Untitled XV, ca. 1975 Black & White Photograph, 24.5 cm x 37 cm Nasreen Mohamedi Photoworks from Nineteen Sixties and Seventies Talwar Gallery is delighted to announce an exhibition of works of Nasreen Mohamedi (1937-1990). This is the artist's first solo exhibition in the United States. On exhibit are rare photographic works created by the artist from the early 1960s to the late seventies. These black and white photo works, from the artist's collection, are being exhibited in their entirety for the first time. The shadowed lines of the steps in a Mughal courtyard, the patterns on a road in Japan, or the lines in the sand on a washed beach all explore the creation and consumption of form by light. Further investigations and experiments with light processing and imaging in certain works result in an unfamiliar yet dreamlike landscape. Capturing the evanescent, while distilling the monumental, Nasreen strove to find the essence of things, creating a unity of form and connecting life as a whole, using a line. The apparent fragility and frugality of her work is in sharp contrast to the strength of their forms and the commitment to a vision. Despite the employment of formal structural geometry, Nasreen's work is infused with perceptible sensuality and poetic elegance. Nasreen Mohamedi's life and work embodied simplicity, purity, resolve. She is one of the rare Indian artists who, with minimal means and a sincere susceptibility to perception, created work that was in sharp variance with the figurative and expressionist painters that dominated the early decades of the post-independence Indian art milieu. Nasreen Mohamedi was born in 1937 in Karachi, India (now Pakistan), and raised in Bombay. She studied at St. Martins School of Art in London from 1954-57. On her return to India, she joined the Bhulabhai Institute for the Arts and worked in the company of artists such as M.F. Husain, Tyeb Mehta and V.S. Gaitonde, who became her mentor for years. In 1961 she had her first solo exhibition at Gallery 59 in Bombay, India. She was awarded a scholarship by the French government to pursue work at Monsieur Guillard's private atelier from 1961-63. In 1964, Nasreen accompanied M.F. Husain as a still photographer to the deserts of Rajasthan for the shooting of his film "Through the eyes of a painter". For next few years she traveled frequently through the Arab world, including Bahrain, Turkey & Iran and was influenced by Islamic architecture. In 1972 she joined the Faculty of Fine Arts at the M.S. University in Baroda, India where she continued teaching till 1988, and where she is still deeply revered by students and her colleagues. In 1975 she exhibited at the Third Triennial in New Delhi, India. In 1985 Nasreen's works were exhibited in "Artists Indiens en France" at the Centre National de Arts Plastiques in Paris, France. In 1991, a retrospective of her work was held at the Jehangir Art Gallery in Bombay, India. In 2000 her works were featured in "Drawing Space", an exhibtion at Iniva in London, UK. Later this year, in October, 2003, her works will be on exhibit in "The Last Picture Show" at The Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, which will travel to The Armand Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, California, in 2004. Nasreen Mohamedi passed away in 1990 in Kihim, India. September 18 - October 25, 2003 Hours: Tue-Sat 11am - 6pm Talwar Gallery 108 East 16 Street New York NY 10003 Telephone +1 212 673 3096 Fax + 1 212 673 3097 E-Mail mail@talwargallery.com www.talwargallery.com |