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Speaking about her art, Nayanaa Kanodia says, “As a contemporary artist, my work is a reflection of the changing face of our nation, through the images of the notable celebrities and public figures, the urban elite, and the common man on the street. The acute static demeanor of my portrayals lends itself to movement through the vehicles of vibrant and dynamic colors, the composition of patterns and intense details, and the gentle Indian...
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Speaking about her art, Nayanaa Kanodia says, “As a contemporary artist, my work is a reflection of the changing face of our nation, through the images of the notable celebrities and public figures, the urban elite, and the common man on the street. The acute static demeanor of my portrayals lends itself to movement through the vehicles of vibrant and dynamic colors, the composition of patterns and intense details, and the gentle Indian spirit reminiscent of centuries past fusing with the invasion of modern advents and amenities.
“Each depiction is charged with innocuous humor personifying the subtle ironies that permeate daily life, which lay in harmony, and yet in conflict with the collision of East and West. My paintings are charged with deceptive simplicity, a mirthful lyricism, and a spirit of authenticity. Together, they coalesce to form insightful documentations, a visual timeline of our society through the lens of everyday occurrences, objects, and people. Around each corner of our cities and villages, we encounter a common and still forgettable site of an overcrowded café, a bustling street, or a flower vendor, yet our deadness of seeing leads us to deplorably disregard the modest and unscathed beauty of our rich culture.
“Many pieces reflect an unkempt maelstrom that has engulfed our transitioning society, providing fuel to a raging dichotomy where on the one hand we have people tenaciously clinging to their roots, fearing the extinction of their cultural identities, and on the other hand we have the birth of a new generation dependent upon progressive conveniences.
“Through my images of India’s vast panorama, these paintings provoke a heightened consciousness and challenge the viewer to consider the reigning and ever-transforming civilization. In my paintings a picture of the moment is built up in which whole histories and relationships are made visible .These paintings are moments of pleasure held forever. They are about time and time in paintings is movement stilled. There is a sense of fun that is sometimes picaresque, that verges hesitantly on the erotic, but excels in the shrewd tongue- in –cheek observation of individual psychology and the customs and manners of groups.”
Speaking of her work, Ranjit Hoskote notes, “Unusually for a contemporary artist, Nayanaa’s paintings originate in an unalloyed pleasure, a viewerly enjoyment of visual surface, narrative depth, and the games that artists play with their audiences. Nayanaa Kanodia approaches the history of art in a spirit of playful homage. Her chosen instruments are an attentive irreverence that is never destructive, a gift for understated comedy, and a conviction that art and life can interweave in the most remarkable ways. Nayanaa does not regard art as a universe separate and remote from the concerns of ordinary life. In Nayanaa’s paintings, waking life and the life of dream flow together. They are high-spirited, wry, votive and witty. Nayanaa handles her materials with a lively and confident lightness of touch. However, despite appearances to the contrary, Nayanaa’s art is sustained by a certain seriousness of purpose.”
Nayanaa Kanodia was born in 1950 in Pune, Maharashtra. She has had no formal training in art except for a year's apprenticeship with Anjolie Ela Menon. She had her first solo show in Mumbai in 1986 and has held numerous exhibitions since then in India and abroad. In 1998, she was selected by the Commonwealth Institute for a solo show in their newly renovated complex in London. In 2001 she was invited by the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, to exhibit her work and to give a demonstration of her technique. She has also participated in many group shows nationally and internationally including, most recently, ones at the Ueno Royal Museum, Tokyo, in 2007; South Africa in 2007; and Singapore in 2006. Kanodia's work is held in many public and private collections in India and abroad including the Musée International d'Art Naïf, Paris.
The artist lives and works in Mumbai.
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Born
1950
Pune Maharashtra
Education
1969 Economics at the Lady Sri Ram College, New Delhi
Exhibitions
Selected Solo Exhibitions
2014 'The Great Outdoors', Art Alive...
Selected Solo Exhibitions
2014 'The Great Outdoors', Art Alive Gallery, New Delhi
2012 'Beyond the Scenes', Gallery Art and Soul, Mumbai
2010 'A City Wakes Up Inside Me', The Museum Gallery, Mumbai
2007 'Distinguished Company', Art Alive Gallery, New Delhi
2007 Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
2006 Reflections, Hong Kong
2006 Chor Bizarre, London
2004 Museum Gallery, Mumbai
2003 Shridharani Gallery, New Delhi
2002 Art Indus, New Delhi
2002 Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
2001 Commonwealth Institute, London
2001 Nehru Centre, London
2000 Shridharani Gallery, New Delhi
1999 Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1999 Art Today, New Delhi
1998 Commonwealth Institute, London
1997 ARKS Gallery, London
1996 Shridharani Gallery, New Delhi
1995 Gallerie Ganesha, New Delhi
1995 Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1995 Taj Art Gallery, Mumbai
1994 Shridharani Gallery, New Delhi
1993 Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1993 Taj Art Gallery, Mumbai
1993 L.T.G.Gallery, New Delhi
1991 ANZ, Grindlay’s Bank, Mumbai
1991 Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai
1987 Bajaj Art Gallery, Mumbai
1987 Citibank, Mumbai
1987 Taj Art Gallery, Mumbai
1986 Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
1986 Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai
Selected Group Exhibitions
2013 'Still Life', Gallery Art Motif, New Delhi
2011 'The Narrator, Protagonist and the Other', Indigo Blue Art, Singapore
2010 '10 x 10', Gallery Threshold, New Delhi
2010 'Black is Beautiful', India Fine Art, Mumbai
2009-10 'On Canvas -1', Gallery Art Motif, New Delhi
2009 'Think Small', Art Alive Gallery, New Delhi
2009 Birla Academy of Art and Culture, Kolkota
2009 1’x1', India on Canvas, Charity Show at The Rooftop, Trident, Mumbai
2009,08 CPAA, Charity Show, Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai
2008 'Women on Women', Indian Art Circle , Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
2008 'Shakti', Rabindra Bhawan, New Delhi
2008 'Mahatma', Point of View Gallery, Mumbai
2008 'Faces', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai
2008 'The ArteCurate Mumbai Art Festival', Mumbai
2008 'Kaleidoscope', Tradition Art, Mumbai
2008 Gallery Beyond, Mumbai
2008 BHNS, Jehangir Nicholson Gallery of Art, Mumbai
2008 Mumbai Festival, University Convocation Hall, Mumbai
2008 Bajaj Capital Art House, India Habitat Centre, New Delhi
2007 'Colors of Life: Thumbprints in Time', Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai
2007 'Darpan', Gallerie Nvya, New Delhi
2007 Dhoomimal Gallery, New Delhi
2007 Cancer Patients Aid Association, Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai
2007 'Art Smart', Academy of Fine Arts and Literature, Siri Fort, New Delhi
2007 Gallerie Sara Arakkal, Bangalore
2007 Samsara Art, Mumbai
2007 Khushi Auction, Mumbai
2007 South Africa
2007 'Imprints', The Ueno Royal Museum, Tokyo
2006 'Evam', Tao Art Gallery
2006 Lansdowne Gallery, Mumbai
2006 'Mayadarpan', Museum Gallery, Mumbai
2006 Khushi Auction, New Delhi
2006 Triveda Auction, Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
2006 Nitanjali, Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
2006 Gallerie Sara Arakkal, Bangalore
2006 Cancer Patients Aid Association, Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai
2006 Articullate, Mumbai
2006 'Monsoon', Art and Soul, Mumbai
2006 Red Earth, Alliance Francaise, New Delhi
2006 HSBC, Oberoi Hotel, Mumbai
2006 Scesa, Cymroza Art Gallery, Mumbai
2006 Singapore
2005 Art Land, Prince of Wales Museum, Mumbai
2005 'Contemporary Chronicals', Art Alive Gallery, New Delhi
2005 'Inner Line…..Outer Space', Gallery 27, Cork Street, London
2005 Gallerie Sara Arakkal, Bangalore
2005 Apparao Galleries, Chennai
2005 Hacienda Art Gallery, Mumbai
2004 'Tao of Shiva, Shiva: The Lord of Light', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai
2005 Hong Kong
2002 Birla Academy of Arts and Culture, Mumbai
2002 Jehangir Gallery of Art, Mumbai
2002 Paris
2001 Shridharani Gallery, New Delhi
2001 Centre for International Modern Art (CIMA), Kolkata
2001 Soul Kurry, Mumbai
2001 'Kala Raksha', National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai
2001 Washington
2001 Centre Regional D’Art Contemporain, Sete, France
2001,02,06 London
2000 Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai
2000 Fine Art Company, Mumbai
2000 Art Today, New Delhi
2000 Apparao Galleries, New Delhi
1999 Renaissance Gallery, Bangalore
1999 Art Today, New Delhi
1999 Birla Academy of Art and Culture, Mumbai
1999 Sir Jamshedjee Jejeebhoy Parsi Benevolent Institution, Mumbai
1999 Jamaat, Mumbai
1998 Apparao Galleries, Chennai
1998 Dubai
1997,98 National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Mumbai
Participations
2010 'Art Celebrates 2010: Sports and the City', represented by Gallery Art Motif at Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi to coincide with the hosting of the Commonwealth Games
2010 'Evolve: 10th Anniversary Show', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai
2006 'Harmony Show', Nehru Centre, Mumbai
2001 'Harmony Show', Nehru Centre, Mumbai
2001 'Kala Ghoda Art Festival', Mumbai
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What serves as an inspiration for you to paint?
Life and its eccentricities inspire me to paint. Ordinary people, their joys and sorrows, vignettes of middle class and street life with its economics of survival are often a starting point. Like in my ‘Celebration of Life’ series, people, objects and places seem to awaken and acquire an extraordinary energy that propels them into a multi-pronged dialogue...
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What serves as an inspiration for you to paint?
Life and its eccentricities inspire me to paint. Ordinary people, their joys and sorrows, vignettes of middle class and street life with its economics of survival are often a starting point. Like in my ‘Celebration of Life’ series, people, objects and places seem to awaken and acquire an extraordinary energy that propels them into a multi-pronged dialogue amongst themselves. My work reflects the charming idiosyncrasies of my subjects.
My canvas breaks the deadness of seeing all the scenes that Indians take for granted. There is an element of nostalgia involved in it. I do not want to mull over the moroseness of life, but want to reflect on the bright, positive side of it. I paint not what I see, but what I feel, what my ‘inner eye’ tells me.
Many of your series delve into the past. Has this been intentional?
My preoccupation, as an artist, is depicting Indian society caught between tradition and westernization. I look at my paintings as a record for future generations. With economic progress, which I see as a necessary evil, several good old ways of life are slowly fading into oblivion. I wish to record them through my work before they totally vanish.
At another level, as I have stated above, my work deals with the dichotomy we are faced with as we oscillate between tradition and modernity. We are invaded by western culture, but at the same time we are desperate to cling on to our roots, traditions and identities. I depict these dualities and ironies of life. An artist cannot stop the inevitable, but can at least make the people pause and think.
Can you tell us about the process involved in creating the ‘color gradation’ and the elaborate detailing, which are a characteristic of your work?
I work in color gradations by a careful layering of pigments, which are made luminous with highlights. Evolving color gradations of four layers of colors whereby the clarity of colors is maintained, not making them gaudy or opaque requires skill. It took years of experimentation to be able to employ such a wide range of colors in complete harmony with each other as against a limited color palette. The effect is one where the whole composition seems to be simultaneously grounded and afloat with all the detailing of objects and people, and anchored in the structured space that is framed by the geometries of the base canvas. The extraordinary details in my paintings revolve around protagonists who seem to be quite narcissistic and aware of the centrality of their position in the canvas. A plethora of decorative details enter my work, where compositions are rendered in flat surfaces and tangents that seem almost textured, woven and embroidered with rhythmic patterns. The details don’t crowd the space. Rather they add to the story and the imagery of my work.
You do not have any formal training in art. When did you then decide to take painting as a career?
I am a self- taught artist who has slowly evolved. I hadn’t formally studied art, but was always interested in painting right since my childhood. I learnt the nuances of art by reading and by observing the works of the masters. I kept experimenting with various techniques to create something absolutely different and eye-catching. After studying Economics (Hons.) in New Delhi, I did one-year apprenticeship with Anjolie Ela Menon. On a professional level, it all started after 1987. Thankfully, my family has been very supportive. Anjolie Ela Menon has been my mentor and guide.
What else do you indulge in apart from painting? And what next?
I do love teaching art to children. Children are spontaneous, and show keen interest. In schools, in the name of creativity, artistic development is completely marred. It is essential for a child to learn the basics of fine art in order to develop a minimum level of interest and improve his visual imagination. I have also conducted art camps in India and abroad. Next, I am planning a visual satire on our legal system. I am also pondering over Bollywood as a subject theme for my next series.
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