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| Voltaire |
Saturday, December 27, 2025
The Painted Sound: A new beginning by Vijayraj Bodhanka / Analysis By Dr. Ved Prakash Bhardwaj
Tuesday, December 23, 2025
Illusions of Life: Recent Works by Archana Jha/ by Dr Ved Prakash Bhardwaj
Thursday, December 11, 2025
Life in Indian Art : an analytical view by Dr. Ved Prakash Bhardwaj
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| Painting by Amrita Sher-Gil. Bride Toilet. Source: public domain |
Indian art has always been connected with life. Whether we look at folk traditions, tribal paintings, miniature schools, or modern and contemporary works, one important element remains constant: the celebration of everyday life. The forms, themes, and styles may change from one century to another, but life continues to be the central inspiration behind Indian creativity.
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| Woodcut by Chittoprasad |
From ancient times onward, art in India has never
belonged only to kings, temples, or wealthy classes. It has flourished in
villages, on mud walls, in courtrooms, on palm leaves, in caves, and on canvas.
It grows wherever there is life, emotion, memory, and imagination. Thus, Indian
art becomes not only a visual expression but also an archive of how people
lived, how they worked, how they worshipped, how they celebrated, and how they
felt.
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| life in mithila painting |
Folk and Tribal Art: Art
Rooted in Life
The clearest example of life-based art is found in folk
and tribal art. In these traditions, art is not a separate profession or a
luxury; it is a part of living. A festival, a wedding, a harvest season, or a
ritual automatically produces art. The walls of houses become the canvas, and
nature provides the tools—soil, leaves, stones, plant colors.
Paintings from Madhubani, Warli, Gond, Pattachitra, Bhil art, Sohrai, and Kalamkari show a world full of farming, marriage rituals, forests, gods, animals, motherhood, and music. There is no artificial separation between life and art. Nature, society, faith, and everyday work become inseparable parts of this expression.
| Warli painting |
These works rarely show kings or dramatic heroism.
Instead, they present simple, yet profound, slices of existence—women preparing
food, farmers sowing seeds, hunters in the forest, children playing, birds,
cattle, seasonal festivities, and community gatherings. The beauty of folk art
lies in its simplicity, vitality, and closeness to nature.
Miniature Painting: Life Replaced by Royalty
When we turn to miniature painting, life
seems to take a different form. Miniature schools such as Mughal,
Rajasthani, Deccani, and Pahari Kalam were largely funded by kings and
emperors. As a result, artists painted what the courts demanded: royal
portraits, hunting expeditions, palace love stories, religious scenes, and
mythological narratives.
Common life disappeared from these surfaces.
Instead of farmers or ordinary women, we see richly dressed rulers, queens,
musicians, elephants, court dancers, and divine figures. Even when nature
appears, it is more decorative than lived. The trees, rivers, birds, and
mountains serve beauty rather than experience.
Despite their technical brilliance and delicate
brushwork, miniature paintings often remain distant from everyday realities.
They show an idealized or luxurious life that belonged only to a few.
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| Painting by Ram Kinkar Baij |
Modern Art Brings Back
Ordinary Life
Amrita Sher-Gil was one of the
earliest and most influential modernist painters in India to portray the
everyday lives of ordinary people, especially women. At a time when much of
Indian art focused on mythology or elite subjects, Sher-Gil shifted attention toward
the lived experiences of the common man. Her works—such as Three Girls, Bride’s
Toilet, and Village Scene—capture the emotional depth, struggles, and quiet
dignity of rural life. Through this focus, she helped bring the realities of
ordinary individuals into the mainstream of modern Indian art, earning her
recognition as a pioneer who humanized and modernized artistic representation
in India.
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| Paintign by Haku Shah |
With the rise of modern art, life once again
becomes the focus of Indian creativity. The colonial period introduced western
education in art schools like the JJ School of Art in Mumbai, where
artists learned perspective, anatomy, oil techniques, and realism. Although the
style was influenced by European methods, the subject matter began to shift
toward Indian life.
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| Painting by Nandlal Bose |
Urban cities, markets, colonial streets, industrial
workers, students, middle-class families, and office employees started
appearing on canvas. Meanwhile, the Bengal School took inspiration from
Indian heritage, rural culture, and the simplicity of folk life. Artists like Nandalal
Bose, Binod Bihari Mukherjee, Yamini Roy and Abanindranath Tagore rejected
both western romanticism and courtly extravagance. They painted humans engaged
in everyday tasks—women drawing water from wells, farmers working, children learning,
village fairs, and devotional practices.
For the first time, ordinary women were not treated
as decorative figures. They were shown working in the fields, raising
children, walking to rivers, selling goods, and performing rituals with dignity
and strength. The most powerful contribution came from Ramkinkar Baij,
whose sculptures and paintings brought tribal life and rural labourers to the
forefront. His large sculptures of Santhal people, especially the Santhal
Family, are milestones in Indian art. They show peasants walking with their
children and belongings, symbolizing strength, survival, and migration. Through
such works, art stepped into the real world of struggle, identity, and social
truth.
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| Painting by Satish Gujral |
Art after Independence: New
Ideas, New Realities
After independence, India entered a new journey
full of hope, pain, and questions. The horrors of Partition, the dream of
democracy, growth of capitalism, rise of socialism and communism, and rapid
modernization affected artists deeply. Art was no longer only about depicting
life; it was also about questioning life.
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| Painting by Arpana Caur |
In the 1960s and 1970s, artists began to paint not
only what they saw, but also what they felt, thought, feared, and protested
against. The canvas became a space for emotional and psychological exploration.
Themes such as poverty, gender inequality, social injustice, political
violence, loneliness, and identity crises came into focus.
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| Painting by Arpita Singh |
Artists like Somnath Hore, Chittaprosad, M.F. Husein,
Souza, Tyeb Mehta, Akbar Padamsee, Bhupen Khakhar, NS Bendre, Arpita Singh, Anjali
Ela Menon, B. Prabha, Ganesh Pyne, Shyamal Dutta Ray, Bikas Bhattacaryjee,
Jogen Chowdhury, Manu Parekh, Madhavi Parekh, Dhiraj Chowdhury, prakash
Krmakar, Paritosh Sen, Satish Gujral, Jai Zarotia, Amit Ambalal, Hakku Shah,
Gulam Mohammd Shekh, Neelima Shekh, Rekha Rodvittia, N. Pushpmala, Lalitha
Lazami, Naina Kanodia, Latika Katta, and many more pushed Indian art
toward new directions. They expressed not just appearances, but underlying
truths. The influence of global movements, political journalism, student
activism, and industrialization made art more critical and reflective.
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| Paintign by Gulam Mohammad Shekh |
Art did not change society directly, but it
transformed how intellectuals and thinkers looked at society. It offered a
mirror that did not beautify reality but revealed its cracks.
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| Painting by Jogen Chowdhury |
Life and Conceptual Art in the
21st Century
In the 21st century, Indian art entered a new phase
dominated by conceptual ideas, surreal forms, unusual materials, and
experimental installations. The artist’s focus shifted from how a painting
looks to what it means. Sometimes the concept dominates so strongly that
the visual form becomes secondary or confusing for viewers.
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| painting by Jagannath Panda |
This created a distance between the art and the
audience. Art now required explanation, writing, curatorial notes, and
sometimes technical understanding. Many viewers began to feel excluded. Yet,
alongside conceptual art, many artists continued to engage deeply with life by
showing pain, memory, gender struggles, environmental issues, migration, and
urban isolation.
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| Painting by Vijender Sharma |
Artists like Arpita Singh, Sudhir Patwardhan,
Laxma Goud, Satish Gujral, Jogen Chowdhury, Ghulam Mohammad Sheikh, Neelima
Shekh, Lalitha Lazami, B. Prabha, Dheeraj Choudhury, Atul Dodiya, Neeraj
Goswami, Sanjay Bhattacharya, Vijender Shrma, Jagannath Panda, Rekha Rodwittia,
G.R. Iranna, Arpana Caur, Gogi Saroj Pal, Ved Nayer, Shipra Bhattacharya,
Maruti Shilke, K.S. Radhakrishnan, GR Iranna, Jagannath Panda, Veer Munshi,
Arun Panidt, and many others
continue to keep life at the centre of their art. On the other hand, abstract
and experimental artists such as Prabhakar Barwe, Prabhakar Kolte, Jeram
Patel, Shobha Broota, Amitava Das, Mona Rai, Santosh Verma, Manish Pushkale,
Amrut Patel, Anil Gaikwad, Nupur Kundu, Harpreet Singh, Pandurang Tathe,
Vijayraj Bodhankar, And many more explore life through colour, texture, and
form rather than direct representation.
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| Painting by Veer Munshi |
The Challenge of Medium-Based
Art Today
A new trend today focuses heavily on unconventional
materials—metal scraps, plastics, digital projections, industrial waste,
sound, light, fabric, and recycled products. While experimentation is
necessary, problems arise when medium becomes more important than meaning.
When art stops reflecting life, it risks losing its human connection. Many
viewers find themselves unable to relate or understand what they are looking
at.
Art must evolve, but it must not forget the society
from which it grows. If art forgets life, it becomes hollow; if art remembers
life, it remains meaningful.
The journey of Indian art shows one unbroken truth:
art survives only when it is connected to life. Whether it is the tribal
painter using natural colours, the miniature artist painting court life, the
modern painter exploring labourers, or the contemporary artist expressing
identity struggles—each reflects a lived reality.
Indian art is not merely visual decoration; it is a
living dialogue with people, nature, dreams, pain, and hope. As long as art
continues to breathe the air of life, it will evolve, challenge, inspire, and
remain rooted in the soil of human experience. Art that comes from life goes
back to life, and this intimate relationship is what makes Indian art unique,
diverse, and eternally alive.
Note: All Images from public domain and used only for refrence.
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
Art by Nikas Safronov - by Dr. Ved Prakash Bhardwaj
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| Nikas Safronov |
Ancient architecture, especially monuments, embodied art, but modern art
limited art to painting and sculpture. Installation art challenged this, and
video art completely changed this notion. However, when an artist integrates
both installation and video, using artificial intelligence, the very meaning of
art changes. Then, art is not in the object itself but in the environment. The
environment becomes a work of art, an art experience. Russian artist Nikas
Safronov's exhibition is a similar one. It features paintings that are
transformed into moving landscapes through AI. His son, Luka, has made the
still images dynamic. This exhibition exemplifies how technology can transform
the art experience. His exhibition, currently on view at the Lalit Kala Akademi
Gallery in Delhi, opened on December 5th and is on view until December 21st.
This exhibition is captivating, grand, and not only captivates but also amazes
people, especially young people. The audience's reactions during the exhibition
reflected curiosity rather than artistic awareness.
This exhibition calls for a new debate. Experiments have been conducted
before to transform paintings into movable environments. Such experiments have
already been conducted with Van Gogh's art, and exhibitions have been held
worldwide. In these exhibitions, Van Gogh's works were transformed through
technology into environments that, upon entering, made the viewer feel a part
of the works. So, are the days of traditional forms of art, such as painting
and sculpture, over? No, they are not, because painting and sculpture are at
the center of all the experiments conducted so far.
This exhibition showcases many dimensions of his art. Along with painting
and sculpture, it also includes installation art. These installations feature
artificial flowers blooming, lighting effects, and natural environments. The
exhibition space has been completely transformed for this purpose. From the
colour of the walls to the
entrance and floor, everything has been transformed into a natural environment.
Outside the gallery, there are large elephant sculptures, which are captivating
with paintings.
Elephants appear several times in his works, such as the video installation
upon entering the gallery, which shows an elephant moving from one corner to
another. The environment in which this elephant is placed also reveals Banaras.
Ganesha is also depicted in the form of a painting. India is reflected on many
levels in Nikas's art. In many of his paintings, we see Shiva, Dashavatara,
gods and goddesses, etc. This reveals the cultural interconnectedness between
India and Russia. However, in this exhibition, art, despite its true form, has
been neglected. AI or animation technology creates a magical effect, possesses
grandeur, and makes the impossible possible. But when miracles become
everything, art dies, as was evident in this exhibition. Nikas is a painter and
a sculptor, but when a painter or sculptor surrenders their art to technology,
their existence disappears. Technology gives their art a magical effect, making
many amazing effects possible. In this exhibition, each painting is accompanied
by a QR code, which, when scanned, makes the painting appear as a video on a
mobile phone.




























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