Manisha Parekh
(b.1964)A New Delhi based artist, Manisha Parekh has studied painting at the M.S. University, Baroda, as well as at the Royal College of Art in London. Having well known painters -Manu and Madhavi Parekh - for parents, she grew up with paints and brush around her. She has emerged as one of the significant young Indian artists, whether it's for her skillfully executed graphics of articles of daily use, or her more ambitious works in the area of conceptual, site-specific installations.
The main thrust of Manisha's style has always been that of clear, scientific
structure. "I am a figurative painter and have deliberately weaned off academic
theories, such that my own basic training would render a logical approximation
of my work." Parekh has always shown a marked preference for black and white,
which allows her to concentrate on form over color. Exploring the densities,
opacity and transparency of inks, she is fascinated by the life they take on
when in contact with paper, seeming as do to almost animate it.
Using minimal color, she uses harmonious forms that are linked and unfold a
larger vision. Sometimes an oval and a line meet and become something new. She
has a continuing fascination with vessels, and breathes life into inanimate
objects, which themselves take on connotations of the human body. In her series
'Hairy Letters', she has used rice paper, glue drawings and gouaches, exploring
textures rather than tones. Her earlier rugged brushwork has gradually evolved
into loose strokes, and the handling of figures in her work in now done "to
relax muscular as well as pictorial tension," as she says.
Parekh has exhibited extensively in India, London and Germany. She also did a
stint of teaching at Baroda and then joined the Kanoria Centre for Arts in
Ahmedabad.
In 1990, she was awarded a fellowship by the Kanoria centre and also won the
Inlaks Foundation Scholarship for a postgraduate course at the Royal College of
Arts, London.
Manish Parekh lives and works in New Delhi.