SELECTED WORKS BY Jitish Kallat
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Jitish Kallat
Public Notice 2
2007
4,479 fibreglass sculptures
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Within my practice, 'Public Notice 2' (2007) links up with two key antecedents, 'Public Notice' (2003) and 'Detergent' (2004), both works wherein a historical speech is summoned as the central armature of the work. Blurred and sometimes forgotten due to the passage of time, the historical speech is fore-grounded and held up as an apparatus to grade our feats and follies as nations, as humankind.
'Public Notice 2' (2007) re-invokes the momentous speech delivered by Mahatma Gandhi on the eve of the historic 400-kilometer 'Dandi March' lasting about 24 days during the Indian Freedom Struggle. On the 11th of March 1930, prior to setting out to break the brutal Salt Act instituted by the British, Gandhi laid out the codes of conduct for his fellow revolutionaries. He called for complete 'Civil Disobedience'; the only fierce restriction being that of maintaining 'total peace' and 'absolute non-violence'.
The speech has within it several themes that may aid our ailing world, plagued as it is with aggression. In today's terror-infected world, where wars against terror are fought at prime television time, voices such as Gandhi's stare back at us like discarded relics. The entire speech will be constructed out of about 4500 recreations of bones shaped like alphabets. Each alphabet in this speech, like a misplaced relic will hold up the image of violence in clinical clarity even as their collective chorus makes a plea for peace.
Within the Indian context as well, we have the worst instance of subversion of Gandhi's words in the year 2002 within his own home state of Gujarat. The historic 'Dandi March' and the speech were delivered not far from the site where India saw one of the worst communal riots and bloodshed since the Indian Independence.
Jitish Kallat
Mumbai |
Jitish Kallat
Eruda
2006
Black lead
on fibreglass |
 

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Jitish Kallat
Death Of Distance
2007
Black lead on fibreglass, a rupee coin and five lenticular prints
Sculpture 161 cm diameter
Prints 46 x 60 cm |
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Jitish Kallat
Death Of Distance (detail)
2007
Black lead on fibreglass, a rupee coin and five lenticular prints
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Jitish Kallat
Annexe
2006
Black lead, fiberglass, stainless steel base
(Including the base)
145 x 46 x 46 cm |
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Jitish Kallat
Untitled (Eclipse)
2007
Acrylic on canvas, triptych
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Jitish Kallat
Rickshawpolis 4
2006
Acrylic on canvas with bronze gargoyles
178 x 274 cm |
 
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Jitish Kallat
Untitled (Eclipse) 3
2007
Acrylic on canvas, triptych
274 x 518 cm |
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Jitish Kallat
Untitled (Eclipse) 5
2008
Acrylic on canvas, in three panels
229 x 518 cm |
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ARTIST INFORMATION
Jitish Kallat's BIOGRAPHY

1974
Born in Mumbai
Lives and works in Mumbai
SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2008
Aquasaurus, Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation
Skinside Outside, Arario Seoul
Public Notice-2, Bodhi Art, Singapore
Universal Recipient, Haunch of Venison, Zurich
2007
Sweatopia, Chemould Prescott Road and Bodhi Art
Unclaimed Baggage, Albion, London
365 Lives, Arario Beijing
Rickshawpolis–3, Gallery Barry Keldoulis, Sydney
2006
Rickshawpolis–2, Spazio Piazza Sempione, Milan
2005
Rickshawpolis–1, Nature Morte, New Delhi
Panic Acid, Bodhi Art, Singapore
Humiliation Tax, Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
2004
The Lie of the Land, Walsh Gallery, Chicago
FAQ, Art Rotterdam, presented by Willem Baars Projects, Holland
2002
First Information Report, Bose Pacia Modern, New York
2001
Milk Route, India Habitat Centre, New Delhi
General Essential, Sakshi Gallery, Bangalore
2000
Ibid., Gallery Chemould, Mumbai
1999
Private limited–I, Bose Pacia Modern, New York
Private limited–II, Apparao Gallery, Chennai
1998
Apostrophe, India Habitat Centre, New Delhi
1997
P.T.O., Gallery Chemould and Prithvi Gallery, Mumbai
GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2009
Mythologies, Haunch of Venison, London
Indian Narrative in the 21st Century: Between Memory and History, Casa Asia Center, Madrid
2008
Indian Highway, Serpentine Gallery, London
India Moderna, IVAM (Institut Valencia d’Art Modern),Valencia
Die Tropen, Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin
Chalo! India: A New Era of Indian Art, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo
GSK Contemporary, Royal Academy of Arts, London (England)
3rd Guangzhou Triennial, Guangzhou, China. Curators: Savat Maharaj, Gao Shiming, Chang Tsong-Zung
Passage to India, Initial Access Frank Cohen Collection, Wolverhampton, UK
Die Tropen. Anschten von der Mitte der Weltkugel, Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin Curator:Alfons Hug
Frontline: Notations from the Contemporary Indian Urban, Bodhi Berlin, Curator: Shaheen Merali
2007
Soft Power, Shanghai Zendai Museum of Art, Shanghai, Curator: Shen Qibin, Binghui Huangfu and Biljana Ciric
Mad Love - Young Art in Danish Private Collections, ARKEN Museum for Moderne Kunst, Copenhagen,Denmark
Best of Artists, ShContemporary, Shanghai. Curator: Pierre Huber
Urban Manners, Hangar Bicocca, Milan. Curator: Adelina Von Furstenberg
Hungry God, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto
INDIA NOW: Contemporary Indian Art between Continuity and Transformation, Provincia di Milano. Curator: Daniela Palazzoli
Aftershock, Sainsbury Center for Visual Arts, Norwich
Horn Please, Kunstmuseum, Bern. Curator: Bernhard Fibicher
Asian Europe Mediation, National Museum of Poland, Poznan and Zendai Museum of Modern Art in Shanghai. Co-curated by Binghui Huangfu
New Narratives: Contemporary Art from India, Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago. Curator: Betty Seid
Thermocline of Art – New Asian Waves, ZKM Museum, Karlsruhe, Germany. Curators: Wonil Rhee and Peter Weibel
2006
The 5th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, Queensland Art Gallery and Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, Australia
Passages, Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels. Curators: Deepak Ananth and Jany Lauga
Lille 3000, Lille, France
The 6th Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju, Korea. Curators: Binghui Huangfu, Wu Hung, Shaheen Merali
Hungry God: Indian Contemporary Art, Arario Gallery, Beijing and the Busan Museum, Korea
L’Art à la Plage, Galerie Enrico Navarra, Ramatuelle, France
Another Worlds, Arario Gallery, Cheonan, Korea
2005
Indian Summer, Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris. Curators: Deepak Ananth and Henry-Claude Cousseau
The Artist Lives and Works in Baroda/Bombay/Calcutta/Mysore/ Rotterdam/Trivandrum, House of World Cultures, Berlin
1st Pocheon Asian Art Triennale, Pocheon, Korea. Curator: Yoon, Jin Sup
Paths of Progression, Singapore Tyler Print Institute, Singapore
Mom and Pop Art, Walsh Gallery, Chicago
International Painting, Gallery GBK, Sydney
Kunst En Oorlog, Kunst en Cultuur Noord-Holland
2004
The Sacrifice – An Intimate I, Collection Swagemakers, Museum De Beyerd, Holland
Contemporary Art from India, Thomas Erben Gallery, New York
Summer Show, Bose Pacia Gallery, New York. Curator: Peter Nagy
Masala, William Benton Museum, University of Connecticut.Curator: Kathryn Myers
Zoom! Art in Contemporary India, Culturgest, Lisbon. Curators: Nancy Adajania and Luís Serpa
2003
SubTerrain: Artists Dig the Contemporary, House of World Cultures, Berlin. Curator: Geeta Kapur
Drawing Conclusions: Work by Artist-Critics, NY Arts Magazine Gallery. Curators: Jill Conner and Gae Savannah
Pictorial Transformations, National Art Gallery, Malaysia
Urban Graffiti, Woolf Gallery, London
Crossing generations: diVERGE, Gallery Chemould’s 40th anniversary, National Gallery of Modern Art, Mumbai. Curators: Geeta Kapur and Chaitanya Sambrani
Indians+Cowboys, Gallery 4a, Sydney. Curators: Aaron Seeto and Ruth Watson
The Tree from the Seed, Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Høvikodden, Norway. Curator: Gavin Jantjes
2002
Under Construction, The Japan Foundation Asia Center, Tokyo. Curator: Ranjit Hoskote
India – Contemporary Art from Northeastern Private Collection, Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, New Jersey
Clicking into Place, Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai. Organised by Japan Foundation. Curator: Ranjit Hoskote
2001
Century City, Tate Modern, London. Curators: Geeta Kapur and Ashish Rajadhyaksha
Indian Painting, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney. Curator: Haema Sivanesan
Indian Contemporary Fine Arts, Seven Degrees, California, USA. Presented by Saffronart.com
2000
7th Havana Biennial, Havana, Cuba, Curator: Hilda Maria Rodriguez
1999
The First Fukuoka Asian Art Triennale, Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Japan. Curator: Kuroda Raiji
Nature Morte, Mary Place Gallery, Sydney, Australia. Curator: Peter Nagy
1998
Art of the World 1998, Passage de Retz, Paris, France
Multimedia Art of the 90s, CIMA Gallery, Calcutta
Jehangir Nicholson Collection, National Gallery of Modern Art, Mumbai
The Wilberding Collection, National Gallery of Modern Art, Mumbai
Indian Contemporary Art, The R.P.G. collection, Leverkusen and Monheim, Germany
1997
Projektgruppe Stoffwechsel’s international art meet ‘Innenseite’, Kassel, Germany. Curator: Hamdi el Attar
50 Years of Art in Mumbai, National Gallery of Modern Art, Mumbai. Curator: Saryu Doshi
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Other artists in The Empire Strikes Back: Indian Art Today
Jaishri Abichandani | Mansoor Ali | Kriti Arora | Ajit Chauhan | Shezad Dawood | Atul Dodiya | Chitra Ganesh | Subodh Gupta | Sakshi Gupta | Probir Gupta | Tushar Joag | Reena Saini Kallat | Jitish Kallat | Bharti Kher | Rajan Krishnan | Tallur L.N. | Huma Mulji | Yamini Nayar | Justin Ponmany | Rajesh Ram | Rashid Rana | T.V. Santhosh | Schandra Singh | Hema Upadhyay | T Venkanna
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