Tuesday 11 September 2012

'Jannis - A Relook' by Jehangir Jani

- Vishal Tondon

Tree of Knowledge. 2012

Jehangir Jani is known in his circle as a multi-talented artist. He has worked in quite a few artistic mediums including sculpture, installations, painting and film. Though he is well known as an accomplished sculptor, his project with the delicate medium of watercolour has been to examine the result of translating tangible objects into a fragile form. For some time now, he has been exploring the possibilities of this very soft yet difficult medium. To Jani’s credit, he has been able to convey, through the flimsy yet willful medium of watercolour subjects that are tough and would otherwise have required the tenacity either of sculpture or oil paint. His new suite of paintings, ‘Jannis – A Relook’, are on view at Kalakriti Art Gallery. These paintings deal with the materiality of objects, rendered in the elusive medium of watercolour.

Jani’s new work exposes the difficult relationship passion and knowledge share. The tortured relationship between the two has been grist for the mill for ages; whole canons of religions, myth and policies have been built around the love-hate equation between passion and knowledge. The philosopher Foucault has mentioned how knowledge is built and sustained through the exclusion and suppression of alternate voices. We see a similar opinion being echoed in Jani’s new work. His new painting speaks of the violence and the use of an iron fist that go into the building of knowledge, including the canon of science which is apparently the foundation of modern thought and society. Jani’s suite of exquisite watercolours sullied with smudged charcoal blotches comment on the parasitic dependence of high knowledge on the blood and the sweat of the common man, the other and the minority, which are all declared as disposable after use. 

High knowledge serves mainly to define and protect the interests only of a powerful few. It adapts and appropriates material from the minor and alternate discourses, which it posits as its own. There is no knowledge other than mainstream knowledge. The engagement of the mainstream discourse with the minor only serves to complete and validate the mainstream. 

Van Gogh, who had earlier equated art with manual labour, questioned hierarchies in Art at the dawn of Modernism. His paintings are like the musings of a Christ for the modern world; “The poor shall inherit the earth.”  His work anticipates the attitude of the art movement of Arte Povera that was to manifest itself in Italy in the 1960s, the latter an outcome of the crisis of Modernity. Two prominent artists of the movement that was Arte Povera, Michelangelo Pistoletto and Jannis Kounellis worked to break down the hierarchies of "Art" and common things. The use of impoverished materials is certainly one aspect of the definition of Arte Povera. It is the interest in underprivileged materials in the work of Kounellis that has moved Jani the most. His recent paintings take off from the works of Jannis Kounellis and Jani invests in the configurations Kounellis suggested the hint of the transgressing desire.

This component of desire enters Jani’s suite of paintings with elements such as sheer slip of cloth and bitten scarlet apples. In these paintings we can see Jani’s quest as a sculptor; the juxtaposition of the fragile and the tough continues to excite him as an artist.  

The apples are of peculiar interest here. They might not be golden, but they do stand for the apple of discord. Also, they stand for knowledge, as is clearly indicated by the title of one of the paintings, ‘The Tree of Knowledge.’ Bitten apples in this suite of paintings recall death by poisoning, as in the story ‘Snow White.’ Bitten apples also recall death by poisoning of Alan Turing, the father of computer science and artificial intelligence. Finally, they recall the original sin and the fall of man. As it turns out in all the three above mentioned cases, mortality was hastened by an unpardonable attribute in each of the protagonist involved; respectively, unique beauty, transgressing desire, and free will.    

Interestingly, the bitten apple as an icon has also been immortalized by Steve Jobs in his company’s logo.

The knowledge of our times is defined by artificial intelligence and scientific information. One would presume that such advances are made possible by the judicious application of rationality and fairness. Recent history proves otherwise. Turing’s suicide by poisoning evidently was brought on by his dissatisfaction at having to live life according to the dictates of the dominant discourse. His contributions to knowledge and human experience could not compensate for his sexual desire for another male, a non-conformism. His death exposes the underbelly of the hegemonic system that built the knowledge of our times. It also is symptomatic of the grimy side of affairs that is the other face of human progress.

Jehangir Jani’s new series, ‘Jannis – A Relook’ revisits, all at once, a complex array of histories relating to sexuality, culture and scientific knowledge. The war between knowledge and passion is a dirty one; each feeding off even while it enriches the other. Jani’s recent work comes at the right time; we have been wondering for some time now about who the real beneficiaries of knowledge are and to what extent free will is possible in an age that boasts of rights to knowledge and communication that are apparently universal and freely available.


Tuesday 4 September 2012

Jehangir Jani Show at Hyderabad

- Vishal Tondon

 
An art exhibition, titled ‘Jannis…A Relook’ will be displayed at Kalakriti Art Gallery, Banjara Hills, from the 7th of September.

The show displays exquisite watercolours by the Mumbai-based senior artist Jehangir Jani. This is Jani’s second solo show with Kalakriti Art Gallery. The last time the artist showed at Kalakriti was in 2006, with his series of sculptures titled ‘Peers’. The current show marks an important turn in the two decades long career of the artist. Jani’s new paintings take a detour from his earlier artistic methods, yet does not abandon his concerns with myths and social norms.

Jani has consistently been fascinated with how myths are created. His art looks for inspiration in the lives of heroes, whether victorious or fallen. Jani comments that today’s political icons are tomorrow’s mythological heroes and anti-heroes. This aspect of myth construction was vividly expressed in many of Jani’s previous shows, the most significant of them being ‘Faerie Tales…A Relook’ (1998, Mumbai), ‘Peers’ (2006, Mumbai and Hyderabad) and ‘Great Expectations’ (2007, Mumbai).

What intrigues Jani about myths is the way in which large numbers of populations structure their lives around these myths, accepting them as absolute truths.

In his long career, Jani has been known for tackling sensitive subjects. But the quest for truth and knowledge has kept Jani going, undeterred. He explains, “I hope that future generations will be more comfortable and accepting of the alternate modes of existence that I have often depicted in my works. I am more curious about how my works will be seen by the future generations.”

Jani’s contribution to contemporary Indian sculpture and installation art is well acknowledged. We ask him about his engagement with a more delicate medium like watercolour. Jani replies, “I have been exploring the possibilities of watercolours for many years now. But I am also toying with the idea of using new media technology in the future. I don’t have the classical sensibility of being faithful to one medium. Like an ever flowing river, I hope technology will carry on inventing new materials, and I will have reason to be in a perpetual state of discovery.” 

 
The present series of paintings, on show at Kalakriti Art Gallery, explores a stimulating theme. These works expose the difficult relationship between passion and knowledge. The theme is best expressed in the painting ‘The Tree of Knowledge’. The bitten apples here represent eroticism and curiosity at the same time. The symbol of the bitten apple, of course, derives from the story of Adam and Eve. The message, apparently, is that one might have to risk tasting the forbidden fruit in order to acquire knowledge. These paintings also suggest that the path to knowledge is a difficult one. It is beset with risks and sacrifices, but the outcome is usually the greater common good of society.

 
Another theme this series of paintings explore is the idea of how, in society, knowledge is built and protected. Usually, the contribution of the laboring classes to the growth of knowledge is not acknowledged. In paintings like ‘Jannis’ Bag 6’, the artist depicts what would be the handbags of a labourer; sacs filled with coal. The idea behind these works is to remind us that there are no menial jobs in the world, as every worker remotely or directly is instrumental in human progress and knowledge.

The paintings in ‘Jannis…A Relook’ are rendered in delicate washes of watercolour and a dexterous use of charcoal drawing. The exhibition at Kalakriti is open to all. Do not miss this great opportunity to interact with the artist and his works.