![]() Gopa Trivedi tries to re-contextualise miniature court styles in contemporary social norms from a feminine viewpoint. Like many artists, Gopa Trivedi’s art practice is closely connected with Indian Miniature painting culture and addresses the social and respective concerns created by inciting idioms in visual language. The forest is Chandan’s source of liveliness, which asks us to stay silent and observe what he treasures and wishes to reveal. ![]() Chandan allows viewers to escape the city’s congestion and a soothing retreat in a time of newfound loneliness through this work. In a Maze of Time by Ketaki Sarpotdar / Photo: KrispinĬhandan Bez Baruah, an artist from the northeast, displays his work in Delhi Art Week, a woodcut print ‘Somewhere in Northeast India’. For an experimental artist like Taneja, the materials are always a challenge, and across different scales and scopes, and fighting with the norms and rules set by society materialistically. ![]() Tor II, House or Home, and Treasured Ornaments are the projects displayed in this show, telling a story of material culture and human life inquisitively, which harmonises the artist’s livelihood and practice with transcending the medium disposition. Harman Taneja’s art practice brings diverse mediums and ideas, and as an architecture experimenter, space becomes the first home, and mediums like water, concrete, found materials, bars, cloths, epoxy, enamel, wood, pigment, text, epoxy resin and many are the essential ingredients. The viewer is critically immersed in what is reflected and enchanted through the works’ fluid nature. What ultimately blends a fusion of sensations in the contemporary world is a captivating question when engaging with artworks. Medium capacity from gouache to textile, ceramic to paper, and wood to concrete, and exploring thematic areas like migration, climate change, biodiversity, mythology, and socio-political issues, those artists and presenting gallery, exhibiting their fusion of traditional and contemporary mind, and comments on social and aesthetical trends and topics in Delhi Contemporary Art Week. The gallery will also feature artists like Aninda Singh, Ankush Safaya, Anupama Alias, Chandan Bez Baruah, Gopa Trivedi, Harman Taneja, Jahangir Asgar Jani, Ketaki Sarpotdar, Khadim Ali, Manjot Kaur, Niyeti Chanda Kannal, Pratul Dash, Sanket Viramgami, Shalina Vichitra, Shubham Kumar, Sudipta Das, Waseem Ahmed, Waswo X Waswo, Yogesh Ramkrishna, Zahra Yazdani. The Latitude 28 gallery brings celebrated and new faces in the contemporary Indian and Global South region, like Pakistani visual artist Farhat Ali, who specialises in reinterpreting chronology and prevalent imagery. Each room and corner is filled with artwork, and each gallery displays its best artists. In Delhi Contemporary Art Week, over 50 artists display their works through six galleries and curated shows. In a canvas or mixed medium, from a minimalistic point of view, artists bring pristine ideas and perspectives, a playful abundance of disciplined mediums, or even question the audience’s view of something and reignite them through a simple process of engaging. Delhi Contemporary Art Week displays the new voices from, in a broader sense, the Global South as a territorial and political identity, resonating with the socio-economic contrasts and backdrops.
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