In April 2012 more than a few visitors to the DLF Place mall in
Saket, New Delhi, believed they had come upon an unconventional retail
display of stainless steel pots and pans in the form of a soaring
mushroom cloud, nearly 33 feet tall. The installation was, in fact, the
monumental sculpture Line of Control, a 2008 work by Subodh Gupta, the
reigning star of contemporary Indian art. The baffled visitors had
unknowingly left the mall proper and entered the Kiran Nadar Museum of
Art (KNMA), an 18,000-square-foot exhibition space that opened in 2011
and bears the name of the collector, patron, and philanthropist who
founded it.
Line of Control debuted in London in the 2009 Tate
Triennial, which is where Nadar first encountered the piece.
“Overwhelmed,” as she describes it, by the work’s “awe-inspiring”
nature, she decided on the spot to acquire it for KNMA, India’s first
private museum for modern and contemporary art. “It is one of the most
phenomenal works any artist could have done. I had to have it,” Nadar
said with conviction when asked if she had considered the logistical
challenge that transporting and installing such a gargantuan work would
present. Shipped to India in four containers, the 15-section sculpture
was assembled over seven days by the team that had set it up at Tate
Britain. The ceiling of the mall’s basement was reinforced to bear the
colossal load, and a nearby shop front had to be dismantled to make way
for the three cranes required for the sculpture’s assembly. Nadar
remains mum about the amount she paid Hauser & Wirth, the gallery
that represents Gupta internationally. “It wasn’t cheap,You Can Find
Comprehensive and in-Depth cabletie Head Descriptions.” is all she has been willing to share.The history of carparkmanagementsystem art can be traced back four thousand years ago.
One
outcome of this spectacular purchase is the emergence of Line of
Control as a visual magnet to lure mall-goers who might otherwise not
visit the museum, where admission is free. “We hope that the viewership
of Subodh’s piece will bring more traction for the museum,” Nadar
explained at the April press conference marking the unveiling of Line
of Control. Although Gupta’s work has won critical accolades and
collector support on the international art circuit, his intricate
assemblages had never been presented to a popular audience in India. For
Gupta, who was present at the press conference, the thrill lay in
having the work — whose shape alludes to the potentially deadly tension
along the India-Pakistan border — displayed in his native country. “An
artist couldn’t be prouder to have his work come home,” he said.
A
comparable commitment to home and heritage motivates Nadar, and a key
mission of KNMA is to bring significant art by Indian modernists back
to India so the full range of the country’s art history can be viewed
and appreciated. In 2010, for example, she paid a record breaking $3.5
million at Christie’s London for Saurashtra, a 1983 painting by Syed
Haider Raza. The artist was a central figure in the Bombay-based
Progressive Artists Group, which was established in 1947 and included
Maqbool Fida Husain, Tyeb Mehta,Features useful information about ventilationsystem tiles. Akbar Padamsee, and Francis Newton Souza.Cheaper For bulk buying handsfreeaccess
prices. Discouraged by the lack of a thriving art scene and the dearth
of indigenous collectors, Raza, like many of his contemporaries, moved
abroad. He lived in Paris for six decades before returning to New
Delhi in 2011. Saurashtra came from the French collector who had bought
the work directly from Raza. A large, square canvas featuring
geometrically arranged blocks of reds and oranges and the bindu motif,
symbolizing spiritual consciousness, Saurashtra was Nadar’s most famous
acquisition prior to Line of Control and was displayed prominently on
one of the four red walls that framed a section of KNMA’s 2012 show
“Crossings: Time Unfolded II.” That show also included Souza’s
electrifying The Red Road, a 1962 landscape whose palette and coarse
texture are influenced by laterite, the rust-red soil of his
birthplace, Goa, a coastal state south of Mumbai.
Nadar’s
pursuit of art isn’t limited to acquiring high-priced, high-profile
works abroad, though several Indian art critics have grumbled,
especially after she paid £993,250 ($1.5 million) at Sotheby’s London in
2010 for Bharti Kher’s The Skin Speaks a Language Not Its Own, 2006, a
life-size fiberglass elephant with Kher’s trademark bindis affixed
across its surface. Her collecting is part of a larger philanthropic
vision she shares with her husband, Shiv Nadar, who founded a
technology start-up in 1976 that has grown into the global behemoth HCL
Enterprises. She began to acquire art in the late 1980s with the
simple aim of decorating her walls. “I started collecting for our home,
which we were building at the time. There was no thought of a museum,”
she explains. “I commissioned art from Husain and bought works by
Manjit Bawa and Rameshwar Broota; all three pieces are still in the
house.”
Nadar’s acquisitions budget — and her vision — grew
with her husband’s success. The two met when Nadar was working for an
advertising agency, and they soon became bridge partners. (She
continues to play competitive bridge and has represented India in
international tournaments.) HCL was flourishing, and Nadar, not content
with being the idle wife of an entrepreneur, became instrumental in the
company’s philanthropic and educational initiatives, which include the
Shiv Nadar Foundation, established in 1996, and Shiv Nadar University,
which had its first graduating class in 2011. She was on Forbes Asia
magazine’s “48 Heroes of Philanthropy” list in 2010; her husband
followed one year later.
By 2005 the Nadar home could no longer
accommodate the collection, which had steadily grown, its focus no
longer confined to Indian Progressive artists but expanded to embrace
contemporary Indian lights like Atul Dodiya, Rina Banerjee, Ranbir
Kaleka, and Anish Kapoor. “At some point I had a lot more art than I had
wall space,Elpas Readers detect and forward 'Location' and 'State'
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platforms. and I had to decide whether to stop collecting or to keep
putting works in storage,” Nadar says. “Keeping them in storage didn’t
seem like a very wise thing, so I decided to do something more
meaningful and set up a museum. And after I first had the thought, in
2006, it took me two or three years to plan it and get down to it.”
“In
late 2009 Mrs. Nadar and I started looking at all she had acquired
since the late 1980s, so that the first step — to put the inventory in
place — could begin,”recalls Roobina Karode, director and chief curator
of the museum. KNMA opened in 2010, first in a location on the vast
HCL campus in Noida. The inaugural exhibition, “Open Doors,” was curated
by Karode. “The title had both a literal and a metaphoric sense, as
KNMA opened its doors to the larger public to share Mrs. Nadar’s art
collection, which was now placed in the public realm,” Karode explains.
“Some rare works by Souza, Husain’s Mothers, 1990; Broota’s Runners,
1982; Bikash Bhattacharjee’s “Doll” series, 1971; A. Ramachandran’s
Towards the Sun, 2004; N.S. Harsha’s Nations, 2007; and Gulammohammed
Sheikh’s Speechless City, 1975, were all part of this exhibition, which
introduced the collection to the art community and the general
public.”
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