NEW YORK, NY.- Leila Heller Gallery presents ETHEREAL, a group show curated by Dr. Amin Jaffer at the gallerys Chelsea location from October 23 through December 13, 2014. ETHEREAL offers a new take on the history of South Asian art bringing together the transitory, insightful, and spiritual sensibility of works by 16 leading contemporary artists from the region.
The visual arts of the Indian Subcontinent are typically associated with abundant ornament, rich encrustation and riotous color. However, the region has also given rise to a tradition of quiet restraint, evident both in spiritual practice and in forms of representation, whose cultural manifestations are spare, fragile, and even tentative. Whether sculpture, photography or experimental video, each artwork in this exhibition is marked by an ethereal quality that challenges our senses and questions our perceptions.
Video and photographic works take nature as a subject, capturing the gracefulness and ethereality found from within our natural surroundings.
Such harmony converges in Shilpa Gupta's photographs of water considered holy in different faiths. Arranged in a quadrant formation Untitled (Holy Waters), (2012) is a contemplative reflection of the spiritual qualities of water. Sonia Khuranas video Surreal Pond I (Epiphany) (2013) presents an idyllic landscape that fades into a mystical experience as a pond slowly evaporates into nothingness. Khuranas art practice explores the poetics of inner experience and the polemics of being in the world.
Ali Kazim captures that moment in natural landscapes just before a physical transformation occurs a serene moment of haunting stillness. In Taker XII (2014) Prem Sahib explores both formalism and autobiographical themes through a minimal palette of grey, black and white. His glossy slate grey resin sweat panels replicate the steamed up windows of a bathhouse with the traces of hands smears stretched across.
Working on a larger scale, some artists in the show demonstrate that the essence of ephemerality can be explored through working with heavier mediums. Rashid Rana compiles pixilated fragments of macro images and themes, creating paradoxical juxtapositions of contrasting realities. In his new work War Within II (2013), Rana revisits the famous neoclassical painting Oath of the Horatii by Jacques-Louis David, bringing together the contemporary idea of nations as the new form of tribes.
Noor Ali Chagani explores the ways that walls in society that work to both maintain the sanctity of home can also divide and obscure. Chaganis surreal sculptures are made of small handmade bricks transformed into tactile textiles and carpets that appear to be suspended in the breeze.