I am a multidisciplinary artist from Bangalore, studied in MS University. Currently practicing in Bangalore, Karnaraka. My work has developed in number of ways over the years yet from the very beginning of my art practice, I have workded in Painting, Printmaking, Installation, Video Art and Live/ Performance art. My intention is to blend these mediums into an interdisciplinary language.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Sheet Happen -Time Out Bangalore


One Monday last month, as the city slipped into the bustling rhythms of the morning, Dimple Shah began supervising the unloading of 15 boxes from a truck that had driven up to Gallery Sumukha. She was just emerging from about with conjunctivitis, which she contracted before undertaking a train journey to the city from Baroda– but with a tight schedule leading up to the opening of her latest show Catharsis in a Forbidden Zone, Shah couldn't afford to let physical discomfort derail her work.

Over the next few days the artist had the formidable job of unpacking 400 kgs of material and getting her show ready. Possibly the most daunting task – setting up the extraordinary piece titled “Catharsis Chamber” – a shower cubicle that she designed, surrounded by PVC curtains and shelves made of acrylic sheets. Once the basic structure of the cubicle was ready, Shah would have to line the shelves with 1,800 medicine bottles, each one filled with either ash, salt, hair or nail clippings, to create a room for a viewer to enter, a space permeated with a sense of privacy and almost ritualistic calm.

“I initially wanted to use pieces of my own nails for the work,” said Shah, who, while talking about her work, veers between earnestness and giggly delight (the former, in this case). “I started collecting clippings two years ago.” Does that mean she’s been planning the details of this show for the last two years? “No,” she clarified. “I just have a habit of collecting things which I might decide to use. I would have used my own clippings, but in a few days I found that they had started attracting ants, so I threw them away. I don’t know why ants were interested in my nails. Maybe the ants inBaroda[where Shah studied, at the Maharaja Sayajirao University] are a little mad.”

The clippings that finally became a part of the show were artificial, procured by Shah after scouring dozens of beauty shops. But there was a problem. “They looked terrible, too artificial and white. My friend and I sat and painted each individual clipping so that it looked a little more natural.” What about the hair in the other bottles? “That’s my hair,” said Shah. “I collected it over two years.”

The sense of theatricality in Shah’s installation work is perhaps explained by the fact that, for many years, she’s had a parallel interest in performance art. Through her training inBaroda, she held performance art shows in which she herself featured, often rendered unrecognisable by blotches of paint. And over the years, photographs of these performances showed up in Shah’s print works and paintings, along with other traces of herself – an image of an eye, a hand print, a diary entry.

“You might enjoy this,” said Shah, momentarily distracted in the middle of going over slides of her work, and flipping open a notebook crammed with preparatory notes and sketches.
A glance through its pages suggested an almost obsessive bent of mind. Reams of notes about psychoanalytic concepts jostle for space with conceptual diagrams, such as the ones of imaginary scientific apparati that Shah ended up fabricating out of copper for Forbidden Zone.

In creating these apparati, and, indeed, in all her explorations into the show’s central theme of alchemy, Shah seems to be responding to a need to explain the inexplicable, and to organise the chaotic storm of ideas that rage through her mind. And while some of her earlier works can bewilder the viewer just because of the sheer number of elements used, in newer works like “Catharsis Chamber” these impulses are expressed simply, with an immediate and undeniable power.

Showing off the sketch of a piece of apparatus, which didn’t make it to the final show, Shah said it was a challenge to get vendors to carry out her orders. “They go crazy when I show them what I want done,” she said. “They’re used to normal orders. I have to spend days with them. They eat my head, and I eat their heads.”

These tedious transactions more than exhausted her, Shah admitted. “Every single work seems to take a toll on my body,” she said, gesturing towards the example of her infected eye. Then, a smile appearing, and her tone growing kinder, “But it doesn’t matter. After all, art is about hard work.”

Ajay Krishnan
Time Out Bangalore
October 01 2010 7.14am

Saturday, March 9, 2013

To cleanse from within


Dimple B Shah gives an expression to catharsis through Paintings, Installations and Sculptures

dimple_b_shah_painter_performance_artist_india
Dimple Shah with her paintings. Photo: Sangeetha Devi Dundoo, The Hindu.

The first installation that greets visitors at Kalakriti Art Gallery is a shower chamber, which Dimple B Shah calls the ‘Katharsis Chamber’. The curtains of the shower place bear psychological theories of Carl Rogers, the process of Calcination and the glass walls of the chamber are lined with rows of tiny bottles. Nothing is here for ornamentation of by accident, says the artist. The bottles are filled with shreds of hair, nails and ash. An recorded audio completes the picture providing the sound of water streaming in.


‘Kartharsis in Forbidden Zones’ is an exhibition of installations, paintings and sculptures that communicate Dimple’s ideas. It took her three and a half years to complete this series, she tells us. “The installations took time. Once I worked on the concept and made detailed sketches, I took help of carpenters and technicians who cut acrylic sheets, wooden and iron planks. I scouted junk shops and found a 100-year-old shop selling old bottles and sourced these for the installation. For another installation, I needed wheels of a cart and after much trial and error, I travelled to Baroda to find the kind of wheels I was looking for,” she says. 

Dimple’s paintings reflect her study of metals, their properties and their effect on our lives. While studying art in Glasgow, she researched on Jain philosophy and imagery. “I came across a book on metals, alchemy and equated what I read to the seven basic planets in astrology and the seven chakras described in yoga. I learnt about lead and it’s correlation to Saturn. I read that nail samples of criminals have an increased lead content in them. I also came to know that women have more traces of copper in them. It was fascinating as I dug deeper into metals and the way they affect us,” she explains. In one of her paintings, Dimple uses a chameleon to represent the changing state of mercury. A glass jar with a sample of the metal corresponding to her paintings and a page from her workbook, detailing her paintings and installation are there for the audience to correlate and introspect.

dimple_b_shah_indian_artist_painter_performance_artist
Dimple completes her work through a performance. She’s been supplementing her work with a performance since her college days in 2001. Her performance has no dialogues, doesn't fall strictly into the realms of theater though Dimple has studied theater. For an earlier exhibition titled Saffron Borders, she gave vent to people’s fear psychosis in the aftermath of the Godhra riots by encircling herself with a ring of fire and reacting to it. “This is the way I connect with people through a visual medium of Painting, Sculpture, Installation of expressing my thoughts by way of performance,” she says. 

What’s interesting is this artist did her bachelors in commerce before shifting gears to fine arts. “After B. Com I realized I was truly interested in arts and did a five-year bachelor course in visual arts, followed by masters in M.S University, Baroda and one year in Glasgow,” she smiles. As a parting shot, she admits installations don’t come cheap. “I am yet to sell any of  them. But I don’t think of returns when I work on an idea,” she says.



Sangeetha Devi Dundoo,
The Hindu, Hyderabad, March 8, 2013



"Kartharsis in Forbidden Zones" an exhibition of Paintings, Illustrations, Prints & Sculpture 
is on at Kalakriti Art Gallery, Hyderabad till March 13.


Wednesday, March 6, 2013

‘Katharsis in Forbidden Zones’ by Dimple B Shah



KATHARSIS IN FORBIDDEN ZONES

Paintings, Sculptures, Installation & Performance by DIMPLE B SHAH
(Part of Women’s March 2013)
Preview: Wednesday, 6th March at 6.30 pm
Venue: Kalakriti Art Gallery, Hyderabad

http://hyderabad.afindia.org/katharsis-in-forbidden-zones-by-dimple-shah/







Alliance Française of Hyderabad and Kalakriti Art Gallery, in association with AGS Four Winds
and Pitars invites you to the opening of ‘Katharsis in Forbidden Zones’, a solo show by Dimple B
Shah.






Purification and healing process in various mediums is the base in Dimple B Shah’s solo show
‘Katharsis in Forbidden Zones’. The idea is to bring the effect of these elements and by studying
them in various aspects like psychological, sociological, ecological and philosophical ways to
understand society and self. Her performances deal with social issues in a theatrical expression,
along with a video installation.

The works in this exhibition represent, epitomise and evoke various alchemical substances to
suggest a precise examination of their properties, the laboratory paraphernalia alluding to
different stages of purification and transformation, while a host of more or less ordinary objects
link the findings of the quasi-science and modern scholarship with the character of our reality,
human imperfections or impurities as well as hope and ideals. The large canvases deal with
the basic classical metals of alchemy in a manner that binds them with and lets them disclose
rudimentary qualities of the human disposition. The artist begins from a position of neutral
objectivity and in the centre of the paintings places a researcher’s table whose frontal position in
vanishing point perspective seems to display it clearly to the viewer. The table covered by white
cloth introduces the sense of an old-fashioned study but with a tinge of domestic interior. The
vessels for chemical experiments and a profusion of other objects demonstrate their nature and
connections at various planes. With the help of the titles one can grasp some of the content,
whereas, indeed, like in the obscure science of alchemy, the specific, often complex relationships
between motifs necessitate detailed elucidation. On longer scrutiny, the objects arranged so
as to indicate their condition begin to stir responding to one another. As one recalls the words
denoting energy, flow and spirit that recur in Dimple’s drawings, the items on the table top
which usually include devices that heat substances contained in glass retorts appear to enact
self-presentation and transformation, like performers explaining themselves to the attentive
audience. The sense of a nearly theatrical scene is enhanced by the large format of the paintings
that invite an immediate, static focus from the spectator. The precise, sparing realism of the
rendering here aims at lucid objectivity, and yet an imperceptive mood of enigmatic, fragile
transmutation emerges with the glossy translucence of the glass tubes, beaked containers,
smooth bowls and globes, etc. The atmosphere gains an eerie note spreading into the saturated,
murky backgrounds that conjure an endless landscape engulfing the sky merged with the ground
over an expanse of flatness and indistinct depth, its darkness not relieved by the tonalities of
ominous, muted radiance conjuring a somewhat surrealistic impact. The intuition of the real and
the subconscious blends then, as a home interior contrasts as well as blends with the external
space indicative of its cosmic dimensions, the artist considering her theme at the same time on
the micro and macro scale, at the personal and social or all-encompassing levels.

Extract from Ms. Marta Jakimowicz’s essay for Dimple B Shah’s solo show ‘Katharsis in a
forbidden zones’ at Gallery Sumukha in 2010.


About the Artist

Dimple B Shah obtained her Diploma in Painting from KEN School of Arts, Bangalore in 1998,
and Post Diploma in Printmaking from the Faculty of Fine Arts MS University of Baroda in 2001.
In the year 2006 Dimple went to Glasgow Print studio to get further training in Printmaking,
Glasgow, UK. Dimple was awarded the First Gold Prix in 7th Engraving Biennale, Versailles,
France in 2009, and National award from Lalit Kala Academy, Chandigarh. She was also awarded
the Commonwealth Arts & Crafts Award, UK in 2005, and Junior Research Fellowship by
Department of Culture, Government of India during 2000-2002.


Dimple, in the very beginning of her art practice, went on to experiment on variety of
media. Her works comprises of Painting, Printmaking, Sculptures, Installations, Video and
Performance Art. Her recent performance include ‘RIP (Rest in Peace)’, Sethu Sundaram
Project, Bangalore; ‘Dual Paradox’, Rasa Art Gallery, Bangalore; ‘Milk, Melancholy and Me’,
Venkatappa Art Gallery, Bangalore, and, ‘One in Hundred years’, NGMA, Mumbai.

Dimple’s solo works has been showcased at Gallery Sumukha, Bangalore; Gallery III, Glasgow
Print Studio, Glasgow, Scotland; Central Park, Bangalore, and Gallery Akkruti, Bangalore. Apart
from these her works were featured in several group exhibitions, includes, ‘Cross Border
Constellations’, Theertha, IAC, Srilanka; 1st United Art Fair, New Delhi; National Awardees show,
Central Lalit Kala Academy, Bhubaneswar; 7th Engraving Biennale, Versailles, France; ‘Present
and Future, NGMA, Mumbai, to name a few.

On view until 13 March 2013, 11am -7pm

Opening on Wed, 6th March at 6.30pm till 13th March at Kalakriti Art Gallery, Open to all

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Post Oil City And Bangalore Gardens Reloaded


Connecting Ideas - Marta Jakimowicz, Feb 3, 2013, DHNS

The dual exhibition “Post-Oil City: The History of the City’s Future” and “Bangalore Gardens Reloaded” was a very interesting event which strove to interactively connect ideas about the metropolitan past and its environmentally relevant solutions for later as well as the often similarly anchored, innovative efforts and inquiry among architects or urban planners and scientists with those of visual artists.

The event enabled by the Institute for Foreign Cultural Relations, Stuttgart in co-operation with ARCH+ and the Max Mueller Bhavan here was part of the German curator Elke Falat’s project to be realised in different countries and continents. It had three parts that evidently and not so evidently added to one another and framed one another. 

The main element that remains the same in diverse locations belongs to the precise charts and drawings presenting innovative, ecology-friendly plans for city buildings, waste managements, transport and such. The several cases for study were brought to the Visvesvaraya Museum (January 18 to February 3) and shown in such a way together with the art works by Bangalore artists as to nearly mingle with the venue’s own scientific display, thus underscoring the linkages of purpose and method behind all the participating agents.  

The artists were asked to “critically react to Post-Oil City in the local context, to develop utopias and question them” considering the recent boom growth of the city that has altered its garden-like character. One may suspect that there perhaps was not enough time for sustained work on the ambitious aim, since the new contributions addressing it directly were infrequent, most addressing the contemporary city phenomenon either in a broader manner relating to a diversity of angles or sourcing from already available work in an akin manner. 

Although the whole was rich and included a number of really good concepts and their visual expressions, the level was not exactly even. Another problem may have been one regarding the accessibility of intended meaning when presented in a public, educatory space. The main hall lined up by cases with urban plans seemed to be held together by its focus on the vast floor installation by Sunoj D, whose multi-seed balls with planting instructions evoked both unnatural farming conditions and a longing to overcome those.


While Ayisha Abraham’s video collage of old home movies conjured a sense of dynamic, vivacious history informing the present and Suresh Jayaram’s quilt hanging paid an emotional homage to the once green city, many artists dealt with difficult issues of Bangalore metamorphosing beyond its capacity. If on a somewhat literal note, Bhavani G D offered a video documentation of lakes depleted of water and Raghu Kondur depicted the dangers of construction labour, Suresh Kumar G resorted to a personal gesture filling an enclosure for vermin-compost with plastic trash. 


Among the best contributions one found Dimple B Shah’s noisy, hard and threatening cubicle of urban claustrophobia and Surekha’s Ragi crop growing from a field of discarded computer keyboards, besides the nostalgic lament for the absence of sparrows by Mangala Anebermath. Two exceptional works delved into subtler but significant changes in the occurring: one being the multimedia installation by Bharathesh G D attuning itself to the emergent connections between people and city grids, objects and materials, the other the text-based questioning of mutating relationships between contrasting notions by Prayas Abhinav. Thinking about the shape of the future, a calamitous outcome was foreseen by a gas-masked Madhu D in his performance photograph against felled trees. Nandesh Shanthi Prakash, nonetheless, chose an optimistic prospect of canvassing for alternative energy in his bicycle-born distribution of bright toy windmills. 

Sunday, February 3, 2013

BANGALORE GARDENS RELOADED


No Space To Escape -"TO BE OR NOT TO BE"



As the city growing bigger and bigger everyday and more and more people migrating from various parts of the country and making Bangalore as their home. This constant inflow is leading to a very different transition of development that the city is experiencing leaving the city in a chaotic, claustrophobic and suffocating space. Argument can be good development or a bad development but fact remains that the city has changed drastically and slowly becoming the city like others without any identity except being just a concrete habitat. The cityscape of Bangalore has changed to accommodate flyovers, buildings, roads and metro etc. slowly and rapidly replacing greenery with concrete.


This installation work basically evoke the feeling of helplessness of situation ambushed, suddenly attacked like situation where no space to escape and exit (a trap). In this work the audience will be forced to confront the situation which they normally do it in everyday life subconsciously, but here they will consciously face it directly, there by alerting there mind to counter the question and seek for answers.Visually this work is in form of concrete box, inside the box there will be 360 degree view of existing city they live in, which is with cement and other material. the work  bring in main essential characteristic of city in minimal form. The experience within the box (claustrophobic and suffocating space leaving no space to breath) represent the psychological situation of mind the mental space.
Over powering of concrete and its inevitable super imposed presence in our daily life which is symbolically represents mans thought and body slowly turning into concrete form with no space for nature and not being in touch with ourselves. 

The installation is  memorabilia of the changing phase. The smell of concrete initially will attract the audience hiding danger ahead. This work is a presentation of the dilemma - Development (a distortion) – Good, Bad or Necessary. My idea is to bring the attention where we really need to look and what we really need to think about? This work provokes us to question ourselves where we are leading to? Is this road leading to Utopian land or land where there is no space to live?



Dimple B Shah 2013

Thursday, November 22, 2012

For Reconciliation

Sethu Samudram Project, India-Srilanka collaborative project curated by Suresh Jayaram

It has been some years since #1 Shanthi Road started the Sethu Samudram project allowing interaction between local artists and their Sri Lankan counterparts from Theertha. In the face of earlier and grave recent history linking both countries as well as effecting in conflict, it has been dominated by geographic, socio-political and cultural issues, their pronouncement being as important as seeking a common ground and reconciliation. 

Although sadly, art still does not reach anyone beyond the Art circles proper, such ventures remain vital. Previous efforts of the artists who often participate continuously and of Suresh Jayaram, the moving spirit behind it all, have contributed then to their fleshing out during the recent joint residency, whose character was led by his curatorial guidance or perhaps only stimulus. 

The resulting exhibition from November 1st to 9th had two young participants from both lands led by the desire for overcoming the three decades of a complex and destructive war by reference, evocation and by drawing the onlooker into the mainly interactive installations. 

The Bangalore artists seemed to approach the task in a compassionate and encompassing way. With much immediacy in visual and emotive terms, Dimple Shah, using the act of erasure of suffering images and by gifting sea salt, engaged the opponent aggressiveness, victims and perpetrators of violence on all the sides, her own gesture and the visitor’s active response through an appeal for mercy and at the same time for forgiveness.

The work of  Prakash L was sincere too, perturbed and empathic, whereas the metaphorical content partly came through, as the blood running through the tubes forming a soldier’s boot, menacing over crematorium shots spoke of rebirth and renewal. Yet it partly remained unclear and unconvincing. One would have wished for an equally loaded and forgiveness-seeking position from the Sri Lankans who, however, preferred a cooler, statement-like, approach. 

“A Story of Dhal and Onion” by Prasanna Ranabahu and Lalith Manage was an accordion book with words and photographic prints alluding to the 1983 war with its ideological, commercial and psychological aspects whose realities, though, needed elucidation here. 

Manage’s T-shirts for sale calling for contact through the use of Sinhala, Tamil, Kannada and English scripts along with rangoli dotted lines was a nice but somewhat over-used idea.



Marta Jakimowicz
19 November 2012,  Deccan Herald,Bangalore.
Photographs by - B.S. Shivaraju (Cop Shiva)
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