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Drawing Room: Richa Arya sees the price of urbanism in Deepak Kumar’s art

Updated on: Oct 04, 2024 02:20 PM IST

What can bird skeletons, blueprints, glass and geometry tools tell us about how our cities are changing? Deepak Kumar shows us how to read between the skylines

I saw Deepak Kumar’s Warning Line at the Indian Ceramics Triennale in 2023, where it immediately drew my attention, both for its scale and its theme. The gigantic work depicts the fragile skeleton of a green pigeon. In it, ceramic pieces of various sizes are assembled together and used as the backdrop for drawings and paintings showing avian bone structures, tree roots, geometry tools, and the kind of blueprints commonly seen in urban planning.

In Crossing (2021-2022) Deepak Kumar uses natural elements mixed with urban themes to showcase ecological issues. (IMAGE COURTESY: RICHA ARYA AND DEEPAK KUMAR)

The scale of urban expansion and its irreversible toll on the natural world, especially on bird species, strikes viewers right away. Its stark beauty and the profound sense of loss it evoked really moved me. Kumar has a way of using a variety of media, and combining science and tech, to tell a story that is bigger than its parts. And most of his works examine the degrading effects of urbanisation on the environment. He grew up in rural Bihar, and has spoken of spending his early years amid the region’s rich natural beauty. As an artist who now lives in Delhi, the move to a concrete jungle shapes much of his work.

Warning Line (2023) uses the skeleton of a green pigeon to depict species endangered by urbanisation. (IMAGE COURTESY: RICHA ARYA AND DEEPAK KUMAR)

Warning Line’s focus on the destruction of ecosystems due to urbanisation resonates with my ongoing research for a project that highlights the water crisis and pollution in Haryana. The more I engage with it, the more I see its relevance in the broader conversation about sustainability and the need for a more conscious approach to development. It reinforces my belief in the power of art to raise awareness and provoke critical thought about pressing environmental issues.

Delhi-based artist Richa Arya works primarily with repurposed scrap metal and other industrial materials. Her intricate sculptures act as symbols of feminised labour. They focus on the domestic life of women in urban Haryana as well as that of migrant women in Delhi.

From HT Brunch, October 05, 2024

Follow us on www.instagram.com/htbrunch

 
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