As much of the world continues to shelter in place, those states and countries slowly easing restrictions are heading out into a world adorned with new art. Tribal artists, Graffiti artists, street artists, and muralists have been taking over social media spaces during the pandemic, using their art forms to express beauty, support, and dissent. From Mumbai to New York, illustrators, cartoonists, painters, and graffitists are depicting their current world view through their art-while galleries seek out new ways of offering support.
Rohan More, Mumbai
This contemporary visual artist has been making art for five years and his breakthrough moment was with the series 'Vilayti Shauk', a tongue-in-cheek take on hype culture. `This artwork reflects the irony of the lockdown in India. As humans, I think we're beings of subjugation, and animals often bear the brunt of that. Now that we are confined to our homes, the earth finally has space to breathe and animals are hopefully getting a break from relentless human activity. That's what I wanted to communicate through the artwork: that, for once, the captor is now the captive.`
Chotti Tekam, Bhopal
Chotti Tekam is an individual contemporary artist from Kotra Sulatanabad, Bhopal. Her work is based on folklore, tribal customs of her Gondi tribe, and her ethnic group. Her painting maybe a seed of reality visible or the work could be abstract or it could even be a combination of the two. She started her artistic and cultural caravan in the year 1993 with her husband `Santosh Tekam` who is also a refined craftsman and tribal artist. Their work has been showcased at India's greatest museum Indira Gandhi Rashtriya Manav Sangrahalaya. When we asked her to tell us about her work of art she said, `Through love, tribes have been intermixing colors to reveal a new rainbow world, According to The Gond belief system, all things are inhabited by a spirit and, consequently, are sacred. Gond paintings are a reflection of man's close connection with his natural surroundings.` She recently started her Facebook community called #CaravanIndie with a sole motive for people to share their knowledge about their own traditions, culture, and ethnic heritage.
Dhruvi Acharya, Mumbai
Acharya started painting in 1995 when she moved to the US and became homesick. Her first professional exhibition was in 1998. She describes her work as a visual diary depicting her thoughts, observations, feelings, and experiences, focusing on the psychological and emotional aspects of an urban woman's life in a world teeming with discord, violence, and pollution. She's currently working on a series during the lockdown in India. `My current watercolors are in response to a world in the grips of a pandemic when more apparent than ever are the repercussions of our misplaced priorities and our entitled attitudes towards our earth and all living things. On the day of the Janata curfew, in an attempt to get rid of stress, I decided to just go to my studio-which is in the same building as my residence-and paint whatever was on my mind. Since then, I've continued to do so.`
Tara Anand, Mumbai/New York City
Anand is a Mumbai-based illustrator who is currently pursuing a BFA in illustration at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. `This artwork is part of an ongoing project where I'm drawing my friends and family every time they Facetime me and intend to keep this up until I can see them in person. This is an attempt to record what will be my only point of contact with people outside of my house for a while, and to see how our interactions evolve and adapt to the situation.`
Conclusion
In times like this creativity can help us deal with and overcome a crisis, I personally believe, " Creativity is just an epiphany or great revelation or realization of oneself ", I think this ongoing lockdown has given us time to think over upon ourselves and the things around us.