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Best known for his sculptures, Dhruva Mistry combines
religious art of ancient civilizations along with the popular art of the
bazaar. His works bear a rich narrative quality and varies in style and
scale- from small sculptures in bronze to monumental works for public
spaces, made of sand, cement, stone and stainless steel.
Dhruva Mistry studied at the Faculty of Fine Arts, Maharaja Sayajirao
University, Baroda (1974-81) before going on to study further at the Royal
College of Art, London (1981-83) on a British Council Scholarship. He has
had several solo and group shows in India and abroad since 1976. His first
was mounted at Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai (1982). In the year between 1984
and ’85, Mistry was an artist in residence at Kettle’s Yard Gallery with a
Fellowship at Churchill College, Cambridge. Since then Mistry has exhibited
extensively in United Kingdom, Europe and Japan. His works have been
included in several prestigious collections including those at the Lalit
Kala Akademi, the Tate Gallery, the Arts Council, the British Council, the
Victoria & Albert Museum, London, the National Museum of Wales, Cardiff, and
the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Japan. His public-art installations include a
sculptural pieces installed at Goodwood, Sussex, the Yorkshire Sculpture
Park, and the Hakone Open Air Museum, Japan. Mistry has also been
commissioned to produce sculptures for the Victoria Square in Birmingham,
U.K and Tamano City, Japan. In 1994, he was selected by the Fukuoka Art
Museum, Japan, to mount his works at the show, Asian Artists Today – Fukuoka
Annual VII. In 1991, Mistry was given the honour of being elected into the
Royal Academy of Arts and in 1993, was invited to be a Fellow with the Royal
Society of British Sculptors, London. On returning to Baroda, in 1997, he
was appointed as Professor, Head of Sculpture and Dean of Faculty of Fine
Arts, M.S.University, Baroda. In 2001, he was awarded the prestigious,
Honorary CBE (Commander of the most excellent Order of the British Empire).
His works, apart from being conceptual, also engage with the process of
art-making, while alluding to the intellectual debate between the artist and
viewer, whether implied or expressed, that a work of art premises and/or
gives rise to.
Mistry’s present oeuvre Steel, Stainless Still, comprises of free standing
sculptures and reliefs where he has explored the materiality of steel in
terms of its contrasts. While he brings forth the frigidness of the
material, he also discovers sensuality in the medium. The smooth unblemished
surface of the material provides Mistry with singular possibilities which he
seizes to reveal. Time and again, Mistry explores the surrounding boundaries
of space where his figures are planted. The artist’s desire for simplicity
prompted him to incorporate the elemental forms of the square and circle in
the current oeuvre, identified as Kaliscape, Spatial Diagram, Still
Life, Maya Medallion and Maya Head, a reduction to the basic elements of
shapes that constitute life around one.
In works titled Maya, there is no conscious attempt to touch upon the
mythological aspect, however Mistry concedes that his works reveal a mystery
of interpretative insights and of course the ambiguity of Maya- the illusion
of the phenomenal world.
The artist has been working in steel since 1999, but turned to metal sheet
only in 2003. His desire to explore the finest possibilities of physical
sculpture initiated him to identify the simplest way of constructing a free
standing sculpted steel figure. Seated Figure is one of his early
attempts whereas Fallen Torso is a more complex composition in steel.
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