Sarvajanik Vachanalaya Hall, Nasik
2008 'Anatomy: Skins of Drawing', Collection of Florence and Daniel Guerlain at FRAC - Picardie, Amiens
2008 Presented by Bodhi Art at Gwangju Biennale
2007 Documenta 12, Kassel, Germany
2007 Art Chicago, represented by Bodhi Art, New York
2007 'On The Edge of Vision: New Idioms In Indian and Italian Contemporary Art', organized by the Italian Cultural Institute in New Delhi in collaboration with the National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), New Delhi at Victoria Memorial Hall, Kolkata and National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai and New Delhi
2005 ‘I Con: India Contemporary’, collateral event, 51st Venice Biennale
2001 'The Mega Wave', Yokohama Triennale, Yokohama, Japan
1999 'Harmony Show', Nehru Center, Mumbai
1997 9th Triennale -India, Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
1997 'Fifty Years of Art in Bombay', National Gallery of Modern Art(NGMA), Mumbai
Honours and Awards
2008 Raza Award, Raza Foundation
1999 Sotheby's Award
1999 Civitella Ranieri Foundation Fellowship, Italy
1995 Sanskriti Award
1992 French Government Scholarship
1982 The Fellowship At Sir J.J. School of Art
1982 Government of Maharashtra Gold Medal
1979 1st Prize, Diamond Jubilee Exhibition, Art Society of India
2008 Raza Award, Raza Foundation
1999 Sotheby's Award
1999 Civitella Ranieri Foundation Fellowship, Italy
1995 Sanskriti Award
1992 French Government Scholarship
1982 The Fellowship At Sir J.J. School of Art
1982 Government of Maharashtra Gold Medal
1979 1st Prize, Diamond Jubilee Exhibition, Art Society of India
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Atul Dodiya he speaks about his experiments, concerns, style and the Indianness of his paintings.
How Indian is Indian art, in terms of influences, style and evolution? Or like with writing, can one say that one presents certain things differently to suit an international audience?
The identity of Indian art as Indian is arguable. Visual art and the visual experience...
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Atul Dodiya he speaks about his experiments, concerns, style and the Indianness of his paintings.
How Indian is Indian art, in terms of influences, style and evolution? Or like with writing, can one say that one presents certain things differently to suit an international audience?
The identity of Indian art as Indian is arguable. Visual art and the visual experience are universal. If you look at early Chinese art, medieval European art or African tribal art, you would enjoy them much more if you were aware of the context. But even if you were unaware of the context, it would not keep you from enjoying the work. Sometimes art is devoid of context, and sometimes it cannot exist without one.
The history of modern Indian art is very short. Contemporary Indian art is only 50 odd years old. We have a tradition of miniature paintings. When one starts working with oil, one would obviously refer to other types of art that has preceded yours. In that sense the canvas of art is much broader. We have painters who are very Indian and some others whose work is based on Indian philosophy but the visual form may not be Indian.
If you are a figurative painter like me, the reality is slightly different. I live in Ghatkopar, (a suburb in Bombay) my figures are Indian in the sense that they would be dark skinned and they portray the life in India, a life that includes the poverty, the concerns and the reality.
What is your style like?
I try to do many things. I react to many themes. I cannot be a painter who has found a theme and spends all his life painting it. Maybe after a few years I would like this said for me that not to have a style is my style. I explored a certain subject matter and my techniques have been used according to the subject matter. My oil paintings had a lot of realism, I used superimposition of various images; I have worked with metaphors…inserted quotations. When I worked with watercolours, the work was simpler. There were figures, they were more specific, in keeping with the theme...that was my series on Gandhi and I wanted to keep it as simple as possible. There was another series where I used laminated surfaces and enamel and the whole effect was that of kitsch.
My latest series is about the poverty that we see around us. I do not aim to please the viewer. My aim, instead, is to shake the viewer, to get him involved, to take him away from the day-to-day realities. I want you there with me. So my work is thematically, sociologically, artistically rough. And in that sense it is very Indian too. And I like my work to be aesthetically well rendered.
What about the fact that you place yourself in your paintings... like in one of the paintings in the Gandhi series?
That was because I have always been influenced by the freedom struggle. So I thought in this way I can be a part of it…with Gandhi!
You are known as someone who likes to experiment with your medium a lot…Could you tell us more about it?
Yes, I often like to do that. Recently, I worked with enamel. Earlier I got an assistant who would write the text in the painting. Some of my work was a like a film poster, then I conceptualise it and get assistants to render the work. I also painted on shutters, like I did in a modern, city painting; when you opened the shutter you could see the painting.
Now I am trying to do sculptural objects, like a ladder – a steep iron ladder. I like to experiment in mixed media.
Whom are you trying to communicate with, in your paintings?
I believe a work of art cannot be general. I don’t give importance to the general viewpoint. The thing that may bore one person may be very meaningful to another. It cannot be perfect from all angles. Even if a Western viewer finds it interesting, to an Indian viewer it may seem clichéd.
You used a lot of mythological figures in your paintings earlier. How was that relevant?
Mythology is a part of popular art. I was interested in popular art. I wanted to use it in my own art, creatively. I used Hindu gods and goddesses like the ten incarnations of Vishnu, as to what they mean to me.
How about awards? How do they affect you as an artist, to be appreciated as such?
Artists enjoy acknowledgement. You like to relate to people. You also feel that out of nothing I created this, and feel proud to have done so. I see awards as an acknowledgement. If they were not there, one would be disturbed. But at the end you are involved in a process. The selling, buying and winning awards, is not relevant when you are alone in your studio with a new painting.
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PAST AUCTIONS
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102
works
Lot 116
Details
Winter Online Auction
17-18 December 2024
Bracket
Watercolour, charcoal and acrylic with marble dust on paper
69 x 44 in
Winning bid
$19,200
Rs 16,12,800
(Inclusive of buyer's premium)
USD payment only. Why?
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Lot 120
Details
Winter Online Auction
17-18 December 2024
Cracks in...
Acrylic with marble dust on canvas and PVC pipe
69.25 x 66.5 in
Winning bid
$60,000
Rs 50,40,000
(Inclusive of buyer's premium)
USD payment only. Why?
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Lot 124
Details
Spring Online Auction
13-14 March 2024
The Titanic Days
Enamel paint and synthetic varnish with...
72 x 47.75 in
Winning bid
$32,195
Rs 26,40,000
(Inclusive of buyer's premium)
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Showing
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Ref 48435
Details
Portfolio of...
Offset print on paper
$477
Rs 40,000
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