Gyan Panchal.
Jumabhoy, Zehra
AMRITA JHAVERI
There are circumstances when sticks and stones may break our bones,
as the saying goes. Paris-based Gyan Panchal's show in Mumbai was
not one of them. Here, such sturdy materials appeared curiously fragile.
In hndus (all works 2012), the aforementioned
"sticks"--actually three white-painted bamboo poles--were
perched rather forlornly near a window. In wedhneumi, the bark of a palm
tree emerged from a piece of yellowish paper on a wall, its shell-pink
contours recalling the ruffled skirts of a soiled petticoat.
Panchal's curious titles, by the way, are gleaned from his study of
the Prom-Indo-European language reconstructed by linguists to aid their
research into the roots of Asian and European dialects. Since the terms
have no currency in everyday life and no fixed pronunciation, he sees
them as occupying the same marginal zone as his artworks.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
In preparation for his first solo show in Mumbai, Panchal took
three weeks off to explore, scouring the city's streets, shops, and
industries for inspiration. While the French-Indian sculptor is
generally known for his use of crude oil (whose use in the ancient world
fascinates him), for this exhibition his partiality for that substance
was held in check. In qotred 1, a rectangular piece of cloth hangs on a
wall like an abstract painting, reminiscent of Rothko or his Indian
counterpart, V. S. Gaitonde. It is, in fact, a lungi (the garment worn
by South Asian men) made with khaddar, the homespun fabric so dear to
Mahatma Gandhi's heart. At first, the textile was brown. After
Panchal drained it of color using bleach, it turned a dirty orange
flecked with a mysterious purple blemish. Prettier, if less excitingly
textured, is the baby-pink qotred 2, which could pass for a threadbare
tablecloth. These down-at-heel fabrics are unconscionably attractive,
which led me initially to object to Panchal's exhibition. It felt
strange to see humble objects and materials--shards of vermilion granite
in Arai or the deep-green marble of pelom 1--so exquisitely displayed in
a too-serene white cube. By making griminess gorgeous, wasn't
Panchal discounting the reality of India's laboring millions?
In the end, I think not. Aligning himself with the elevation of
commonplace materials in Italian Arte Povera of the 1960s and '70s,
Panchal has charted his own path by rehabilitating the "poor"
objects, devoid of function, that are deemed valueless by the
"new" India. It is the point of transition--from discarded
object to high art--that Panchal cherishes, admitting that he wants to
preserve "the moment when the object is in-between a raw material
and a finished product." Since, in India, marble tends to be dyed
in brilliant shades to accommodate local tastes, Panchal set out to
reveal what lies beneath its artificial jewel-like hues. In part, pelom
2 mimics a slab of malachite. We don't have to peer too closely,
though, to distinguish uneven brushstrokes. By concentrating on the
tactile quality of industrial rejects and unwanted objects, Panchal
probes the processes of production and consumption. The jagged edges of
three thin, long strips of grayveined marble in cicami were positioned
along the floor and a wall, lined up so that their ends almost touch. A
fourth section was relegated to a separate wall--standing alone, as if
abandoned. Just as we might have been about to walk away, something
seemed to happen: From a certain angle, all four fragments of marble
lined up together to form an arc. And then, for an instant, we glimpsed
the sculpture as a whole. With Panchal, value depends less on what we
see than on how we look.