| Bhupen Khakhar Bhupen
Khakhar was born in Bombay in 1934. He is a self- taught artist, having qualified as a
chartered accountant before moving to Baroda in 1962 to join the Art Criticism course at
the Faculty of Fine Arts. It was here that he started painting and became involved with
the seminal Narrative Figurative movement
He held his first solo exhibition in Bombay in 1965 and has had fourteen
solo shows since, in Bombay, New Delhi, Baroda, London, Ahmedabad, Amsterdam, Den Haag,
Paris and Tokyo. Khakhar has also been widely represented innumerous group exhibitions
including Art Now in India, London, Newcastle and Ghent (1 966), IX Biemale de Sao Paulo,
and the First Triemale - India, New Delhi (1 968), Pictorial Space, New Delhi, and Menion
Biennale (1977), Six who declined to show in the Triennale, New Delhi (I978), Narrative
Painting,London(1979), Place for people, Bombay (1981), Six Indian Painters, Tate Gallery,
London (1 982), Contemporary Indian Artists, Center Georges Pompidou, Paris (1986),
Documenta IX, Kessel (1992), A Critical Difference: Contemporary Art from India, UK (1
993), India Songs, Sydney and Amsterdam (1 994) and Traditions/Tensions, the Asia Society,
New York and tour, 1996. Khakhar's work has been characterized by a rare irreverence and a
lack of inhibition about his lack of formal training. Indeed, he has been able to evolve
his own mode of address that harnesses this lack of training to provide an edge to his
expressions. His early work made use of ready-made images of deities from popular
oleographs which were collaged and painted over, sometimes with graffiti. Khakhar's
interest in 'degenerate' forms of art led him to an exploration of artistic conventions in
hybrid traditions that operate in the interregnum between classical miniatures and
European illusionism. A deliberate naiveld is visible in his paintings from the 1970s,
coupled with a deeply felt sympathy with his subjects, who are often ordinary folk caught
in an existence they do not quite understand. There is also biting comment on the gentle
stupidity of petit bourgeois life: a quality of being frozen in time perineates several of
these representations of common people in all their vulnerability. The vulnerability
argument is taken a step further in the early 1980s, when Khakhar's homoerotic concerns
come to be openly declared, often with self-referential figures. The 1980s also bring a
move away from the blown-up-picture- postcard painting to spatial arrangements of greater
complexity and articulation. Observation of the everyday plays an important role in
Khakhar's work, and he is able to zero in on 'typical' characters that the observer can
often locate within his/her own experience. He seems to have taken on a project of
devising a way of representing the marginal seeking to show that which is always there,
but never gets looked at. Khakhar has devised a way of rendering the body with an unusual
plainness, like a bone-less structure, that highlights the twin arguments of vulnerability
and invisibility that he maintains. His recent forays into watercolors and ceramics reveal
a great deal of freedom in handling the material. Even in the occasionally macabre
examples of his recent work, there is the evidence of joy and a sense of play in dealing
with the material.
Bhupen Khakhar lives and works in Baroda. |
Bhupen Khakhar
You can't please them all.
Oil on canvas
69" x 69"
1982

Bhupen Khakhar
Gallery of rogues
Oil on canvas
1990

Bhupen Khakhar
The moor
Oil on canvas
48" x 48"
1990
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