Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
International

Indian Sculptor Mrinalini Mukherjee To Display Art Collection At The Met In US

IANS, 28 May, 2019 07:34 PM

    The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the largest art museum in the US, will showcase a collection of works by renowned Indian sculptor Mrinalini Mukherjee in the first comprehensive display of the artist's work in America.


    The artist will be the subject of a revelatory retrospective at The Met Breuer.


    The exhibition ''Phenomenal Nature: Mrinalini Mukherjee'' will be on view June 4 through September 29, 2019, bringing together 57 pieces by Ms Mukherjee and will explore the artist's longstanding engagement with fiber, along with her significant forays into ceramic and bronze from the middle and latter half of her career, the Museum said.


    The exhibition is made possible by Nita Ambani, her husband Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani and the Reliance Foundation.


    Born in Mumbai in 1949, Ms Mukherjee studied painting, printmaking, and mural making at the M S University in Baroda, with the influential artist K G Subramanyan, under whose guidance Ms Mukherjee first experimented with fiber.


    Phenomenal Nature will also present the latter half of Ms Mukherjee's career in the mid-1990s, when, prompted by a residency at the European Ceramics Work Centre in the Netherlands, she began working with ceramics, eventually taking on bronze in 2003. "Probing the divide between figuration and abstraction, Ms Mukherjee would go on to fashion unusual, mysterious, sensual, and, at times, unsettlingly grotesque forms, commanding in their presence and scale," the museum said.


    A committed sculptor who worked intuitively, never resorting to a sketch or preparatory drawing, Ms Mukherjee in her forms explored the divide between figuration and abstraction.


    She was primarily inspired by nature and this was further informed by her enthusiasm for Indian historic sculpture, modern design, and local crafts and textile traditions. The exhibition will seek to highlight the radical intervention Ms Mukherjee made by adapting crafting techniques with a modernist formalism.


    The artist's fiber forms are physical and organic. She never worked with a loom; instead, knotting became her primary technique and it imbued her sculptures with three-dimensional volume and a sense of monumentally, the museum said in a release.


    Ms Mukherjee used natural as well as hand-dyed ropes sourced from a local market in New Delhi, where she lived and worked. The forms she fashioned are replete with sexual imagery, while some of her large anthropomorphic pieces - in which the vegetal, human, and animal coalesce - at times suggest the imagery of classical Indian sculpture.


    The exhibition is organised by Shanay Jhaveri, Assistant Curator of South Asian Art in the museum's Department of Modern and Contemporary Art.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Nearly 2 lakh Indians studied in US in 2017-18

    Nearly 2 lakh Indians studied in US in 2017-18
    India is the second largest international reservoir for the US higher education institutions having sent 196,271 students here in the last academic year, according to latest data.

    Nearly 2 lakh Indians studied in US in 2017-18

    Indian-Origin Minister Shailesh Vara Leads Resignations In Fresh Brexit Jolt For PM May

    Indian-Origin Minister Shailesh Vara Leads Resignations In Fresh Brexit Jolt For PM May
    Shailesh Vara and two other ministers resigned today from her divided Cabinet over UK's "half-baked" divorce deal with the European Union.

    Indian-Origin Minister Shailesh Vara Leads Resignations In Fresh Brexit Jolt For PM May

    Imran Khan Says China Gave Pak 'Big' Aid Package, But Won't Reveal Amount

    Chinese leaders and sought aid to overcome the financial woes faced by his cash-strapped government.

    Imran Khan Says China Gave Pak 'Big' Aid Package, But Won't Reveal Amount

    Woman Ticketed For Not Holding Escalator Handrail To Be Heard By Supreme Court

    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada agreed Thursday to hear the case of a woman who was ticketed and arrested after she refused instructions to hold onto an escalator handrail.

    Woman Ticketed For Not Holding Escalator Handrail To Be Heard By Supreme Court

    Mixing Business And Family: Justin Trudeau Turns To Singapore Ancestors To Widen Trade

    SINGAPORE — Slowly strolling along a paved walkway, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looked around Fort Canning and came face-to-face with his history.

    Mixing Business And Family: Justin Trudeau Turns To Singapore Ancestors To Widen Trade

    China Says Butt Out; Canada Calls For Release Of 'Arbitrarily' Detained Muslims

    China Says Butt Out; Canada Calls For Release Of 'Arbitrarily' Detained Muslims
    OTTAWA — Canada stood firm against Chinese criticism Thursday after the Trudeau government rallied more than a dozen countries in expressing concern to Beijing about its jailing of hundreds of thousands of its Muslim minority.

    China Says Butt Out; Canada Calls For Release Of 'Arbitrarily' Detained Muslims