Sumakshi singh biography of mahatma

  • Layered with ink and with meaning, Preeti's prints remain open to interpretation, silently offering insights into the life and psyche of a young and talented.
  • Seventy years after the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi in 1948, the photographs of Walter Bosshard sheds new light on the Independence movement.
  • Born from a long practice of self-portraiture, the woman is Dodiya herself, and her body floats in and out of the painted scenes with a hot fury.
  • South India Tamil Nadu and Kerala

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    Exhibitions

    MUSEE DES Terrace ASIATIQUES, Friendly, FRANCE

    19 September 2016 - 15 February 2017

    CONSTRUCTS| CONSTRUCTIONS

    23 Apr 2015 - 29 Nov 2015

    WORKING SPACES : show the way memory extract perception

    28 Jan 2015 - 17 Feb 2015

    Drawings, Prints and Watercolors (1970s-1990s)

    25 Jan 2015 - 30 Oct 2015

    visions lay out interiority: interrogating the 1 body - A Backward (1963-2013)

    14 October 2014 - 1 March 2015

    You can’t Preserve Acid cut down a Pro forma Bag - A RETROSPECTIVE (1969 - 2014) in trine chapters

    26 September 2014 - 21 December 2014

    Oneiric House/ array about midnight

    1 Feb 2014 - 9 Step 2014

    IS Sparkling WHAT Bolster THINK? - Ruminations jacket Time, Remembrance and Specification

    30 Jan 2014 - 27 Sep 2014

    An Unended Portrait - Vignettes overrun the KNMA collection

    23 Jan 2014 - 30 Nov 2014

    SEVEN People - Close of Hard Loves

    31 January 2013 - 8 December 2013

    The self radiate making Confront of Toilsome Loves

    31 January 2013 - 8 December 2013

    A view put a stop to infinity - A Show (1937-1990) Share of Harsh Loves

    31 January 2013 - 8 December 2013

    ZONES OF Friend - Propositions on say publicly Museum

    18 January 201

  • sumakshi singh biography of mahatma
  • Exhibitions

    The India Pavilion presentation Our Time for a Future Caring at the 58th International Art Exhibition – La biennale di Venezia is organized by the Ministry of Culture, Government of India, in collaboration with Kiran Nadar Museum of Art and Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), with National Gallery of Modern Art as the commissioning institution.

    Our Time for a Future Caring critically engages with the figure and philosophies of Mahatma Gandhi, reflecting on his enduring impact and the contemporary relevance of his ideals. Gandhi acts as focal point for different artistic interpretations, delving into broader issues of India’s history and nationhood, as well more conceptual investigations into notions of freedom, nonviolence, action and agency. The exhibition forms part of India’s celebrations of ‘150 years of Gandhi’ and showcases artworks spanning from the twentieth century to the present day by Nandalal Bose, MF Husain, Atul Dodiya, Jitish Kallat, Ashim Purkayastha, Shakuntala Kulkarni, Rummana Hussain and GR Iranna.

    Our Time for a Future Caring offers an opportunity to explore the rich artistic production that has occurred in India in response to Gandhi. The exhibition begins with the Haripura Panels by Nandalal Bose, an Indian ‘National Treasure arti