Thinking Tantra

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Includes Prabhakar Barwe, Tom Chamberlain, Shezad Dawood, Nicola Durvasula, Alexander Gorlizki, Goutam Ghosh, Prafulla Mohanti, Jean-Luc MouleÌ€ne, Anthony Pearson,  Sohan Qadri, Prem Sahib, G.R. Santosh, Richard Tuttle, Acharya Vyakul and Claudia Wieser.

Famously introduced to the West by Ajit Mookerjee in his seminal 1967 Tantra Art, Tantric drawings have an unwritten history that is explored here for the first time. A complex body of beliefs and practices, Tantra enables individuals to conjoin with cosmic forces and inhabit alternative dimensions. Omnipresent to those that are attuned, there are tools that facilitate tantric transcendence: rituals, sculptures, drawings, maps, and chants, to name but a few. At different times, in different places, and in different ways, artists have taken up elements of Tantra and adapted or incorporated them into works of contemporary abstraction. Art historians and art dealers have been responsible for categorising and defining Tantric drawings in the west; this exhibition presents artworks, in a range of media, that suggest a range of alternative perspectives.

Starting with anonymous Tantric drawings from a span of two to three hundred years, the exhibition continues with work from the '60s, '70s and '80s by Indian artists who either practiced Tantric rituals or customs, were part of the Neo-Tantra movement, or appreciated Tantra as a socially relevant form of self-expression: Prabhakar Barwe, Prafulla Mohanti, Sohan Qadri, G.R. Santosh  and Acharya Vyakul.  

'Thinking Tantra' speaks to the impulse Tantric drawings inspire in many artists to explore multiple dimensions. This exhibition brings together drawings made in the Tantric tradition, with works by artists who know these drawings well, respond to them, and actively relate them to their own practice.

The artworks take varied forms including colourful works on paper in watercolour and coloured pencil by Nicola Durvasula, Alexander Gorlizki and Claudia Weiser; reliefs in wood and other materials by Richard Tuttle; linear sculpture by Jean-Luc Moulène; works on vintage fabric by Shezad Dawood; repeated mark-making onto a paper surface by Tom Chamberlain;  and solarisations by Anthony Pearson.

The exhibition is a collaboration between Rebecca Heald, Amrita Jhaveri and Drawing Room, London. A first iteration of the exhibition was at Jhaveri Contemporary, Mumbai, in early 2015.

For further information please visit, https://drawingroom.org.uk/exhibitions/thinking-tantra