Chris Dercon, the director of the Tate Modern  Art  Gallery , London 
Photo: Chris Dercon and his wife, Sonja Junkers, with MP P. Rajeev at Aspinwall House 
By Shevlin Sebastian
Chris Dercon, the director of the TateModern  Art  Gallery 
Dercon has been very impressed by the art
works at the Kochi-Muziris Biennale and the people who are attending it. “I
have never seen so many families and young people at a biennale,” he says. “I
wanted to read the text placed next to the exhibits, but I could not do so,
because there was a crowd standing and reading it. It means that people are much
more complex thinkers than before. They want to understand these art works.”
And although some have found the art works
baffling, they have been drawn again and again to view them. “An acquaintance I
met in Fort  Kochi 
And Dercon, who had come to Kochi Fort  Kochi 
He says that Kochi Kochi  will
become another Venice 
Meanwhile, one indirect impact of the Kochi
Biennale is that South Indian art has been placed on the global stage. “It is
wonderful,” says Dercon. “I was much impressed by the painting of KP Reji and
the installation work of Sumedh Rajendran.”
So, hopefully, one day, there will be
exhibitions of South Indian art at the Tate, which receives five million
visitors annually. And significantly, a large chunk of them are young people.
“They come to museums not to see art but to
ask questions about sexuality, religion, economics and life,” he says. “This
inner search is not only because of the decline of formal religion, but a loss
of belief in politics and a feeling that there is nobody to represent them.”
Art today makes up for those feelings of
loss. “It is touching on subjects which they feel unable to discuss with their
friends, like identity and sexuality,” says Dercon. “There are some fantastic art
works in this biennale which asks similar questions.”
Dercon has always been interested in Indian
art. When he was the director of the Haus der Kunst (House of Art)
inMunich, he organised an exhibition on Amrita Sher Gil (1913-41). “She was a
young Indian artist who wanted to find a way to express her country in her
art,” says Dercon. “She did not want to obey the rule that the art of the west
is the dominant one. Amrita wanted to say that both [Pablo] Picasso and
[Rabindranath] Tagore were her idols. Amrita took from the East and the West
and was communicating back and forth.”
And Dercon is convinced that most Indian
artists of today will be doing the same thing what Amrita did so many years
ago.
(The New Indian Express, Kochi)
(The New Indian Express, Kochi)

 

 








