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Mrinalini Mukherjee

Mrinalini Mukherjee

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Female
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Mrinalini Mukherjee was an Indian painter and sculpture artist. Born to artists Benode Behari and Leela Mukherjee, in Bombay, she was brought up in the hill town of Dehra Dun. She studied painting at Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, before doing a post-Diploma in mural design under K. G. Subramanyan. Being a painter and sculptor, she has a unique voice in contemporary Indian art and is best known for her knotted sculptures with hemp ropes. She was known for the use of folk and tribal art techniques to great creative advantage in her works

Early life and education

Mukherjee was born in 1949, in Bomaby, India to artists Benode Behari and Leela Mukherjee. The only child to her parents, she was brought up in the North-Indian hill town of Dehradun, where she attended school, and spent her summer vaccations in Santiniketan. She went to study Bachelor of Fine Arts (Painting) at Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, before doing a post-Diploma in mural design under K. G. Subramanyan, an Indian artist and member of the Fine Arts Faculty at the university. She received a British Council Scholarship in 1971, for sculpture at the West Surrey College of Art and Design.

Career

Mukherjee worked for the West Surrey College of Art and design in Farnham. Her first solo exhibition was held at Sridharani ARt Gallery, in 1972. It featured wrapped woven forms in dyed natural fabric, a series of works that brought her recognition.

In 1994-95, she was invited to the Museum of Modern Art at Oxford to hold an exhibition conducted by David Elliott. The same exhibition further traveled to several cities around the England. Mukherjee has also participated in an international workshop in Netherlands in 1996. Art historian and independent curator Deepak Ananth ascribed Mukherjee’s predilection for modest, earthly materials to her influence from Subramanyan, and in turn from the history of Indian artisanal craft. In an essay entitled “The Knots are Many But the Thread is One”, Ananth wrote, “As if in harmony with the vegetal realm from which her medium is derived, the leading metaphor of Mukherjee’s work comes from the organic life of plants. Improvising upon a motif or image that serves as her starting point the work’s gradual unfolding itself becomes analogous to the stirring into maturation of a sapling.”

Later in her career, Mukherjee had been experimenting with ceramics.

Style

The authors of Indian Contemporary Art Post-Independence dubbed Mukherjee as a "unique voice in contemporary Indian art", and remarked "The sculptures knotted painstakingly with hemp ropes in earthy or rich glowing colours evoke a fecund world of burgeoning life, lush vegetation, iconic figures." Acknowledging the note of sexuality manifested in the "phallic forms", they added "the mysterious folds and orifices, the intricate curves and drapes. There is a sensuous, tactile quality to her work which exercises a compelling hold on the viewer."

Mukherjee studied under K. G. Subramanyan, and derived hevaily from his artistry. Sonal Khullar writing on Subramanyan's influence on her wrote in Worldy Affliations Mukherjee a former student, "[...] use jute, wood, rope, and cowdung to create environments at once magical and mundane. Their inventiveness with visual language and investments in ordinary materials are a legacy of Subramanyan's teaching, writing and art-making."

Influences

In the context of the pedegogy professed by K G Subramanyan, Mukherjee's decision to work in a material traditionally associated with her craft rather than "high art" reflects her teacher's conscious attempts to overcome what they considered to be a staple polarity in Modernism, not least in view of the extreme richness and continuing actuality of traditional artisanal skills in India and the sheer versatility of popular vernacular idioms.

Artist's father Benode Bihari, who, in his teaching at Shantiniketan, his ideologies since 1950's (being an active part of the 'nationalist' revival movement) and his works in 1970's has had great impact on the artist.

Exhibitions

Solo Exhibitions

2015

Transfigurations - National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), New Delhi

2013 

Palm Scapes - Nature Morte, New Delhi

Bronze -Jhaveri Contemporary, Mumbai

2010

Works By Mrinalini Mukherjee - Gallery Espace, New Delhi

2007 

Sculpture In Bronze - Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi

2004 

Bronzes And Fiber Works - Nature Morte, New Delhi

2001 

Night Bloom - Nature Morte, New Delhi

Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai

1997 

In The Garden - Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi

1996

Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai

European Ceramics Work Center, Hertogenbosch

1995 

British Council Gallery, New Delhi

1994 

Mrinalini Mukherjee Sculpture - Museum of Modern Art, Oxford

Pavilion Gallery, Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Bretton Hall, Wakefield

Royal Festival Hall Galleries, London

1986 

Pundole Art Gallery, Mumbai

1985 

Pantheon Of Images - Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi

1977 

Pundole Art Gallery, Mumbai.

1973 

Triveni Gallery, New Delhi

1972 

Shridharani Gallery, New Delhi

Group Exhibitions

2015

India Art Fair, New Delhi

2014

Burning Down The House – Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju

2013

The Body In Indian Art - BOZAR, Brussels

2012 

Crossings: Time Unfolded (Part II) - Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, New Delhi

2008 

India Moderna - Institut Valencia D’Art Modern, Valencia, Spain 

Mapping Memories: Painted Travelogues - Threshold Art Gallery, New Delhi

2006 

The Art Mill at Berkeley Square Gallery, London

Akar Prakar, Kolkata

2001 

Bollywood Lounge - Arrival Passengers Terminal, Amsterdam

1999 

Edge Of The Century- Nature Morte, New Delhi

1998 

Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai

Contemporary Indian Art - Kunsthallen Goteberg, Milles Garden, Stockholm

1997 

Rediscovering The Roots: Contemporary Indian Art - Muses de la Nacion, Lima, Peru

Major Trends In Indian Art - Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi

Indian Contemporary Art: Post Independence, National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi

1996 

Shilpayan - National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi 

Samkaleen Bharatiya Kala Ek Sanchayan - Festival of India, Russia

Asia Pacific Triennale of Contemporary Art, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane

1995

The Other Self - National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam

1994 

100 Years: From The NGMA Collection - National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi

1991 

Words And Images: Artists Against Communalism - National Gallery Art, New Delhi

1990 

National Gallery Art, New Delhi

1989 

Timeless Art - The Times of India Exhibition, Chattrapati Shivaji Terminus, Mumbai 

Artist's Alert - Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi

1988 

Indian Contemporary Art, Festival of India, Japan: Merugo Museum of Art, Tokyo

Takaoka Municipal Museum of Art; Machinda City Museum of Graphic Arts

1987

Contemporary Women Artists, Festival of India, USSR

The Sculpted Image - Bombay Arts Festival, Mumbai

1986 

Origins, Originality And Beyond - Sydney Biennale, Sydney

Second Biennale of Havana, Havana

First Biennale of Contemporary Indian Art, Roopankar Museum, Bharat Bhavan, Bhopal

1985 

Some Aspects Of Indian Art Today - Bharat Bhavan, Bhopal

1982 

Festival of India, Contemporary Indian Art, Royal Academy of Arts, London

All India Print Exhibition, Government Museum, Chandigarh

1981

India: Myth And Reality - Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, UK 

Fifth Triennale of Contemporary Art, Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi

Inaugural Exhibition, Roopankar Museum, Bharat Bhavan, Bhopal

1980 

Sara Hilden Art Museum, Tampere

Paris Biennale, Paris

Anthology of Paris Biennale, Nice; National Gallery of Modern Art, Lisbon

1979 

Silver Jubilee Exhibition of Sculpture, Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi

1978 

Six Who Declined To Show In The Triennale - Kumar Gallery, New Delhi

1977 

National Exhibition, Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi

1975 

Annual Exhibition, All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society, New Delhi

Works in Public Collections

  • Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, UK 
  • Yorkshire Sculpture Park, UK
  • Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
  • National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi
  • Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi
  • Roopankar Museum of Art, Bharat Bhawan, Bhopal
  • Fine Arts Museum, Punjab University, Chandigarh
  • India Tourism Development Corporation, New Delhi
  • India Institute of Immunology, New Delhi 
  • Tate Modern, London
  • Government Museum and Art Gallery, Chandigarh
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