Truth In One's Stride
Art India|August 2019
G. R. Iranna’s work at the Venice Biennale is a call for mobilizing the Gandhi waiting within each of us. Premjish Achari discusses his practice.
Premjish Achari
Truth In One's Stride

Since the last few years, the national political discourse has centered around the criticism of two crucial figures of modern Indian politics – Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru. While the former is considered as the Father of the Nation, the latter is regarded as the Architect of Modern India. The range of criticism against these figures spans different political persuasions – from the Left and the Right and from Ambedkarite sections. Gandhi’s own display of racism and his contempt for blacks during his stay in South Africa have been invoked recently to question his stature as an icon of peace. Back in India, organizations that have an antagonistic relationship with his political ideology have left no stone unturned to dismiss and discredit his politics of non-violence or ahimsa. This virtue, which according to Gandhi, should be valued by society above all other important tenets, has been condemned as the characteristic feature of a coward who is unable to defend his country.

While Gandhi’s legacy of ahimsa is under threat back home, his role and relevance in our times are being explored by eight artists participating in the Indian pavilion in the current edition of the Venice Biennale. The Indian Pavilion featured works by both contemporary and modern artists like Atul Dodiya, Ashim Purkayastha, Jitish Kallat, Shakuntala Kulkarni, G. R. Iranna, Nandalal Bose, Rummana Hussain and M. F. Husain. The artworks locate Gandhi in the present context and test his political relevance against the high tide of jingoism and hate crimes. Artists have used various mediums and strategies to address this crisis by foregrounding Gandhi’s political ideology.

This story is from the August 2019 edition of Art India.

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This story is from the August 2019 edition of Art India.

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