You are here:Home » Jan2013 » ‘Liquid Distillation of Animated Consciousness: Art of Neeraj Goswami’ Book Launch on Jan. 29

‘Liquid Distillation of Animated Consciousness: Art of Neeraj Goswami’ Book Launch on Jan. 29

Report by Santanu Ganguly, New Delhi: Sanchit Art brings to you the colorful work of Neeraj Goswami—an artist for whom painting is the source through which he expresses himself. His art reflects the state of the art in India as it grew over the last fifty years. A big difference in his art that compels serious attention from contemporaries as well as from connoisseurs in equal measure. He is now in the process of planning his future projects with large sculptures in public spaces. A coffee table book entitled ‘Liquid Distillation of Animated Consciousness: Art of Neeraj Goswami,’ written by Arun Ghose and published by Sanchit Art, will be launched at Lalit Kala Academy, Ferozeshah Road in New Delhi on January 29, 2013 at 6 pm. The book offers interesting inroads in his spiritually oriented artistic vision.

Art of Neeraj Goswami reflects the state of the art in India as it grew over the last fifty years. Born in Patna, in 1964, he grew up in Delhi since the age of eight and was groomed to be an artist since then even though his family had little means to support such an ambition. He was honored with a solo show in his school days in Delhi and won considerable attention from veterans like Saradindu Sen Roy and Gulam Rasool Santosh before entering Art College in Delhi. His next solo took place while still in art college and it was veteran artists from Delhi Silpi Chakra, KS Kulkarni and Anupam Sud and others, who came forward to organize it with a view to recognize his prolific talent. There was no going back for him since then. Between 1990 to 2000 he had had ten solos held almost annually in Delhi and, predictably enough, catapulted him in the prime frontier of the mainstream Indian Art of the day.

‘Liquid Distillation of Animated Consciousness: Art of Neeraj Goswami’
Art of Neeraj Goswami

There was, and still is, a big difference in his art that compels serious attention from contemporaries as well as from connoisseurs in equal measure. Instead of looking outward for inspiration he trained his mind to look inward for subjects. He inherited his strength of spiritual inquest from his grandfather and received intense spiritual training from his ‘Guru’ while still in his teens and thus developed a spiritual individuality that got reflected in his art with increasing clarity. In fact a retrospective of his art over the last twenty five years will easily reveal how his mind got increasingly cleansed from the accumulated garbage of the societal surroundings and it was mainly achieved with regular and intense ‘kriyas’ taught to him. His art got simultaneously strengthened in degrees in which surrealism and minimalism got artistically reinvented. Even Cubism became an artistically descriptive tool in his hand and its complicated surface divisionism attained its simplified minimalism, gradually yet steadily, over the same period in his art.

‘Liquid Distillation of Animated Consciousness: Art of Neeraj Goswami’
Art of Neeraj Goswami

In spite of the gradual, post-modernistic, recent trend to do away with traditional art-making techniques Neeraj Goswami remains faithful to canvas and paint without loosing his cutting-edge strength of spiritual surrealism that has an unmistakably modern appeal seldom seen in contemporary art. He believes painted canvas, with its age-old practice of framed rectangularity, has a time-less appeal of eternity while all other contemporary practice for installation and videography has a temporal air that is almost transitional in character. He however is very fond of sculpture in the round and has already tried his hand in this medium with unmistakable originality .He is now in the process of planning his future projects with large sculptures in public spaces.

‘Liquid Distillation of Animated Consciousness: Art of Neeraj Goswami’
Art of Neeraj Goswami

Neeraj has shown his works almost in all parts of the world and has retained his childhood habit of receiving critical accolade since, at the age of five, his drawing of an elephant on a large black-board in primary school received headline-space in a Patna Daily. He, aged forty eight, now lives and works in New Delhi.

0 comments:

Post a Comment