Peter Buggenhout: Gallery Maskara.
Jumabhoy, Zehra
Visiting a gallery in Mumbai is generally gratifying, if for no
other reason than that the air-conditioned white cube provides a welcome
respite from the heat and dust of the city's that street's.
But not this time. For his first show in India, "ResDerelictae
II," Belgian artist Peter Buggenhout was determined that we should
encounter at least one of the things we were fleeing from: dust.
Buggenhout's show, curated by Sofie Van Loo and gallery owner
Abhay Maskara, comprised four large, lumpy objects, each made of waste
material. Iron slag, polystyrene, polyester, and cardboard were thickly
coated with the dust the artist purchased from professional cleaning
companies in Belgium. These "dust sculptures" (as Buggenhout
dubs them) were not specifically created for his Mumbai debut, but they
were selected because of the aptness of their medium. Presenting dust as
art was meant to make Mumbaikars scrutinize afresh this all-too-familiar
irritant. The almost clinical setting of pristine white walls and
gleaming glass formed a deliberate contrast to the grubbiness of the art
and the conditions outside.
From a distance, the four sculptures looked remarkably alike--each
resembling a rough-edged, brownish-gray rock. Yet the longer one
wandered around the gallery, which had been turned into a sort of
labyrinth by temporary white walls, the more the differences among them
emerged. The two larger sculptures were placed in glass vitrines. The
deep green glass and the gallery's soft lighting imbued them with
an under water glow and the patina of rusty metal, momentarily
suggesting the romantic tale of a shipwreck: Aren't the curved
bottoms of the structures, come to think of it, something like hulls of
boats?
Buggenhout has been making dust sculptures since 2003. They are all
given the same name: The Blind Leading the Blind, a reference to Pieter
Brueghel the Elder's painting Parable of the Blind, 1568.
Blindness--a metaphor for the limits of logical investigation--is
central to Buggenhout's art. He is beginning to be well known in
Europe for his sculptures and installations fashioned from abject
materials--blood, hair, and animal intestines--that are influenced by
Georges Bataille's concept of l'informe, formless waste or
excess that evades categorization. In "Res Derelictae II,"
bands of shadow produced by iron beams fell across the lumpy objects.
From certain angles, the shadows converged to construct a prisonlike
enclosure. However, as viewers moved around the gallery, the shadows
moved too, so that artworks invariably escaped containment.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Surrealism has often been accused of romanticizing non-Western
cultures for their supposed spirituality, usually treated as a foil for
Western rationalism. (Arguably, Bataille's Primitivist musings on
African magic do just this.) Initially, it is tempting to ascribe such
motives to Buggenhout's art as well. In the catalogue for his 2006
exhibition in Belgium, Sincerely, A Friend, Buggenhout's
photographs of Hindu icons--such as a weathered statue of Ganesh, shot
when the artist visited India in 1995--were placed among images of his
similarly misshapen sculptures, some of which have obvious references to
Hinduism, such as Lingam, 2003. Is this visual correspondence meant to
suggest that the spirituality of the icons is echoed in the art? In
fact, "Res Derelictae II" sidestepped such accusations of
exoticism because it was so attuned to Mumbai's multifaceted
reality: Gallery Maskara is situated in Colaba, a scruffy neighborhood
that has become home to the city's most cutting-edge galleries, and
the exhibition's disturbing appeal lay precisely in its ability to
mirror these contradictions.