“I aim at directness and simplicity.”
Vasudeo S. Gaitonde
Vasudeo S. Gaitonde
While often
referred to as an abstractionist, it is a term the Indian painter Vasudeo S. Gaitonde didn’t like. He preferred to
describe his paintings as "non-objective” since they are not the
abstraction of recognizable forms but rather the result of an internal dialogue
prompted by his adherence to Zen Buddhism.
As the Wall
Street Journal reported Gaitonde saying “I don’t
work, I relax and wait, and then I apply some paint on the canvas. The most
important aspect of painting is waiting, waiting, waiting, between one work and
the next… A painting always exists within you, even before you actually start
to paint. You just have to make yourself the perfect machine to express what is
already there.”
Born in Nagpur,
the third largest city of
the Indian state of Maharashtra, it was whilst his family were in the neighboring
state of Goa that Gaitonde first developed his interest in art and had his
talent recognized.
As the regular
Artforum contributor Meera Menezees noted in the book Vasudeo S. Gaitonde and the Light of the
Cave, Gaitonde said “I clearly
remember one of my family members who used to paint on temple walls. Perhaps that
was what first attracted me to painting.”
Such was
the quality of the young Gaitonde’s work that one of his elder sister’s
teachers remarked “Your brother is going to be a very fine painter in the
future.”
At the age
of 24, a year after India gained independence from Britain, Gaitonde received his
diploma from the famed Mumbai art institution the Sir JJ School of Art and
became an active member of Progressive
Artists Group of Bombay.
About a decade later when Gaitonde embraced the Japanese
variation of the 5th Century Indian philosophy known as Zen Buddhism
his work change from the figurative to the nonrepresentational that was
to occupy him for the rest of his life.
This adoption of a meditative process centered round
the silence of
contemplation gave his work balance, depth and a
quality most often described as a profound stillness.
About which Gaitonde has said “Your entire being is working
together with the brush, the painting knife, the canvas to absorb that silence
and create.”
The retrospective exhibition V. S. Gaitonde: Painting
as Process, Painting as Life is currently on show at Venice’s Peggy Guggenheim Collection
until the 10th of January next year.
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