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from a Garden in Calcutta

by Patricia Groves

Cultural Theologist, Oman

“There is a web-like, diaphanous quality to Manav Gupta’s watercolors; ephemeral shapes are caught in shafts of colored light. A bird perches momentarily on an invisible branch. It does not seem like the bird will flyaway; but it could disintegrate into the forms from which it was made; or slip into spaces between colors. Manav does not give maddening answers like the painting is what the viewer sees in it. Instead he is eager to share his vision, to enfold those who come, in the coordinates of his dreams. “

A child grew up in a horticultural garden in the heart of Calcutta. There, in the enchanted world of plants and flowers, the small child would run and play – and paint.

That child is now one of India’s top contemporary artists. There is a web-like, diaphanous quality to Manav Gupta’s watercolors; ephemeral shapes are caught in shafts of colored light. A bird perches momentarily on an invisible branch. It does not seem like the bird will flyaway; but it could disintegrate into the forms from which it was made; or slip into spaces between colors. I am lost in a crowd of people who have come to the exhibition on opening night and I am not taking notes; but I am listening to what is said.

Manav does not give maddening answers like the painting is what the viewer sees in it. Instead he is eager to share his vision, to enfold those who come, in the coordinates of his dreams. He rides along on words, images and music, taking the unspoken language of his paintings into films and performances This artist sees painting in a cascading vortex of rhythm, voice and dance. By painting to the cadence of poetry, the motion of dance and the exhilaration of music, Manav feels that he can encompass the scent, the spirit of the performing arts in image, on canvas … that this is a step toward a more universal and multidimensional concept of painting in our strange, modern world of colliding sensory stimulation. Who is this man who would, if he could, hold the whole world in his hands? I will not answer in the enviable superlatives of the critical press to date; or dwell on his creative empathy with the former President of India as· expressed in their illustrated volume of poetry, Life Tree; or overly remind you that he has sold at Christies… Instead I will go back to the garden.

One day, young Manav had to leave the garden to help his mother raise his little sister through difficult times. It was only when his sister was safely married that Manav could devote himself to his art – which he did heart and soul, like a lover finally re-united with the long-time object of his desire. Manav Gupta has the passion and drive of the once-thwarted visionary; he holds close the undaunted dream of the garden of innocence he left too soon, the Lost Paradise which he recreates every day with his paint brush.

Exploring Earth’s Elements

by Uma Nair

Art critic, Historian

“From probing the first principles of nature and thought, Manav’s art is about nature’s pre-eminence and earth’s universal truths. What is enticing is that he dips his brush deep into his intrinsic romanticism, puts it in context through his deep rooted faith and psyche of Indian spirituality and translates it all on his canvas in the language that’s metaphysical. “Light, for me is — Hope and Colour — the Universe in which it exists”.”

“From probing the first principles of nature and thought, Manav’s art is about nature’s pre-eminence and earth’s universal truths. “Man’s existence, needs to align with the larger cosmic matrix,” says Manav. The physical interface of global warming, Man’s interference with earth’s natural ecosystems, disregard to environment consciousness by Man has all impacted the artist deeply over the years.

What is enticing is that he dips his brush deep into his intrinsic romanticism, puts it in context through his deep rooted faith and psyche of Indian spirituality and translates it all on his canvas in the language that’s metaphysical. Recently, in the artist’s creative journey, the influence of the present socio-cultural metamorphosis, where moral fabrics are eroding at the altar of manipulative social matrices and blatant consumerist environment is adding new dimensions to his art. It seems the protagonists of his canvas seek to break away from the shackles of this web towards “light” that is “hope”.

His watercolours sold out last year and he spoke about the process of his sensibility that awakens the nature lover in us. “As I scrape the bottom of the soul for some ingredients the only way I can explain to myself, about what it all is, is to believe that in some past life (if there is one), I belonged to the rainforests. The mantra there, for survival, is to submit to the natural forces, bow before it, respect its ways, learn and grow. You cannot defy it or go against it. In the rainforests there are labyrinthine darknesses weaving around you but there is always light in streaks, in a glow, in a stream, sunlight…all of which brings hope. You don’t bathe in it all the time but it seeks you out. Man is but a speck. The human race, still a speck, in this mighty universe rich with millions of secrets. The rainforests teach you this,” he states.

Is painting then a transcendental experience? Far away from the madding crowds of monetary markets? “When I paint, what transcend on the canvas are the hope and the power of the eternal truths of nature’s emblematic symbols,” he says. Adding, “Light, for me is — Hope and Colour — the Universe in which it exists.” This is when, for him, this world loses its meanings. The larger one takes over and he paints.”

An Inward Attunement

by Keshav Malik

Padma Shri, Indian poet, Art and Literary critic, Arts scholar, and Curator

“Thus, and in sum, here is evidence of a self-spiritualizing imagination, and wherein the painter is trying to integrate such wholes of experience as bring about our union with the essential reality. Through his external senses the painter is able to perceive the visible world. Through his internal senses he tries to perceive the microcosm, including the twin level of body and soul. The painter has a message to deliver to his ordinary self—a message concerning our deepest being. It means an awakening to a more elevated plane of living. Finally, his “umbilical chord-rainforest” symbolizes an epiphany of the universe continually opening up from sacred source, the centre of the birth of life. An epiphany of which it is both an expression and symbol.”

Manav Gupta’s art, facing both forwards and inwards, is a contemplation of spiritual and the natural communion. And so, his images act as a vehicle of a visionary world that is itself the instrument of self-transcendence. His disposition is towards invoking the inner world of the soul as the stage of divine imminence. His work has undergone much development. The maturation is palpable.

Working in a wide range of installations, watercolors, acrylics, oils, sculptures and multi media, he puts the medium to fresh creative tasks. Technically, as far as color and light goes, he is highly professional. Moreover he has a precise understanding of color as the language with which nature tries to communicate meanings and values. For him color is a function of sight- implying a sun- like quality in the eye.

Here then is a silent discourse on the music of colors. In this way, visually he works out notes and scales to produce melody and harmony. One can follow Manav’s development from color harmonies of great refinement even in his earlier work- on to a progressive liberation of light from the object, or perhaps the resolution of the object into light. The artist has come to understand light as that from which the objects we see are made.

Informed by profound intuition, Manav’s pictorial language emerges from and surmounts the creative process to exist objectively. It is then that the instrument of a level experience that is communicable in terms that relate to the knowledge and wisdom of the inwardly attained. The artist’s technical know how, as a colorist, is not deployed for its own sake, but because his technique has its own meditative content.

Thus, and in sum, here is evidence of a self-spiritualizing imagination, and wherein the painter is trying to integrate such wholes of experience as bring about our union with the essential reality. Through his external senses the painter is able to perceive the visible world. Through his internal senses he tries to perceive the microcosm, including the twin level of body and soul. The painter has a message to deliver to his ordinary self—a message concerning our deepest being. It means an awakening to a more elevated plane of living. Finally, his “umbilical chord-rainforest” symbolizes an epiphany of the universe continually opening up from sacred source, the centre of the birth of life. An epiphany of which it is both an expression and symbol

Manav Gupta is a natural

by Kingshuk Mukherjee

Senior journalist

“He is as close to nature as possible. All that he does comes from deep within. There’s nothing cosmetic about what he feels or what he does.” Truly. For, Manav’s quality isn’t just about a genius. It’s about how he feels and the shades of blue he seeks in the sky through his eyes. It’s about the grit and struggle of a man from humble circumstances. It’s about a man who hasn’t grown up breathing tinned air. It’s as easy as the flow of a deep river that meanders through a landscape and runs off to an unknown destination where it meets the horizon. Manav is a product of nature. Hence, his love for the trees. Manav is about perception. Hence, his fetish for eyes. Manav is Manav. Unique as ever.”

He is not what you traditionally know as an artist. An alumnus of Presidency College, Kolkata, Manav picked up the paint brush as a child in the serene, sylvan surroundings of National Library, Kolkata. In that sense, therefore, this young artist lived and grew up in the lap of heritage.

He always had a restless heart, one which died to try out things. And he would… Even as he made this journey, the canvas was never far away and the brush strokes matured. He studied painting under Shri Vasant Pandit, an unsung master. Manav often recalls how mesmerized he’d be as his guru would talk to him for hours. Manav’s parents took him to the master when he was a toddler, barely two years of age. Even at that tender age, the Master created an indelible impression on him. And from that day, till the time Manav left the city of his birth for Delhi, the Guru and his shishya vibed. They talked endlessly and painted together. It was as if two souls were tied in one string….

Today, Manav has grown manifold. His art has taken him to the zenith. He’s a name the world recognizes. All this because he’s spontaneous. His art comes from within. It has nothing to do with formal training. “My art is what I am. What I perceive. And what I look forward to. My art is my heart beat.” There have been critics who’ve praised him for his technique. But more often than not, what he has created has been the result of a storm within. His brush strokes have followed the dimensions of those restless stirrings.

He is as close to nature as possible. All that he does comes from deep within. There’s nothing cosmetic about what he feels or what he does.” Truly. For, Manav’s quality isn’t just about a genius. It’s about how he feels and the shades of blue he seeks in the sky through his eyes. It’s about the grit and struggle of a man from humble circumstances. It’s about a man who hasn’t grown up breathing tinned air. It’s as easy as the flow of a deep river that meanders through a landscape and runs off to an unknown destination where it meets the horizon. Manav is a product of nature. Hence, his love for the trees. Manav is about perception. Hence, his fetish for eyes. Manav is Manav. Unique as ever.

'A canvas for the greater good'

The Patriot | Shashi Sunny | January 24, 2024

“Currently captivating audiences as a speaker at the Sculpture Conference in New York, Manav Gupta serves his art as a beacon for global dialogue on environmental awareness”

Contemporary artist Manav Gupta is recognised as a ‘master of light and colour’ in his paintings and for his creation of solo public art projects in India that promote environmental consciousness through unique installations.

Gupta has been the force behind six iconic public art projects over the last decade, maintaining a distinctive art practice by conceptualising and creating monumental artworks that embody his unique style.

Despite being somewhat of a recluse, Gupta, a maverick based in Delhi, is currently in the USA, speaking at the Sculpture Conference in New York hosted by the International Sculpture Center.

Considered one of the most versatile creative practitioners in India, he effortlessly commands scale, working across miniature formats to vast acres of land. His repertoire includes diverse mediums such as canvas, paper, sculpture, installations, conceptual and multimedia art, as well as public art in ambient spaces, challenging both the medium and spaces to fresh creative tasks.

Speaking from the US, Gupta explains that his ‘sadhana‘ and focus have always been on climate change and sustainable development since the beginning of his journey as an artist, well before these topics became regular conversations among intelligent and aware social groups.

He elaborates, “My ‘arth – art for earth’ movement, initiated during my second solo in 1996-1997, has its roots in the way nature nurtured me during childhood, and nature continues to be a central theme in my work. I wanted to share the experience of nurturing and healing of people by nature. Hence, the ‘umbilical cords of earth,’ rainforests, and ‘lyrics of light’ are constant themes in my paintings. I coined ‘arth – art for earth’ from three principles – ‘arth’ in Devanagari script means ‘wealth’ and ‘meaning’ in Hindi. What is the true wealth and meaning of life on earth? Pronounced as ‘earth,’ which is our ‘dharti,’ I expanded ‘arth’ as ‘art for earth.’ So, all these three combined have shaped my art practice over the years.”

METICULOUS: Rain in dusk and dawn in Gupta’s artistic world
From 2003 onwards, Gupta worked on creating the Copenhagen Wall of Hope for CNN during the Copenhagen Summit and initiated ‘Plant a Sapling on My Canvas’ projects at his exhibitions, inviting people to participate in his environmental consciousness movement. Recognising his passion and dedication, the Ministry of Environment, Government of India, invited Gupta to create one-minute films as public service messages, incorporating his paintings, poetry, music, and the chirping of birds.

Over the years, Gupta’s practice evolved into large-scale installations interpreting his “Arth – art for earth” concept for museums and public art. His paintings grew into large canvases, such as a live ‘Travelling Museum Laboratories of Art for Earth.’

Gupta, originally a water colourist, combines strong poetic and narrative elements, capturing light and exploring colour brilliantly with sensitive and delicate stroke play. He stands out as one of the few water colour painters today whose command of the medium and dexterity in exploring light and colour have earned rare critical acclaim from luminaries, critics, and the media alike.

His artistic journey, beginning in 1996 at the Birla Academy in Kolkata, has included exhibitions at Taj Hotels, London, New York, Melbourne, and various locations in India. His works have graced prestigious venues such as the Ministry of Culture, the Roosevelt House, the residence of the American Ambassador (2000), US Embassy, Leela Palace, Bangalore, HSBC, Delhi, Rashtrapati Bhavan, and the Victoria Jones Gallery, London.

Gupta’s works can be found in several private and public collections in India and abroad, forming part of the permanent collections of Rashtrapati Bhavan and the Parliament. He was commissioned by the then President APJ Abdul Kalam to interpret his poems in paintings, resulting in the book “The Life Tree.”

SPREADING THE WORD: Gupta educating people in art design and sustainability
Expressing his artistic philosophy, Gupta says, “Everything I do comes from a deep belief within. I do not create anything that is purely commercially driven. All my projects reflect how I feel, what I see, and hear around me. It mirrors my emotional understanding of my surroundings, reflecting the struggles and efforts of a common man. I do not draw my inspiration from a milieu that is away from Nature. Everything I create is drawn from the natural landscape and reflects this earthiness.”

Gupta also addresses the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal of Climate Action by placing the human perception of climate action at the forefront of his work, making bold commentaries about negative attitudes towards climate change and how hope can be used to address those attitudes.

‘Rain,’ ‘River,’ ‘Rainforests,’ ‘Umbilical cords of earth,’ ‘Lyrics of light,’ ‘Beehive Garden’ are some of his most celebrated and critically acclaimed creations. His monumental public art projects like ‘Tree of Life’ (2010), ‘Shrinking River at National Museum Pretoria, South Africa’ (2013), ‘Ganga Waterfront’ at IHC New Delhi (2015), ‘Ganga to Mississippi outreach’ (2015-16), ‘Excavated Museum in a Mall’ (2017), ‘Sculpture Garden at Amrita Shergill Marg’ (2017-2018), ‘Arth–Art for Earth’ punctuating 27 acres at IGNCA, hosted by the Government of India (2018), ‘Water the New Gold – ‘City in a City’ in Bhubaneswar’ (2019) have found a place in record books and attracted attention for innovative concepts in creating public awareness on sustainable development and climate change.

TIME MACHINE: His repertoire includes diverse medium
Gupta recalls being invited by former President of India, Dr A P J Abdul Kalam, as the first Artist-in-Residence at Rashtrapati Bhawan, considering it among his most cherished memories. The founding of ‘arth – art for earth’ remains his brainchild of two and a half decades.

Art, according to Gupta, has a unique way of addressing suffering. In the face of the climate crisis, art can play a role that sparks hope even in times of utter hopelessness.

Gupta continues to inspire the hope the world so desperately needs. In his own words, “I see art as a great leveller. It is a blessing to have been able to reach out across all cross sections of society and create ‘dialogues at the waterfront’ that evoke responses to my art, the thought behind it, and the vision, from everyone, irrespective of whichever rungs of society they may belong. More often than not, the exchange of thoughts with thinkers, evolved humanitarians, people with vision, students, and the masses has enriched my art and embellished it. The essence of it all is the distilling residue that is celebrated and carried, both by the viewer and the artist.

Tags: CONTEMPORARY ART, CONTEMPORARY ART IN INDIA, ENVIRONMENT, MANAV GUPTA

'Manav Gupta: Public Art'

Annual Gathering of the International Sculpture Centre | New Jersey, USA | October 10th - 15th, 2023

“Manav Gupta, one of India’s foremost contemporary artists, is known for installations, paintings, sculptures and large-scale public art projects. He has conceptualized art for sustainable living for three decades pioneering interdisciplinary collaborations and engagement practices, involving diverse stakeholders.

Among his highly acclaimed monumental projects are Tree of Life (2010); Shrinking River at National Museum Pretoria, South Africa (2013); Ganga Waterfront, at IHC New Delhi (2015); Ganga to Mississippi outreach (2015-16), Excavated Museum in a Mall (2017); Sculpture Garden at Amrita Shergill Marg (2017-2018), Arth–Art for Earth, punctuating 27 acres at IGNCA, hosted by the Government of India (2018). Water the New Gold – ‘City in a City’ in Bhubaneswar (2019). Most of these featured multiple installations, including the seminal Rain, Rainforest and Beehive Garden. Quoting Sculpture magazine : “Gupta’s art affirms the age-old sanctity of earth and clay, assembling everyday objects made by potters from across India to create huge installations that convey hope, passion, and the journey and transience of life. He creates contemporary yet timeless and powerful stories…while transforming the familiar into something completely unconventional, unexpected, and magical.”

Gupta’s works have been sold by Christie’s, Bonham’s, Philip de Pury and are in several private and public collections.”

'A quest for light'

Classic Feel | South Africa | 2013

A quest for light

The work of the leading Indian artist, Manav Gupta was introduced to South African art lovers earlier this year at an exhibition titled Rainforests And The Circle Of Life. Classicfeel took the opportunity to speak to the artist.

Light  is a common preoccupation among visual artists. Painters and photographers alike are always seeking to find light that illuminates their subjects  in just the right way and to capture  it – somehow to trap  within the physical confines of their medium. For Manav Gupta, however, the concern with light goes beyond the problems of the medium to become the subject itself. ‘for me  it has always been a quest for light.’ he says. ‘I seek light -in gaps, in crevices and ventricles of the rainforests.

For me light is hope. It seeks you out amidst the  darkness. So the process of seeking out  and finding the way forward with that single streak of light has been the journey of my life and work.’

The works on display during Gupta’s exhibition in Pretoria earlier this year were clear expressions of this ongoing preoccupation with light. The centerpiece of the exhibition, which also included several of the artist’s paintings, was an imaginative installation called Unsung Hymns of Clay Forming the heart of this site specific work is a large mass of small clay pots called diya- used as lamps in various Indian religious occasions –innovatively reimagined as the contours of a drying riverbed. These simple earthen bowls, when filled with oil, augmented by a cotton wick and lit. become spiritual instruments. With the addition of a tiny flame, these common, disposable pieces of clay become links to the divine. A small bit of light thus elevates the profane towards the sacred
Unsung Hymns of Clay is the third in a trilogy of exhibitions called Rainforests and the Circle of Life. which, aside from the ongoing exploration of the qualities-both empirical and spiritual – of light. also explores environmental consciousness as the central theme in Gupta’s work. The fresh and minimalistic treatment of the lamps laid out on the floor remind the viewer of a dried up riverbed. This links to discussions around water and its increasing scarcity in some places around the world, which speaks to wider issues of natural resources and the environment. Which are also matters of deep concern to Gupta and have occupied his thoughts since before his career began.
Born and raised in Kolkata, India, the birthplace of the Nobel Prize for Literature laureate Rabindranath Tagore. Gupta’s own versatile repertoire comes from writer and scholar parents who made a point of exposing him to art and culture during his formative years.
“I was exposed to prose and poetry from a young age.’ he says, ‘as well as music, theatre and dance. I also grew up in the lap of nature because my father was the director of the national library, which is situated on this patch of green, complete with lush, budding trees. Which can almost be described as an island in the middle of the city.’ Combining with the strong influences of culture and nature were ideas about spirituality and transcendence.’ I had a guru, when I was a child .who had spent a lot of time in the forests and so on and he taught me the soul of art and the essence of nature. All ofthese things made a very strong impression on how I grew up and how my work evolved.’
While he learned about ‘the soul of art’ from his guru, Gupta was taught ‘the grammar of art’ at Kolkata’s renowned Academy of Fine Arts.
After completing his education ,he did not go straight into a career in the arts_ ‘I worked for a while-I had to support my mother_ I was doing very well, I had a good job, I was secure. But one day I decided to take the plunge. Everyone said I was crazy- art will never pay the bills! But I knew that if I didn’t do it then, I would never do it. ‘Gupta’s first solo exhibition was extremely successful and brought him an invitation to show in the Indian capital, where his works drew the attention of the wife of the US Ambassador to India, who bought some of his works and hosted his exhibition at Roosevelt House_ The environmental themes in his work introduced him to members of the Indian government, which led to his work being displayed in the Ministry of Culture. commissions by the Ministry of Environment and Forests, a collaboration with former President of India APJ Abdul Kalam (Gupta illustrated a book of poetry by the former head of state and a mural commissioned to mark the long friendship between India and Bhutan.
Perhaps Gupta’s most famous work -thus far -is the 11000 square-foot. six-floor high mega-mural .The Tree of life, which adorns the New Delhi headquarters of the multinational telecommunications company, Bharti Airtel. The creation of this work was unique in itself, with Gupta employing four creative processes. for the first time, in its making -namely conceptual. performance. collaborative and site specific. He invited the company’s employees to share the experience of painting with him in the first phase using what was created to weave a composition on a six-floor high staircase, while the organization’s employees watched. ‘How I saw it was you have 4000 employees who are going to be watching me work every day. So I thought, why don’t we make this a collaborative process? I opened up to all these non-artists. They would be there doing their job and then on their coffee break they could come and add a brushstroke here and there. It was exciting as well as challenging, especially as I was conceptualizing spontaneously without any blueprints. I juggled between the micro environment of helping the office workers paint and the larger role of creating a cutting edgeartwork.’ This massive undertaking resulted in the giant work of art that has seen the Airtel building being granted museum status.
Gupta’s first trip to South Africa took place at the invitation of the Indian High Commission in Pretoria. Unsung Hymns of Clay, together with a number of earlier works, went on display at the National Museum of Cultural History. The response to the exhibition-from
the public. collectors and the media alike-was very favourable.

Manav Gupta is an artist quickly growing in international renown and his works are recognised by collectors as excellent investments both for artistic and economic reasons. But, contrary to the misconceptions propagated by popular culture, the achievement of fame and recognition does not signify a destination. For Gupta. the effort to expand consciousness and create awareness. And most importantly, the quest for light. continues. CF

VESSELS OF LIFE: A CONVERSATION WITH MANAV GUPTA

Sculpture Magazine | Chitra Balasubramaniam | July 8, 2020

“Manav Gupta affirms the age-old sanctity of earth and clay, assembling everyday objects made by potters from across India to create huge installations that convey hope, passion, and the journey and transience of life. Using just a few types of functional items—the diya lamp, the kullad tea cup, and the chilam smoking pipe—he succeeds in creating something contemporary yet timeless in its ability to tell a powerful story. Massed in their hundreds and thousands, these humble items gain new significance, as tradition reimagined makes an eloquent case for sustainable practices that respect the earth’s resources while transforming the familiar into something completely unconventional, unexpected, and magical.” – Sculpture Magazine

“I am simply walking the path of infinity with a life dedicated to art. If my humble drop in the ocean can help bring about the change in thinking that is so needed in today’s crass, commercialized, mechanized existence, if it can add a dab of spiritual context to the world as it takes art and culture as a vehicle of change across boundaries, it makes my artistic process that much more fulfilling” – Manav Gupta.

Manav Gupta affirms the age-old sanctity of earth and clay, assembling everyday objects made by potters from across India to create huge installations that convey hope, passion, and the journey and transience of life. Using just a few types of functional items—the diya lamp, the kullad tea cup, and the chilam smoking pipe—he succeeds in creating something contemporary yet timeless in its ability to tell a powerful story. Massed in their hundreds and thousands, these humble items gain new significance, as tradition reimagined makes an eloquent case for sustainable practices that respect the earth’s resources while transforming the familiar into something completely unconventional, unexpected, and magical.

Chitra Balasubramaniam: Clay symbolizes earth, and pottery is one of the earliest art forms created by humanity. Both are taken for granted, yet you have persisted in working with them to create nature-inspired, site-specific installations. Why this obsession with earth and clay, as well as with water?
Manav Gupta: Nature nurtures us, and it’s the greatest laboratory in which to learn. My “Excavations in Hymns of Clay” series of large-scale installations (2013–ongoing) is the natural offshoot of a 23-year journey beginning after my first solo show in 1996. As a part of my artist statement, I wrote about “umbilical cords of earth, water, and rainforests.” In 2018, when a new installation was being hosted by the Indian Ministry of Culture, I chose World Environment Day to mark my show at the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts because it underlined my homage to the earth’s resources as the true wealth of our planet. In 1997, I had christened this art for the earth as “arth” from the definition of “meaning” and “wealth” in the Devanagari script. So, for me, choosing clay as the medium was an extension of its significance in sustainable development. It is something that everyone across the world relates to, in the context of earth and environment.

CB: Initially, you had worked in painting and sculpture. Could you talk about your journey into the art world?
MG: As a child, I sketched banyan tree trunks; I saw poetry in the dead wood and felled logs. I used to create sculptures out of them by excavating various zoological forms, removing what was not required. These were first exhibited at Taj Bengal in Kolkata in 1997, along with my contemporary miniatures. I joined the Academy of Fine Arts studio course, but it was my guru Shri Vasant Pandit who taught me the soul of art. I went to Presidency College in Kolkata, and then worked for a few years to help support my mother, a professor and single parent. After my sister’s marriage, I took the plunge to become a practicing artist and never looked back. My first exhibition, at the Birla Academy in 1996, was unconventional—they had to install it on the lawns because there was no indoor space. Indoor galleries can be intimidating for the public, but outdoor environs are a comfortable zone to visit—people came in huge numbers. It was probably here that the seeds germinated of wanting to show my work in public places, to involve ordinary people in my work, and to do site-specific installations and people-oriented projects.

CB: When did the shift from painting to installation happen? Was the mural you made in 2010 for Airtel’s headquarters in Gurgaon a turning point?
MG: Scale has always attracted me, and I like challenging myself by inventing new ways of handling a medium. The making of one-minute films as public service messages on climate change and biodiversity—a first-of-its-kind invitation from India’s Ministry of Environment in 2006—or carving out new paths in collaborative interdisciplinary processes and outreach projects beyond my earth series—led to a “eureka” moment somewhere around 2011 as I was researching clay and pottery as organic mediums. I did a Duchamp on an earthen lamp—inverting it to transform it into a droplet of water—then laid it out as the shrinking river and the Zen globe of clay on the floor of the National Museum of Cultural History in Pretoria, at a 2013 solo show co-hosted by the Indian High Commission. The statement of inverted earthen lamps as metaphors for sustainable development got extended by public demand. Since then, I have given lectures at institutions around the world to share the message.

The five-story-high, 11,500-square-foot mural project at Airtel Campus played into my attraction to gigantic sizes. I had done collaborative and interdisciplinary projects before, but here, I orchestrated four distinct processes—conceptual, collaborative, site-specific, and performance. I got several employees from the 4,000-strong workforce to paint with me and engage in the lateral thinking process. The five elements of nature—earth, water, air, space, and fire—came together in my “Tree of Life.”

CB: Those five elements of nature are a recurrent theme in your work. What do they mean to you? They were behind “unsung hymns of clay,” your Pretoria show, and they continue to inform the “Excavations in Hymns of Clay” series.
MG: Nature is my muse, and my work has always lent itself to the cause of the environment. In these clay installations, I use quintessentially Indian pottery pieces as they are. But I invented a new identity and global language for them as units of my large installations.

The Vedic philosophy respects all elements; it is scientific. Ancient civilizations understood this. They were in sync with the five elements. My “Excavations” installations dig out and espouse learning from earlier civilizations about sustainable living. “unsung hymns of clay” was about the metaphor of Vedic philosophy of respecting nature and nurturing it like it nurtures us. The earthen lamp is part of the Indian cultural landscape. Made by poor potters, sold next to garbage dumps, on the road, these lamps are bought, placed on altars and lit as sacred; then they are discarded and unsung again—they are revered only for the short time they are used. That’s how we treat the earth’s resources. “arth” is my humble wake-up call.

CB: Water inspired your series of works devoted to rivers, rain, and Zen. How did they happen?
MG: Water and rainforests were the core of my earlier work. In these works, I use one element, clay, to depict another element, water. Given the importance of water in our future, I wanted to connect the rivers of the world symbolically—the Ganga and the Thames, the Mississippi and the Nile. Reinventing pottery creates the context for an “excavated” understanding that all early civilizations respected water. We need to nurture rivers back again. In our foolish sense of omnipotence, we destroy trees and try to control rivers to our own peril. I have made versions of these installations, called Ganga Waterfront and Rain, around the world, from South Africa to India, to Minneapolis. They are site-specific with a local context, embracing sylvan or architectural space with countless units of pottery woven patiently together as droplets of water in large-format perspectives. An installation from 2018 used nearly half a million units of pottery and covered over one acre. Just like rivers and rain flow, which have a mind of their own, my work finds its feet depending on the space and area. Rain embraces trees—the lungs of the city. Using these installations as the foundation, I curate interdisciplinary performances at my “Dialogues at the Waterfront,” bringing society’s stakeholders, including educational institutions, together with performances and panel discussions, in the hope that solutions might emerge.

CB: What are the Time Machine works, made from kullad cups, about?
MG: I use disposable clay cups to reinforce the message that we are all fragile and transient. We do not live even a micro or nano existence along the timeline of the universe, and yet we use the earth’s resources irresponsibly, only taking without giving back. The time machine depicts the universe since its inception. It shows how insignificant each one of us is in the warp of time. As a cup of life we need to give back to the earth in equal measure to what we take from it. In Time Machine—the sound of aum, I used a triptych of Time Machines to translate the sound of “aum,” considered the sound of creation, with three syllables of “a,” “u,” and “m”—the middle one being the largest.

CB: Where are you headed next?
MG: I am simply walking the path of infinity with a life dedicated to art. If my humble drop in the ocean can help bring about the change in thinking that is so needed in today’s crass, commercialized, mechanized existence, if it can add a dab of spiritual context to the world as it takes art and culture as a vehicle of change across boundaries, it makes my artistic process that much more fulfilling.

'Artist creates India's first public art museum on water and sustainable development.'

Times of India | Sandip Bal | June 5, 2019

If you are passing through Rasulgarh Square and notice a giant tube well and a series of painted building-like structures, don’t be surprised. This busy traffic junction that connects Bhubaneswar, Cuttack and Puri is getting a makeover. The roundabout at the center of the crossroads under the flyover was being used as a scrapyard to store construction debris. But now, it’s getting a new lease of life through a series of art installations and murals deemed India’s first public art museum on water
and sustainable development. It has been conceptualized and created by internationally acclaimed contemporary artist Manav Gupta. He has been working relentlessly for over two months to give the square a beautiful look.

According to Manav, the art installations are not mere structures, but are the elements of a concept, the city in a city — sustainable city, smart
city, and are made up of scraps from the bridge. “It’s an effort to engage common people through public art. In our country, public art is a rare thing. So, I have tried to introduce my concepts, which are mostly about transforming pottery into large installations. I wanted to bring this concept to Bhubaneswar and use the scraps lying around. Since pottery may not be feasible here, I used concrete scraps and debris,” he added. He has used the concept of Earth, which when pronounced in Hindi,
Arth, gives it two meanings — ‘meaning’ and ‘wealth’. And in keeping with that Manav has put up three installations — a giant 20-foot tube well, a city of concrete blocks and murals. “A tube well was used in villages as a source of clean water, but no one uses it these days. It’s a symbol of pure water from within the Earth. I have made this installation from scraps. I used waste concrete blocks used for pressure testing
during the flyover construction to create the city within a city. I have made flowing pathways that look like rivers from tube well to the city.
This charts the path water takes from its source to households,” he said.

The installation city reflects the architectural design of an urban centre, with unique murals on the seven towers. These murals are a tribute to Odisha and the city of Bhubaneswar, with various elements specific to the city like the Lingaraj temp le, Odissi and more. Manav said one side of the city installation depicts realism and other, sustainable development. “I was invited to create this public art after having worked in many places across the globe. Bhubaneswar has been noticed all across for its recent achievements like holding a hockey World Cup and becoming the smartest city in India,” he added.
Manav, who had left the city ahead of cyclone Fani and
returned after it, told us that it was as if he was seeing a different city. “While the cyclone caused so much destruction all around, I feel
blessed that my installations were not affected. It was a humbling experience after having spent 20 years of my life visualizing and creating these types of environmental art installations,” he added.
To his credit, Manav has six most iconic and revolutionary art projects in India this decade. Once finished, the installations will be maintained by the National Highway Authority of India (NHAI) and would act as major tourist attraction.

'Down to arth - How Manav Gupta uses meaningful artwork in terracotta to bring clay back to Nature.'

Swarajya Magazine | Sumati Mahrishi | September 09, 2018

A few years ago, at a display of Delhi-based artist Manav Gupta’s works in Minneapolis, visitors asked him if earthen lamps would survive the snow. Gupta uses clay objects in his body of work, where he embraces nature and architecture. Earthen lamps – his ingredient for the persistent in-depth probe into nature through gigantic installations, were making viewers curious. Gupta’s love for clay, especially the earthen lamp, is deep. So, to quell all doubts regarding life and longevity of clay, he left ‘Shrinking River’, one of the installation works, in Minneapolis snow. Clay, mud, maati – the steel of Indian art history – lies fairly unexplored in public art and other display avenues. Gupta’s work brings it back, from earth to art. He says, “it is a myth that clay cannot stand tough conditions, or that it is perishable. When I left the ‘Shrinking River’ in snow, people were surprised. They understood my belief in clay. They understood clay and its permanence, the fragility of life, our belief in nature and elements as sacred.” He adopted clay as his medium, extensively, in 2013. No other artist uses clay and pottery in public art like Manav Gupta. His works on nature and climate change are extensive, in harmony with themes and sites he chooses, and soul stirring. In the back drop of the recent Kerala floods, his series, ‘Arth’ (meaning), stands as the most gentle and revolutionary expression of art exposed to rain, trees and sunlight. Depletion of natural resources, recreating and sustaining, are at the core of the series.

At the ongoing exhibition of his works at the grounds of Delhi’s Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA), stands ‘Ganga the Riverfront and Matighar’, his tribute to Ganga. The work flows, suspended from the roof top of Matighar the iconic art gallery. It presents a striking depiction of the sacred river in its various flows and stages. “In my view, it is a perfect synergy and tribute to Matighar, which has been closed. The Ganga will lose out if we do not care for it. Concern and activism towards the environment doesn’t have to be noisy. I chose to raise my concern by recreating the river and by engaging with people in mega cities.”

He adds, “my first experience of exhibiting a river depicted in pottery outside India was in South Africa. People there were alien to the idea of diyas and what they are about.”Mimicking nature is an art. Gupta uses clay and deploys seemingly mundane objects of pottery – diya (the earthen lamp), chilum (smoking pipe), khullhad (cup) and ghara (pot) to create rain, waterfronts and rain forests, and other aspects of nature and life. He weaves and assembles the clay objects into installation works in painstaking efforts to mimic nature and to arrive at nature – asclosely as he can.

Why clay? “We are clay. Maati. Dust to dust. Hence, clay. I am clay.” Art is about hope. Offering earthen lamps to people in public art, Gupta hopes that people will not discard diyas, which serve as a “conduit of prayer to the sacred”. Clay is a representative of an element. “It represents earth and human,” he says, “we deplete our resources and we are depleting human kind.”There is more to his choice of material. Metaphors. He is unearthing them through simple objects made of clay. “I am scrubbing the soul,” he says. To him, the first realisation of using clay as a drop came from an inverted diya. “There are artists who can create from cerebral thought. For me, it has to be in the heart, the inside. It (clay) kept growing inside.”Watching Gupta’s ‘Waterfront’ for the second time in Delhi (it was displayed first a few years ago), unravels more depth and details in his work. The presence of clay in several strings of diya, chilum and khullhad woven together to form a river and installed at Matighar, involves a layer of meanings. “It is my tribute to Matighar, which translates into an abode of mud, through my work.”The use of the different shapes and sizes of the numerous diya, chilum and khullhad and gharas used in the “waterfront” gives it a sense of flow. The chilum lends it the cascade, diyas the flow, kullhads – the break in the flow – pace and momentum, and pots – the gurgle, hollows and rocks. Gupta is aware of the ripples of emotions the ‘Waterfront’ creates in the viewer. “Maano to Ganga, Na maano to behta paani (it’s all in the perception – of Ganga as Ganga or Ganga as flowing water),” he says.Gupta relies on architecture and nature to produce installation works out of material, which, if not meticulously blended into his philosophy and thought, would mingle in surroundings – as any other mundane clay object meant for use, as dust. In his art work, these objects become more than mere ‘useful’ kiln-burnt pieces of utility.
They acquire meaning. They become grains of a flow – moments in a story and chapters in Arth, the continuing series of works dedicated to nature and environment. They transform into remnants of an element, beaded together. Assembled together, woven into various patterns with the help of thin wires and knots. “Weaving happens differently. For softer flow, I use chilum,” he adds.In order to connect rivers, people, rain forests and other aspects of nature and life through works of installation that are global in language and Indian in soul, he is required to drop something in particular, regularly. “The pedestal (of high art and perceptions and activism associated with high art).” It is relieving to see his art at a healthy distance from a couple of aspects. First – the elitist approach of looking at nature in language and art work. Second – the piercing cacophony of activism. He believes in simplicity.Time Machine, Beehive Garden, the Noah’s Ark, the Bed of Life are built around metaphors. He wanted to give a message. “The humble clay can serve as luxury.” He adds, “I was surprised to see people at a mall, where my works were displayed, connecting with the works. Similarly, at the most premium addresses in mega cities. People were surprised. They were not sitting at cafes. They were looking at the river. You’ve got to engage the audience right. I believe in people’s intelligence.” He pays attention to viewers’ perception.

At the IGNCA lawns, Gupta’s installations have spent a monsoon – out in the open, under sun, rain, night and day. Clay – maati – his medium for art in Arth develops a warm relationship with the site. “It had to be intrinsic. It had to be Indian. Clay was me.” Gupta describes himself as “non conformist”. He adds, “I have never been in a market-driven exercise (when it comes to works in clay).” He lingers between, around and outside the works, like a protagonist, director and narrator on a unique stage. He is ever present in the continuing drama of a “micro ecosystem” flourishing around his art work and the trees.

Clay talks to the other four elements present at the site in his site specific work in Arth, the series he has pursued over the decades. Its prototypes are housed in his studio in Delhi. The prototypes remain there. The traveling museums (collection of his works) interact with the world and venues. He adds, “Foreign audience is much more impressed, eager and far ahead in terms of wanting the works. As always, it so happens, we (Indians) realise our worth much later.”Rain, his work comprising chilum -the traditional smoking pipe of clay associated with intoxication – strung meticulously into thin wires, succeeds in creating a poetic depiction of rain. The viewer can feel the flow of

drops. The pitter-patter is tapped in a drenching fall in the remarkable use of one element to depict another. Clay for water. Diyas arranged most cleverly on wires define the sense of play in his own understanding of rain and its geometry. “Each strand is important. Each string is important,” he adds.

He catches the flow in broken geometry. He arrives, very close in his work, at the inner texture of the falling rain. It is understood and experienced best when one walks through the strings of clay chilum falling from tree branches. It is while standing between the falling wires studded with the chilum when Gupta’s fine handling of the most simple activity in nature and season, that of rain, arises distinctly. The effect is similar to what a viewer would experience when he sees an object kept between parallel mirrors. This, in particular, is more intoxicating than any intoxication associated with the chilum itself. “I tell my viewers – get drenched in the rain of chilum,” he says.It is fascinating how his work grows and develops for months after he has put up the installations – out in the open. “Trees are my laboratory”, he says. Gupta has  used fallen trees for sculptures in the past. In the current display, the falling of rain in Rain from tree branches has a symbolic significance. Rain needs trees, and trees rain.Rain invites life. Worms, insects, birds, creepers, climbers, and seedlings, live and play on and around this installation. Around Bee Hive – another installation. Around the Bed of Life, yet another installation that symbolises the concept of bed as bedrock of love, life, death. Around Ganga – the Waterfront, which symbolises the scared river, and the flowing of time. And then, there is Noah’s Ark, the intriguing piece in the thought chain and cycle.Human presence is pleasant disturbance. Parakeets fly in and out of the Beehive Garden project – one of the most fulfilling works. Parakeets leave feathers behind as temporary mementos on clay on the  beehives. The cuckoo continues the dialogue with trees. Other birds visiting the trees discuss their daily lives, swinging on the raindrops of clay in ‘Rain’, once in a while. Crows grumble nesting issues. Ants walk their own little miles on sun dried rain-soaked diyas and moss-curled clay curves.

The clay beehives hung on a tree

The beehives are honey sweet punctuation on trees. They display workmanship, thought, patience, control precision and form. Kulhads – in every work – become the cups of life. He says, “It was very difficult to arrive at the most natural depiction of aspects of nature in general and the beehives in particular. For me, it was important that the form of the beehive remains as natural as possible. The larger beehives just followed. A beehive can turn artificial very easily and quickly. One has to be careful.”Gupta tells Swarajya the reason behind using Arjuna and neem trees for this museum (collection of his works). “Arjuna and neem trees are being lynched for their medicinal values. They have to be nurtured. It is a reverse process. We have to nurture trees and, therefore, rain,” he adds.

The act of weaving, beading, threading knotting, tying untying, assembling dismantling – the fundamental fabric of Indian textures, lives and traditions, is the basis of his unique use of clay. Nature begins to twine around the numerous units of clay in his work. But clay, the medium, itself, remains detached and unnerved by continuing activity around it. It stands in the music of bird song and rain.He has to dismantle “each and every unit” for the travelling museum. The reassembling of the units swirls up a new cycle of recreation every time, every display, every site. Earth to art to metaphor and back. “Dust to dust”. No one uses baked clay for public art like Manav Gupta and nothing scrubs the soul better than clay.

'RITUAL RIVER'

Forecast Public Art | Public Art Review issue 53 - 2015 (fall/winter) | Sep 1, 2015

Repurposing local pottery to showcase environmental issues.
For his work Rain, the Ganga Waterfront along the Time Machine, Indian artist Manav Gupta reused thousands of earthen cups. The installation appeared on three continents in 2016.
In “Rain, the Ganga Waterfront along Time Machine,” a river of clay objects streamed across the steps of the India Habitat Centre in New Delhi in early 2015. Previously installed in South Africa, the latest in Manav Gupta’s Excavations in Hymns of Clay series calls attention to the use of global resources, makes a nod to spirituality, and references the relentless power of water. The installation is slated to appear in the U.S., Europe, and Southeast Asia in 2016.
Flowing across the architecture en masse, pottery poured over the steps, embracing the staircase like water and, according to Gupta, “denoting the symbolism of the passage of time as the river flows.” The pottery also offers a metaphor about how we use resources like water: “Taken for granted. Anointed when needed. Only revered when in use,” says Gupta. “And after its purpose is served, discarded and thrown and another one bought to serve the desires of the soul yet another day.”
A poet, painter, and filmmaker as well as an installation artist, Gupta says the Time Machine in the title recalls “the mechanized lives we lead without respecting sustainable living and resources.
Gupta draws attention to resource use by choosing as his raw material diyas (earthen lamps), chilam (clay pipes), and kullar (earthen cups). Purchased from poor potters at roadside stands, then used for prayer, these vessels have historically been used only once. According to the artist, the humble cups gain meaning through worship and to this day are still discarded after use, “to be immersed in the Ganga.”

While a dip in the sacred Ganga is still seen as a purifier of sins, a river of disposable clay vessels speaks to how we choose to use (and sometimes misuse) the earth for our own purposes.

Forecast Public Art hosted a special event with artist Manav Gupta on November 11, 2015. Manav spoke about his career as an international artist, specifically his work “Excavations in Hymns of Clay. ”Excavations in Hymns of Clay” that has been described as a “suite of environmental art installations where the artist deploys the quintessentially Indian potter’s produce of clay objects such as the earthen lamps (“diyas”), local cigar (“chilam”), earthen cups (“kullar”) and transforms their individual identity into metaphors and idioms of sustainability, context, perception and treatment as he conceptualizes and creates large scale avant-garde installations. “A poet, painter, and filmmaker as well as an installation artist, Manav invited attendees to walk through his history as an artist and spoke more specifically to his current series – Excavations in Hymns of Clay – a major undertaking that he plans to bring around the world. His work seamlessly weaves spirituality, tradition and environmentalism.

'Is It Mere Water Or Holy River Ganga?'

Blouin Art Info | HEMANI BHANDARI | April 14, 2015

Ganga Water Project Along The Time Machine by Manav Gupta
(India Habitat Centre)

“Sacred,
If you believe
I lie wrapped in a heap of nothingness
Unsung, Unlit, Unheard
Till the end of time.”
That’s Manav Gupta at his musing best. Forever challenging his comfort zone even in the physical world, Gupta has created another work of art to marvel at. Thousands of earthen lamps are placed inverted along several rows and chillums hang from the wall down the columns to create an illusion of the Ganga waterfront. When dusk falls and the area is lit up, one can almost hear the sound of the waves.
Titled “Rain, the Ganga Waterfront Along The Time Machine” from the series “Excavation in Hymns of Clay”, the installation represents a waterfall wherein Gupta has used the Ganga, the revered river in India, as the idiom and earthen lamps and chillums as metaphors to draw home the point: “If you consider me sacred, I am pure, else mere water, it flows.” Gupta says it’s the maverick inside him that inspired the project. The installation is on view at the Plaza steps at the India Habitat Centre where people can engage with it, understand it and absorb its calm.
The most striking thing about the installation is the optical illusion that Gupta has succeeded in creating with the earthen lamps and hanging chillums. The architectural engagement of the pottery with the walls where it is placed transforms the regular venue into a riparian landscape. “The architectural engagement of art with space and construction is something which is a matter of concern for me and is very important for art to belong there,” says Gupta. According to the artist, the earthen lamp and chillums have a negligible existence and are discarded once used, and so is the case with the Ganga and other natural resources that mankind uses and discards with alarming nonchalance.

Not only do the lamps and chillums feed the need of metaphors but also provide the surface needed to portray a river without a shore, especially when placed inverted. “Also, it’s a poor potter’s produce which is quintessentially Indian and in terms of micro-finance situation, I am trying to rehabilitate them as I buy in huge numbers. It’s deeply satisfying,” shares Gupta.
God lies in details and it holds true for Gupta’s huge art installation as well. As is the case with a real waterfront, ripples and waves are discernible even in the installation as the pottery has been placed smartly, densely at certain places to give the right effect. Alongside lie two potted plants, one barren and the other in bloom, to reflect on the power of water.
The artist, who remembers the first box of crayons that he got at the age of one year, has experimented with almost all forms of media, ranging from installations to site-specific architectural spaces, the conceptual to multimedia, canvas to sculptures. All, however, are bound together by the constants of “light, color, spontaneity and nature,” he says.
The mega mural of 10,000 sq. ft at the Airtel Centre, Delhi and the 20-feet high Bhutan friendship mural in the mountain country are some of the artist’s most acclaimed creations. “I haven’t followed the usual route in my art career,” says Gupta, who was a marketing professional with a multinational company before he turned to art completely. “And I am glad I didn’t take the usual route because it lead me to where I am today,” he adds. Born and brought up in Kolkata, Gupta joined the Academy of Fine Arts to pursue his interest during school and college, and he made his art, which then comprised only paintings, public with his first show in 1996 in the open space of the Birla Academy. Talking about his figurative milestones, Gupta says the moment when he could explore light and color in nature was the time when his “soul felt at peace”. It was fulfilling when people across the globe in the US, Europe and Asia could relate to his art and yet recognised it as Indian as well as contemporary.
Nature has been his ultimate inspiration as one can see in his paintings and other works of art. He has learnt from his guru Vasant Pandit that nature is the soul of art. “For me, it’s the soul of everything,” he says. Gupta has been propagating the importance of environment since he began painting. “I even asked people to paint a sapling on canvas during one of my exhibitions.” All one needs to do is to remain conscious of the environment while doing what they are doing, he advocates.
Public art projects are growing in the country in order to engage the common man with art and this has also been one of the motives of the artist. The Ganga Water Project is a step in that direction. “Everyone across the globe appreciates public art and we must pursue it as we enjoy a rich cultural rooting. The supposed common man understands art and we must not assume they won’t if exposed to it,” says Gupta.
“Ganga Water Project Along The Time Machine” is on view at Plaza Steps, India Habitat Centre, Lodi Road, New Delhi, till April 20

The Excavated Museum - Manav Gupta

Times of India | Uma Nair, Art Critic and Historian | January 31, 2017 |

Manav Gupta is truly a unique genius – the thinker and the visionary is hailed by critics as one of the most erudite and versatile contemporary artists today. After a hundred thousand footfalls at the India Habitat Centre in New Delhi a year ago at his Ganga waterfront; and taking it across the Mississippi and the Hudson in USA last year as part of his Global Public Art Project on sustainbility connecting rivers of the world, he has created an entire ‘excavated museum’ at the DLF Mall of India at Sector 18, Noida till the 18th Feb 2017 with a suite of five mega environmental art installations that punctuate different spaces in the Mall.Why ‘excavations in hymns of clay’ ? His phiolsophy and artist statement bring out the uniqueness behind the whole first of its kind concept of a solo project of environmental art by any artist as a travelling museum and public art for sustainable development. He says ‘Water and all five elements of nature are our source of sustenance. Ancient civilizations from India to the world over respected and understood this sanctity. While they drew nourishment from the great rivers. Be it our sacred Ganga or the Mississippi. As we grow, its time, we excavate the ancient philosophy of sustainable living. And we are all clay. Dust to dust. My art seeks to submit to this paradigm. Hence ‘excavations in hymns of clay. ‘As a part of his outreach programme of evolving, site specific and dynamic multiple edition solo public art projects across the world he deploys the quintessentially Indian potter’s produce of clay objects such as the earthen lamps (“diyas”), local cigar (“chilam”), earthen cups (“kullar”) to transform their individual identity into metaphors and idioms of sustainability, context, perception and treatment as he conceptualizes and creates large scale avant-garde works; using the rural Indian pottery meant for everyday use, in mass numbers, he deconstructs their age old existence as units to make them lend themselves to another form, be it in a Duchamp like inverted concept or simply rendering them formless.
The River Waterfront A site-specific installation with the invention of deploying earthen lamps and chilams as an iteration of their metaphors to form the lyrical formlessness of Time along the flow of the river. The multidimensional sensuousness of strands of rain pouring down against a waterfront is thought provoking as a poetic device executed with dramatic presence. Using the earthen lamp as a metaphor, Manav explores issues of environment consciousness. And also how perception and context interplay each other. The earthen lamp is woven in the cultural-religious fabric of India from time immemorial. And the chilam a means of cheap intoxication to gratify. This humble small clay bowl and the local “cigar” have a nondescript existence and only during that momentary use turn into the medium of gratifying the desires of the soul or the senses. Taken for granted. Anointed when needed. Only revered when in use. Their life is strange Like the Ganges. Given today’s world of current complex issues of treatment and perception of women as well as earth (referred to as mother earth in many quarters of Indian spirituality) the artist draws a cross spectrum reference of eroding human values using Ganga as the idiom. The pollution of the rivers, the shrinking of water and its availability and such other climate change issues have been in the artist’s ethos of work since beginning. This laying of the river along the banks of the Yamuna at the Mall of India is the artist’s bedrock of opportunity for dialogues across different stake holders of society and cross cultural worlds. The Time Machine With the first of its kind use of the potter’s produce of earthen cups to form the hourglass; the artist engages the audience with Time and its ethereal and transient passage. Clay, a naked, earth symbol of existence, resource and sustainability and the cup as the metaphor of Time’s limitedness draw us to explore how we use our resources. The fragility of clay juxtaposed with the limitedness of the “cup of Time” draw an engagement to our waste, perception, passage and interface with Time and Life itself in a rapidly mechanized, capitalistic, consumerist human interaction with earth along our limited timelines of life. The introduction of Light within, by the artist, celebrates the awakening of our consciousness and its potential of Hope.This sculpture – installation is philosophical and spiritual, teasing subtle nuances of human intelligence and its emotional quotient on one plane, while at the same time, simple, elegant graceful and celebrating the public engagement with art itself – the exciting possibilities of the potters produce as evolved artistic practice made brilliantly simple by the artist for mass consumption. Noah’s Ark The artist uses the symbolism of the Noah’s ark to underline the relevance of saving the world. A cycle of creation, un-creation, and re- creation, in which the ark plays a pivotal role.Noah’s ark is the artist’s imagination of an ancient civilisation in which Noah and his boat were etched in history for saving life on earth from doomsday. The artist excavates his impression of how a buried museum might be discovered that houses the Noah’s Ark and the Time Machine and other such creations that hold secrets of sustainable living and how each one of us need to play a role in saving the wrath of Nature if we keep tampering with it.We are all clay and could all be the Noah to stop a while and protect our own; by adopting a safe methodology of sustianble living that takes the future generations of our own families and other species to an evolved and secure life through the consciousness of preserving our environment. The beehive garden project Bees are an obvious or not so obvious link in the evolution chain and our sustainability. This global beehive garden project is an environmental statement by the artist about biodiversity and its crucial linkages to sustainable development. Manav’s art has always sought to play a bigger role than itself, in creating greater awareness on environment. And it reaches our senses and homes as a captivating reminder with its innovative deploying of “chilams” (earthen rural cigars) and “kullars” earthen cups to create beehives that can occupy every garden and home that keep acting as a gentle creative reminder to us each day to stop a while… and while doing what we are doing, try and add a drop in the ocean in the preservation of bees and biodiversity. ‘Meet me by the riverside’ The bed Love is what makes the world go around. The artist makes an intimate statement of love through the use of the male and female idioms of existence and how fragile love can be and yet so ethereal. Another dimension of sustainable development. With the river bed of earthen lamps and earthen cups, a stream seems to emerge from somewhere deep within and flow seemlessly pouring over. The bed is symbolic of history, of love and of a certain hope that the statement ‘meet me by the riverside..’ evokes.

Maverick Genius

India Perspectives | Ministry of External Affairs MAGAZINE, Government of India | May-June, 2016

Taking art beyond boundaries

Termed ‘maverick genius’ by critics, artist Manav Gupta uses art as a medium to spread the message of water conservation and sustainable living. Freedom, a reflective term, is synonymous with artistic liberation and celebration of the soul. This holds true for Manav Gupta. The artist, a true patriot, began his art journey on India’s Independence Day almost two decades back. His path has been laden with all the essence the country carries as he embraces the principles of ancient Indian philosophy, way of life and scriptures through art.

His paintings and sculptures depicting the terrain and totems of the Bastar forests, his celebrated series on shoonya (zero) drawing inspiration from the ancient Indian philosophy of the universe, the sun and the moon, the typical jugalbandi between musicians, his installation called Time Machine made with kulhads (earthen cups) at Gurgaon and his public art installation, Rain, the Ganga Waterfront, hosted by India Habitat Centre (IHC) in New Delhi, are all testimony to creative art. Going beyond Manav’s installation, Rain, the Ganga Waterfront, was awe-inspiring as it used thousands of earthen lamps and chillums (clay pipes) to create an illusion of a waterfall.
It was an exemplary artwork as Manav attached his craft with sustainable development and called for attention to the use of global resources. His first-of- its-kind Indo-US public art project on sustainable living received critical acclaim. The 70’x65’x60′ installation, Rain, the Ganga Waterfront Along Time Machine at the IHC was celebrated by one and all. Moreover, the involvement of people from different walks of life in the project provided it a wider reach and visibility. Manav is most sought-after for depth of colour light and composition in his paintings and for innovations in art practices.

 Last year, he was invited to deliver the President’s lecture at the Minneapolis College of Art & Design and for the forecast talk on public art by two leading international organisations in the US for disseminating the Indo- American edition of the Travelling International Public Art Project on Sustainable Development. The artist has been credited for re- utilising everyday objects of clay for The artist has been credited for re- utilising everyday objects of clay for large-scale public art in an attempt to transform local items and produce them on a global platform, a move that primarily stems from environmental consciousness. Manav is a true ambassador of India’s soft power, having been invited to the US, Europe, South Africa and the Middle East with solo exhibitions called Travelling Trilogy at Massachusetts, New York, Iowa, San Francisco, Berlin, London, Muscat, Pretoria, Johannesburg and Cape Town, besides major Indian cities in recent years. His series of art installations, Excavations in Hymns of Clay, and painting series, A Hundred and Eight, are quintessentially Indian as he continues to take up sustainable development and deploy the humble Indian potter’s produce to form avant garde cutting-edge installations. Using sustainable material for development and respecting water as a precious resource, reducing wastage and working on river banks are the obvious means for conservation. Kaleidoscope Manav’s works have transcended the constraints of any particular medium and permeated museums, galleries and corporate institutions. His paintings include two signature series, Large Canvases: Umbilical Cords of Earth and Contemporary Miniatures: Water Colours on Paper and his experiment with films was manifested into a one minute public service message a large which was commissioned by the Government of India. Think Tank Manav was a part of panel discussions during his installation, Rain, the Ganga Waterfront along Time Machine, as government and commerce industry leaders, environment and water experts, art veterans, and spiritual leaders discussed on water, earth’s resources and sustainability, and how art and spirituality connects people to contemplate and respond. Further, his concept of Mark Twain’s Mississippi Poetry Festival at Waterfront is another example of fine art. Manav is a true artist as his creations are an extension of his efforts to sensitise people towards nature.

Ganga to Mississippi: Eminent artist Manav Gupta’s Art Project connects USA with India

The Indian Panorama | Jan 22, 2016

A first of its kind Indo – US project is being initiated by one of India‘s top ten eminent contemporary artists, Manav Gupta, that builds multiple linkages at different venues in the USA and India between the countries and the people via the great and sacred rivers of India and the USA and their waters, through art. The global project engages different other art forms as well as people from all walks of life, with the river of clay waterfront, created with the quintessentially Indian potters produce, engaging with cutting edge installations and signature paintings, with America’s people.
Connecting the River Ganga with the River Mississippi, through the signature ‘umbilical cords series’ paintings that have been auctioned by Christie’s, Bonhams’ ,Philip de Pury and by deploying the humble Indian potter’s produce to form avant garde cutting edge installations series “excavations in hymns of clay”, the project stands to serve as an excellent tool to spread awareness on earth’s precious resources specially water and sustainable living through “healing of the rivers” with an engagement of people with a ‘little of their heart, soul and mind space‘ ;besides building bridges between India and USA through the unique first of its kind conceptualization and idea of ‘Ganga to Mississippi” that it brings with itas the humble contribution of the artist culminating from the two decades of his experience of taking art beyond art to seek consciousness on environmental issues through his paintings, Public art, collaborative, performance and may other art initiatives beyond boundaries between nations and beyond just himself.It strives to reach new heights in a first of its kind initiative ever as an engagement with the Mississippi and the people of the land by the Indian artist via dialogues through art and literature, dance, music, poetry, theatre in a language that is contemporary, a vocabulary that’s global, art that’s avant garde as well as first of its kind in deploying Indian pottery to create cutting edge large scale art and a concept that’s as unique as its universal.With the New York Consul General of India organizing a grand preview of the project exhibition at the Consulate, the artist is working hard towards a run up to World Earth Day on 22nd of April 2016 in New York followed by multiple chapters of the project shaping up at multiple venues in different cities.

After a record turnout of a hundred thousand footfalls at the Global India Preview of the Project at the India Habitat Centre in New Delhi, Gupta, who has been sought after for his depth of color light and composition in his paintings, was invited to deliver the prestigious President’s lecture at the Minneapolis College of Art & Design and the Forecast talk on Public Art by the two leading international organizations in the U.S. last month for disseminating his Global Public Art Project on sustainability that brings people of the two nations together in his upcoming Travelling Trilogy IV, USA edition.Also, the artist, who has been specially pre-commissioned last October to create a special suite of works from his signature series umbilical cords of earth, water on the theme by a US based collector couple, has started his on-sites research here , on an invitation by them for a long leg of this tour for absorbing insights, taking notes and sketches on how the cities along some of the rivers of America like the Mississippi to the Hudson and the East River respond to its waters and to look at sites of engagement where he would create dialogues on the above theme through his public art. He is getting ready for a seminal suite of works that he would bring to the US, April 2016 onwards, marking the World Earth Day.

Excavated Museum at the Mall | Millennium Post explores why this solo public art project by any artist is a solo biennale in itself.

Millennium Post | January 29, 2017

Manav Gupta does it again! A list of many firsts. He is truly a maverick genius – no wonder the thinker and the visionary is hailed by critics as one of the most erudite and versatile contemporary artists today. After a hundred thousand footfalls at the India Habitat Centre in New Delhi a year ago at his Ganga waterfront; and taking it across the Mississippi and the Hudson in USA last year as part of his Global Public Art Project on sustainbility connecting rivers of the world, he has created an entire ‘excavated museum’ at the DLF Mall of India at Sector 18, Noida till February 18 with a suite of five mega environmental art installations that punctuate different spaces in the Mall.
Former Expert Committee Member of Republic Day celebrations, first artist-in-residence at the Rashtrapati Bhawan invited personally by Dr Abdul Kalam, only artist to be invited by Environment Ministry to create one-minute-films on climate change, Manav is listed by Financial Times among ten contemporary Indian artists whose works would fetch good returns. The unique concept of environmental art in the Museum gets deeper with his underlying philosophy behind this series. He says, “Water and all five elements of nature are our source of sustainance. Ancient civilizations from India to the world over respected and understood this sanctity.While they drew nourishment from the great rivers. Be it our sacred Ganga or the Mississippi. As we grow, its time, we excavate the ancient philosophy of sustainable living. And we are all clay. Dust to dust. My art seeks to submit to this paradigm. Hence excavations in hymns of clay.”
As a part of his outreach programme of evolving, site specific and dynamic multiple edition solo public art projects across the world he deploys the quintessentially Indian potter’s produce of clay objects such as the earthen lamps (“diyas”), local cigar (“chilam”), earthen cups (“kullar”) to transform their individual identity into metaphors and idioms of sustainability, context, perception and treatment as he conceptualizes and creates large scale avant-garde works; using the rural Indian pottery meant for everyday use, in mass numbers, he deconstructs their age old existence as units to make them lend themselves to another form, be it in a Duchamp like inverted concept or simply rendering them formless. 

Some of his works include:
The River Waterfront
A site-specific installation with the invention of deploying earthen lamps and chilams as an iteration of their metaphors to form the lyrical formlessness of Time along the flow of the river. The multidimensional sensuousness of strands of rain pouring down against a waterfront is thought provoking as a poetic device executed with dramatic presence. Using the earthen lamp as a metaphor, Manav explores issues of environment consciousness. Given today’s world of current complex issues of treatment and perception of women as well as earth (referred to as mother earth in many quarters of Indian spirituality) the artist draws a cross spectrum reference of eroding human values using Ganga as the idiom.
The Beehive Garden project
Bees are an obvious or not so obvious link in the evolution chain and our sustainability. This global beehive garden project is an environmental statement by the artist about biodiversity and its crucial linkages to sustainable development. Manav’s art has always sought to play a bigger role than itself, in creating greater awareness on environemnt. And it reaches our senses and homes as a captivating reminder with its innovative deploying of “chilams” (earthen rural cigars) and “kullars” earthen cups to create beehives that can occupy every garden and home that keep acting as a gentle creative reminder to us each day to stop a while… and while doing what we are doing, try and add a drop in the ocean in the preservation of bees and biodiversity.
Meet me by the riverside –The bed
Love is what makes the world go around. The artist makes an intimate statement of love through the use of the male and female idioms of existence and how fragile love can be and yet so ethereal. Another dimension of sustainable development. With the river bed of earthen lamps and earthen cups, a stream seems to emerge from somewhere deep within and flow seemlessly pouring over. The bed is symbolic of history, of love and of a certain hope that the statement ‘meet me by the riverside..’ evokes. Called the ‘excavations in hymns of clay,’ this is the premiere of his 2017 edition that also happens to celebrate the twentieth year since his first solo at the Birla Academy of Fine Arts inaugurated by three prominent figures from Kolkata.

'A wealth of meaning'

The Statesman | Aruna Bhowmik | July 19, 2018

A spectacular installation work at IGNCA uses clay pottery to depict all the natural elements. A review by Aruna Bhowmick Sharp, sensitive and organized as an individual and as an artist, ‘Manav Gupta has over the year created unusual and striking work of art that are as soul stirring as meaningful. Over the past few years, he has honed his ideas evolving as an environment-oriented artist with a difference. Using humble clay pottery, the earthen lamp or Diya and chillum or the local smoker’s pipe. Manav has created the most spectacular installation work to denote the elements with special reference to the Ganga. Using just these basic utility earthen pieces, he creates the cascading water of the mighty river reminder of its even mightier abuse and misuse.

Currently showing on the vast lawns of the Indira Gandhi National Centre for arts (IGNCA) the show is located over adjacent sites. An -Ode to Ganga – Waterfront has special reference as An Ode to Matighar, intelligently making an ironic statement on the Ganga by embracing the closed and abandoned Matighar itself, earlier declared by authorities as “unsafe.” At a short internally commutable distance, facing the new building of IGNCA. On Dr. Rajendra Prasad Road, are five other such installations spread over the lawns as Arth ~ Art for Earth (The Excavated Museum of Clay). Flood lights are an inherent component of the art works.
“arth” in Devanagari or Hindi implies “meaning’ as well as “wealth”, in this con- text meaning the five elements in relation to our existence on this planet. Today’s perception and treatment both of the earth and of women, both referred to as “mother” in many quarters of Indian spirituality, are contradictory and hypocritical, venerated on one occasion and sullied on all others. This polluting, the shrinking of water and its sources, the resultant climate change, have concerned this artist for several years.
As one pierces the darkness of the gardens becomes behind the Featuring a terracotta assembly as bed, and mannequins man and woman, the contention here is that life begins and ends from the bed. We are incepted here, and we leave the world from here.
In the backdrop we see the array of chillum strung on fine yarn, lit up to sparkle like rain to nurture the Arjuna and Neem trees. Nestling among the tree trunks are the hives of The Beehive Garden. Bees are an obvious or not so obvious linking the evolution chain and our sustainability. This global beehive garden project is an environmental statement about biodiversity and its crucial linkages to sustainable development. It is for us then, to try and add a drop in the ocean in the preservation of bees and biodiversity.
Noah’s Ark symbolises the saving of the world. In the “cycle of creation, un-creation and re-creation, the ark plays a pivotal role”. And in that effort is the neuter-gendered individual seen “rowing” the boat of all existing life on earth against the doom of self-destruction. The Time Machine, placed atop the stairs to the main entrance, is a set of three hour glasses composed of diyas, here implying cups or receptacles, together composing the large cups of the hourglass, to receive and disperse the sand within it. The sand here implies Time, Life and, in course of it, what we return to the earth after our abundant intake. “In its cur- rent avatar, the Time Machine is a tryptic espousing the sound of “OM” as “AUM” the three notes of the sound that crated the universe and reverberate in it.”
The installations are spectacular. Motivated by clear-headed noble ideas and created with great finesse and good taste they become magnificent. The thing to remember is that terracotta is not soluble or destroyable even with its humble origins. A lot of world civilisational history has been unearthed and dated from buried terracotta findings. So only time can tell how eco-friendly or environ- mentally-sustainable it really is.
Best time to visit: after sundown. Open till 9 p.m.

From Sand To Dust - Manav Gupta weaves in stories of sustainability using quintessential byproducts of the Indian potter

The Indian Express | Pallavi Chattopadyay | July 30, 2018

The serenity of the riverbed is disturbed by the onslaught of water making its way into it, instantly bringing to the mind the gushing waters of various falls of the country — such as the Chitrakoot waterfalls or the Kempty Falls. But the fall in question is contemporary artist Manav Gupta’s installation, titled River Waterfront.
Indira National Centre for Arts (IGNCA), the mammoth artwork has been created with thousands of the earthen lamps (diyas) made by potters, local cigar (chillum) and earthen cups (kulhar). It pays an ode to the Ganga, glowing with yellow light at night, and symbolising how the river’s path flows from the mountains and pours into plains and distributaries. Five other tall installations come together to form Gupta’s public art project “Arth – Art for Earth”, serving as metaphors for environmental sustainability. Delhi-based Gupta, who was the first artist-in-residence at the Rashtrapati Bhawan after being invited by APJ Abdul Kalam in 2003, brings out the nurturing qualities of the rain through another installation titled Rain. Chillums, recreating the effect of water droplets, hang from strings from the arjuna and neem trees (known for their medicinal properties) and give a drizzling effect to the garden spread across the 23-acre IGNCA premises. “What we do is peel off the barks and wound the trees for medicinal use. But the rains nurture the trees. The idea for this piece lay around why can’t we, as human beings, nurture the trees instead of taking away from them,” says Gupta. Beehives, made using chillums and kulhars around the branches oftrees, turn into storytellers in Bee-hive Garden, bringing attention to the dwindling population of bees. Gupta says, “The UN has declared the World Bee Day (May 20). Bees are a very important part of ecological system because they help in pollination and that’s how vegetables and crops grow. We are always the consumers. Bees are getting extinct and have been declared an endangered species. These beehives made in clay bring in the element of respecting other beings as well, besides nature.”

Then there is the artist’s own interpretation of Noah’s Ark, wherein a male figure appears holding the sail of a ship, made entirely of the three clay objects. “If we don’t take care of nature, we will need to run away from climate change, and row a boat to save ourselves,” he says.
On the use of over a lakh of diyas to create the river effect in River Waterfront and other artworks in his latest exhibition, Gupta says, “We have all grown up seeing the earthen lamp and it has been part of Indian ethos and spirituality. It has a very strange existence. That touched me. It lies on the roadside and is made by potters and we pick it and let it become the conduit of our prayers to god. Suddenly it becomes sacred. The entire perception changes from nothing to everything. In a minute after ceremonies, it is thrown back again after we have used it. That is the metaphor of the earthen lamp.”In that sense, it is not surprising to see clay objects becoming Gupta’s tools lately, including the massive installation of the Ganga waterfront he created in 2016 at India Habitat Centre’s Plaza steps from his series ‘Excavations in Hymns of Clay’. The 50-year-old says, “The human existence and life is because of nature. We are panchmahabhuta — the five elements of earth, water, fire, air and ether. We are all dust to dust, and therefore I use clay. Clay and pottery are my mediums and I use nature as a laboratory.”
Noah’s Ark
Gupta is among the few artists in the country who are using art to raise concerns around the environment. He says, “I try and address environmental problems without noise and the usual protest mode of high decibel shouting. But one can sensitise people. If it touches hearts and souls, art is a very powerful medium. Steve Jobs understood it and used it very well for Apple in terms of the way they present their design. Same can be said about the architecture of a city. My other aim is to engage with the masses, and take art out of the gallery and museum spaces.”
Arth, which translates to “meaning” in Hindi, was picked by the artist as the title of his project “to seek meaning and larger truths of life”. He adds, “Artha also means wealth in Hindi. So what’s the true wealth of humanity. It is actuallynature and the natural resources. That is what makes us survive. It is not the money or commercialisation.”

Clayscapes - Manav Gupta’s 'arth — art for earth' carries forward his commitment towards innovation and sustainability.

The Tribune India | Swati Rai | July 29, 2018

Manav Gupta’s Arth — Art for Earth carries forward his commitment of two decades towards innovation and sustainability. In the installation, he deploys Indian clay objects like diyas, chilam and kulhar and transforms their individual identity into metaphors and idioms of sustainability.

Six installations — Rain, The River Waterfront, Time Machine, Bee-hive Garden, The Bed of Life, and Noah’s Ark — form part of this public art display at the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA). Through them, the artist seeks to portray traditional Indian pottery as a metaphor for nurturing the environment in a consumerist society. “In Devanagari, arth stands for ‘meaning’ and ‘wealth’. I have explored both these concepts in the context of our existence on this planet as we use a wealth of earth’s resources, the five elements (panch maha bhoot), as well as our meaning and purpose in life while we are here. We all are clay. Dust to dust. My art seeks to submit to this paradigm.

”The River Waterfront — An Ode to Ganga seeks to create awareness about the conservation of rivers and their organic essence to our lives. In The Time Machine, the artist engages with time and its transient passage. In Noah’s Ark, Gupta uses symbolism to underline the relevance of saving the world.

The Beehive Garden Project is a statement on biodiversity and its crucial linkages to sustainable development. The Bed of Life highlights the fact that love is what makes the world go around. The river bed of earthen lamps and earthen cups is symbolic of history, of love, of beginning and the end. Just like the circle of life.He says his focus is on making meaningful art for the masses. He says people might interpret the works in their own way, buthis purpose is to be able to engage in a dialogue around sustainable development through innovative art forms.

“When I paint, what transcends on the canvas are the hope and the power of the eternal truths of nature’s emblematic symbols”..."Light for me is Hope and Colour, the Universe in which it transcends" - Manav Gupta

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