|
|
|
What sets apart Meera Devidayal from her contemporaries is her abundant use of popular symbols from everyday life and iconography in her work. She is intent on making a statement, albeit a subtle one, and prefers to leave it to the viewer's discretion and perception to interpret it. Painting to her is a means of self-exploration, questioning her own dogmas and beliefs as well as a means of bringing out the ironies in our immediate...
Read More
What sets apart Meera Devidayal from her contemporaries is her abundant use of popular symbols from everyday life and iconography in her work. She is intent on making a statement, albeit a subtle one, and prefers to leave it to the viewer's discretion and perception to interpret it. Painting to her is a means of self-exploration, questioning her own dogmas and beliefs as well as a means of bringing out the ironies in our immediate surroundings.
It is not easy to classify or compartmentalize Meera Devidayal. She has been termed a feminist and more so a Kitsch artist. But she does not appreciate any of these tags. For this sensitive artist, her deep artistic sensibility rooted to the social concerns is a yardstick for gauging herself.
Devidayal's artistic choices place her in a definite narrative of Indian art. She was one of those artists from the early seventies who reacted to the strict high modernism of their predecessors by exploring popular and kitsch imagery. Unlike most of her contemporaries, she remains isolated because she has charted her own journey and formed her own agenda. She has chosen rather not to be associated with the self-conscious avant-garde groups of her times. She has relied on her personal experiences and, in the process, has evolved and matured, as an individual and as an artist.
However, she is quick to note that there is a clear emerging trend involving more and more contemporary Indian artists who are now making the adept use of the elements of kitsch in their works. Kitsch elements are resurfacing, and are well on the way to be part of the mainstream art, as she points out.
She adds to say: "When I started off in the 1970s, my interest was kitsch or urban folk art, expressed in so many different ways in India - on buildings, in shops, in living rooms. Since then I have portrayed different simmering issues of modern life as my horizons have widened."
Color, texture and tone are of importance for this artist; yet the pictures are not merely ornamental. They may be read at many levels and are intended to disturb you. Meera Devidayal believes that there need not be one particular message or meaning in a work. Perhaps a picture should evoke diverse emotion in different people and be read on many distinct levels.
For example, a disturbing diptych by the artist portrays a sheet covered corpse and the exposed legs of a girl, presented behind barbed wire that separates the viewers from the subject. It raises perplexing questions regarding its meaning and significance. Equally perturbing is a painting of a reclining woman; is she merely relaxing; is she asleep; is she perhaps dead? It seems the ambiguity is intentional.
Born in March 1947, Meera Devidayal completed her graduation in English Literature from Loreto Convent, Kolkata in 1966. She preferred to study art privately since in those days, art education was not an attractive proposition. Her formal training in fine art was only in 1969 after she married and came to Mumbai. She studied at the Sir J.J. School of Art for three years, and then switched to a part time course.
Homes with intricately painted doors; windows and verandahs with patchworks of pealed paint earlier dominated her paintings, mostly set in an urban environment. Rich colors and feminist overtures dominate her canvas. Her paintings depict the man-woman relationship, sometimes in harmony and often in conflict. She easily identifies with feminist themes - whether it is in the form of women sitting semi-nude with a sewing machine; stitching flowers on a dress or a complete nude just being herself oblivious of a hand with a knife in one corner.
Her show "The Secret Garden" in 1998 based on this theme was well received. The Secret Garden, according to the artist, is a place where beauty blooms in unexpected corners, where fragments evoke by implications, the workings of the heart. Another series of works - Woman's Body: Site of Contestation - that was exhibited in 1995 is a sort of sardonic comment on the work of generations of male artists who had painted the subject of woman and womanhood. Critics term her exploration of the relationship between men and women as a feminist statement.
But she is not restricted to feminist issues. She has raised pointed objections to other social maladies. In one of her works, she has taken a hard look at gambling during Diwali juxtaposing it with exploitation of children in firecracker factories. In her set of pictures on the tenements of Mumbai, she employs mixed media on paper. She cut out film images of couples to create bright spots in otherwise dreary life. The pictures appear to contrast dreams, expectations and romanticism with the harsh reality of chawl life.
Among her most recent shows is "Brahma to Bapu; Icons and symbols in Indian art" at the Centre for International Art (CIMA), Kolkata in November 2002. The artist has exhibited extensively in India and abroad. She lives and works in Mumbai.
Meera Devidayal's latest body of works titled "Dream-Home" captures the quest for that lovely abode that can often drive us to despair. The exhibition is on at Gallery Chemould in Mumbai till March 28, 2003.
Read Less
Born
1947
New Delhi
Education
1971-74 Bachelor of Fine Arts, Sir JJ School of Art, Mumbai
1966 English Literature, Loreto House, Kolkata
Exhibitions
Selected Solo Exhibitions
2009 'Where I Live', Hirji Jehangir...
Selected Solo Exhibitions
2009 'Where I Live', Hirji Jehangir Gallery and Chemould Prescott Road, Mumbai
2006 'Dream / Reality', Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
2005 'Tum Kab Aaoge', Anant Gallery, New Delhi
2003 'Dream Home', Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
2000 'Mythescape', Prithvi Gallery and Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai
1998 'The Secret Garden', Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1995 Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai
1994 Vithi, Baroda
1992 Art Heritage, New Delhi
1991 Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
1990 Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1986 Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1981 Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
1978 Art Heritage, New Delhi
1977 Taj Art Gallery, Mumbai
1975 Taj Art Gallery, Mumbai
Selected Group Exhibitions
2005 Tao Art Gallery, Pune
2004 'Tribute to Bhupen Khakkar', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai
2004 'A New Mediatic Realism', Uttarayan, Baroda
2004 'The Search', Paintings from National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai at Muscat, Oman
2002 'Triangle Artists Workshop', New York
2002 'Icons & Symbols', Centre for International Modern Art (CIMA), New Delhi and Kolkata
2001 'Kitsch Kitsch Hota Hai', Gallery Espace, New Delhi
2001 'The Nude', Guild Art Gallery and Birla Academy of Art and Culture, Mumbai
2000 'Nayika', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai
1999 'Icons of the Millennium', Lakeeren, Mumbai
1997 'The Looking-Glass Self', Lakeeren, Mumbai
1996 'Art & Cinema', Lakeeren, Mumbai
1995 'Bombay', organized by RPG at Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1995 'Art for Cry', Mumbai and New Delhi
1994 Contemporary Miniatures', Centre for International Modern Art (CIMA), Kolkata
1992 Birla Academy of Art and Culture, Kolkata
1989 'Artists Alert' for Sahmat, New Delhi
1983 'Seven Women Artists', Art Heritage, New Delhi
Participations
2012 'The Calendar Project: Iconography in the 20th Century', part of Project CINEMA CITY: Research Art & Documentary Practices presented by National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA) and Ministry of Culture, Government of India at National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai
2010 'Summer Show 2010', Centre of International Modern Art (CIMA), Kolkata
Honours and Awards
2007 'Miniature Format Show', Bombay Art Gallery, Mumbai
1998 'The Miniature Format Show', Sans Tache, Mumbai
2007 'Miniature Format Show', Bombay Art Gallery, Mumbai
1998 'The Miniature Format Show', Sans Tache, Mumbai
Read More Read Less
You have been often referred to as an artist who widely employs popular kitsch elements. Do you like carrying this tag and being labeled so?
"First of all, let me make it clear that I do not entirely agree with the perception that I do only kitsch. It is true that I have used the popular kitsch elements in my works, but that's way back in the 1970s. Since then, I have evolved as an artist; have employed different...
|
Read More
|
You have been often referred to as an artist who widely employs popular kitsch elements. Do you like carrying this tag and being labeled so?
"First of all, let me make it clear that I do not entirely agree with the perception that I do only kitsch. It is true that I have used the popular kitsch elements in my works, but that's way back in the 1970s. Since then, I have evolved as an artist; have employed different techniques and media. It is true that I continue to be fascinated by popular kitsch elements in our everyday life, refer to them, and employ them as inputs. But that is all about it. These serve merely as starting point for me.
"Though Kitsch elements are now well on the way to becoming part of the mainstream art, it wasn't the case, say about three decades ago. I was among the very few artists then to employ them. Among those I knew, I could remember only Bhupen Khakhar having employed them at that time. But just for this very fact, it is unfair to bracket me as a kitsch artist."
What serves as the immediate provocation or the motivation for you to paint?
"I have been sensitized to three central issues - class, tradition and popular culture. To translate these concerns into my own artistic concern, I have played with the ingenious props and artifacts associated with religious icons and marketplace oleographs, Hindi film posters and calendar art. I have also explored the wayside shrines - a mosque or a temple - that become even more curious in urban settings. I have used the collage to bring out the ironies of modern life. I have framed the Haji Ali shrine through a sherbetwallah's
Shop-on-wheels."
Can you take us through the defining phases in your career as an artist?
"As I said earlier, when I started off in the 1970s, my interest was kitsch or urban folk art that is expressed in so many different ways in India - on buildings, in shops, in living rooms. By the mid-seventies, I moved from collage-overlaps to sophisticated framing devices. From the late 1970s to the early 1990s, I evoked the codes of lifestyle and class dominion through a series of interiors. These were my take on the price one pays for upward mobility. Prior to that, in the early 1980s, I had also started using family photographs for adding a touch of nostalgia in my works then. In the mid-1990s, I worked on a series of female nudes."
Critics had termed exploration of the relationship between men and women in your series of works on woman's body as a feminist statement. How do you react to this?
"I was termed a staunch feminist after I did a series of works on issues related to women and womanhood. A woman's vision is bound to be different from that of a man's largely because, even in today's modern world where woman is no longer restricted to the home, men and women inhibit different spaces.
"As you might be aware, my series of works, titled: "Mythescope" that were exhibited a couple of years ago showed how traditional dogmas, repeated through community rituals and the mass media, are internalized by women, no matter what class they belong to, or their degree of social consciousness. I had tried to question the meaning of rituals and the traditional values associated with them - both at a personal and at a social level. These works were done in relation to festivals like Karva Chauth."
So your work is not just about feminism?
"Absolutely! It is true that I have voiced the concerns of women and womanhood through my works. But I have not restricted myself to feminist issues. I had raised pointed objections to other social maladies through my work. While exploring the theme of gambling during Diwali, I showed dismembered hands resting on the edge of the table, with a green tablecloth resembling a forest that could catch fire if a firecracker burst. A faint xerox of child laborers making firecrackers in the factories of Sivakasi, pasted on the cloth, underlined the exploitation that goes on as the millions of Indians celebrate the festival of lights."
What kind of response do you expect from the viewer?
"A work of art is not fixed once and for all at the time of its creation. Rather varying viewers may justifiably interpret or work differently, and each such interpretation is seen as having validity equal to that of the artist's original intention. There need not be one particular message or meaning in a work. A picture should evoke diverse emotion in different people and be read on many distinct levels.
"I am quite clear that I am not interested in producing decorative works. Painting for me is a means of expression. It has to be thought provoking, and occasionally disquieting. Color, texture and tone are important to me. However, my paintings are not merely ornamental. They may be read at many levels, and are intended to disturb the viewer. I guess, there should enough scope or room for the viewer to form his/her perception of the work."
Tell us about your exhibition "The Secret garden" which is one of your famous works
"The Secret Garden" is a place where beauty blooms in unexpected corners, where fragments evoke by implications, the workings of the heart. Many of us have lived desert lives; tiny on the surface, enormous underneath. We are all filled with a longing for the wild, but there are few culturally sanctioned antidotes for this yearning. I think all of us really want a more than just what we can see. But it means breaking out of the whole frame of social and moral rules that keep individuals imprisoned - and sane. To bring an image from the unseen world into being, we must stir dull roots with spring rain, mixing memory and desire- and breed lilacs out of the dead land. Only by allowing our wild potency to be unleashed, and openly becoming our secret selves, we can see the flame in every bush."
Do you have preference for any particular style?
"I cannot typify my characters or my style as being either realistic or romantic. They represent a completely different visual style. I am constantly searching for a pictorial idiom that can match my perception. The idea is to find a metaphor to show my observation, what is not articulated, but is there. My work is mostly figurative. There is a photo-realistic quality to it. But it's not a mere documentation or any direct comment. There are contrasting images that combine together to throw up an entirely different and unrecognizable result.
"I have employed mixed media on paper with collage, crayon, watercolor and acrylic. I have screen-painted maps on the canvas. I have even screen-painted architectural blueprint. I have made use of xerox to form a collage. The subject matter and the medium should compliment each other."
What's the theme of your latest body of your work titled "Dream-Home"?
"As the title would suggest, the work captures our quest for that lovely abode that can often drive us to despair. Nowadays, we see newspapers carrying advertisements that promise the consumers a home of their dreams in heavenly settings. These literally lure buyers into going for "the best deal" in finding a shelter. But the home is not a mere dream; it's our basic need. The luxuries and the amenities apart, that sense of security behind the four walls is paramount.
"Everyone aspires for one's private space - in a tin-shed or in a fancy apartment. One may beautify it according to one's taste and capacity. Then there are those ads promising a nice bungalow on the outskirts of the city. It's an endless consumer cycle rolled by a chain of supply and demand. In the process of finding our dream abode, it doesn't strike us that we are ruining the countryside; we are paying scant respect for the environment. We do not question ourselves how the lack of infrastructure will be an impending hurdle in our quest for that home of our dreams."
|
Read Less
|
|
|
|
|
PAST AUCTIONS
Showing
2
of
2
works
PAST StoryLTD AUCTIONS
Showing
2
of
2
works
Lot 34
Details
Absolute Tuesdays
15 March 2022
Untitled...
Mixed media and photograph on paper
10.5 x 16.75 in
Winning bid
$169
Rs 12,480
(Inclusive of buyer's premium)
|
Lot 42
Details
No Reserve Art Auction
21-22 May 2019
Untitled
Oil on canvas
84 x 25.5 in
Winning bid
$1,824
Rs 1,25,856
(Inclusive of buyer's premium)
| | |
Need help? For more information on Indian Art, please see our Art Guide. For help
with buying through Saffronart please click here. If you have any other questions, please contact us.
|