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“ATHAHA” Beyond The Boundaries Solo Show Of Paintings By Well-Known Artist Alka Bhrushundi At Jehangir Art Gallery

“From: 3rd to 9th March 2026 “ATHAHA” Beyond the Boundaries Solo Show of Paintings by well-known artist Alka Bhrushundi VENUE: Jehangir Art Gallery AC Gallery -1, 161-B, M. G. Road, Kala Ghoda, Mumbai 400001 Timing: 11am to 7pm. Contact: +91 7703880130 Alka Bhrushundi’s ‘Athaha’ does not merely contemplate infinity; it constructs it. In her works, blue is not a backdrop to devotion but a spatial field in which matter, energy, and consciousness appear suspended. The paintings move between vortex and void, between cellular intricacy and cosmic scale. Spirals open like primordial galaxies. Orb-like forms hover as if embryonic worlds. Vein-like calligraphic tracings pulse across surfaces, suggesting neural networks, river deltas, or unseen cosmological diagrams. The language is abstract, yet unmistakably organic. The artist’s earlier engagement with devotional figuration has not disappeared; it has evolved. What once required an image now unfolds as vibration. The divine is no longer personified but diffused, circulating through colour, texture, and atmosphere. Blue dominates, but it is not singular. It deepens into indigo, fractures with rusted orange, glows with quiet gold. It carries both immersion and combustion. There is a compelling tension in these works: density and lightness coexist. Feathers drift across turbulent grounds. Gold fissures cut through planetary masses. Mist veils intricate structures beneath. The compositions feel simultaneously microcosmic and macrocosmic; as if we are witnessing the inside of a cell and the birth of a universe in the same breath. ‘Athaha’ proposes infinity not as escape, but as interior expansion. These paintings ask the viewer to recalibrate scale, to consider that vastness may reside within the smallest pulse of awareness. In an era of distraction and speed, this work insists on sustained looking. It resists narration and instead offers immersion. Infinity here is not decorative mysticism. It is a disciplined exploration of energy, stillness, and threshold. Stand before these works long enough,...

Between Surface And Depth: The Inner Landscapes I An Exhibition By Bharti Verma And Ruchi Chadha

The exhibition Between Surface and Depth: The Inner Landscapes by Bharti Verma and Ruchi Chadha opened on 3rd March at Gallery No. 2 of Jehangir Art Gallery, Mumbai, drawing artists, students, and members of the city’s art community to an engaging inaugural evening. The exhibition will remain on display until 9th March, presenting a body of work that reflects on inner experience, resilience, and the subtle dialogue between surface and depth. The show was inaugurated by Rajendra Patil, Founder and President of the India Art Festival, along with Rishiraj Sethi, Director of Aura Arts. Their presence added significance to the opening, highlighting the continuing support extended by curators and art platforms toward contemporary artistic practices. The evening was further marked by the presence of distinguished academicians, including Ganesh Tartare, Professor at the Sir J. J. School of Art, and Him Chatterjee, Vice Chancellor of J.J. School of Art Architecture and Design. Their participation brought together perspectives from both the academic and artistic spheres, enriching the spirit of the occasion. Visitors to the opening explored works that move between figuration and symbolic abstraction. Bharti Verma’s paintings reflect an inward gaze, where the human form becomes a site of memory, emotion, and introspection. In contrast, Ruchi Chadha’s lotus-inspired compositions evoke themes of renewal and quiet strength, using the flower as a metaphor for growth and emergence.    Between Surface And Depth: The Inner Landscapes I An Exhibition By Bharti Verma And Ruchi...

“Echoes Of Silence”Art Exhibition By Renowned Artists – Vikas Malhara, Hemant Dhane In Jehangir Art Gallery

From: 17th to 23rd February 2026 “Echoes of Silence” The Dual Art Exhibition by Contemporary Renowned Artists – Vikas Malhara, Hemant Dhane VENUE: Jehangir Art Gallery 161-B, M.G. Road Kala Ghoda, Mumbai 400001 Timing: 11am to 7pm Contact: +91 8329932837, +91 9422775921 A Group Exhibition of Paintings by two contemporary renowned artists – Vikas Malhara, Hemant Dhane are showing their recent works in Jehangir Art Gallery, Kala Ghoda, Mumbai from 17th to 23rd February 2026 Between 11am to 7pm. Vikas Malhara Vikas Malhara operates within a restrained, inward abstraction where form appears only as a trace and colour functions as a carrier of time. The paintings unfold slowly, built from translucent layers of greys, blues, blacks, and earthen whites, creating surfaces that feel weathered rather than composed. Nothing is declared outright; instead, structures emerge hesitantly, as if remembered rather than invented. Horizontal bands, softened blocks, and interrupted planes suggest landscapes without geography; psychic terrains shaped by pause, erosion, and silence. Malhara’s brushwork avoids emphasis; marks blur into one another, allowing edges to dissolve. This deliberate refusal of sharp definition creates a sense of suspended movement, where forms seem to hover between appearing and disappearing. Blacks carry weight but not aggression, functioning more like anchors of gravity than gestures of dominance. What distinguishes these works is their temporality. They appear less painted than settled, as if the surface has absorbed breath, hesitation, and repetition over time. The paintings do not resolve; they remain open, incomplete, and quietly receptive. In a visual culture driven by immediacy and assertion, Malhara’s works insist on slowness. They ask the viewer to linger, to inhabit uncertainty, and to experience abstraction not as an idea, but as a state of being. Hemant Dhane In his works, Hemant Dhane pares abstraction down to its most disciplined, inward essentials. Colour is not applied; it is settled. Greens hover like atmospheric fields, reds burn without aggression,...

“Divine Texture Of Culture” An Exhibition Of Sculptures By Kiran Shigvan, Karuna Shigvan At Nehru Centre Art Gallery

From: 10th to 16th February 2026 “Divine Texture of Culture” An Exhibition of Sculptures by Kiran Shigvan, Karuna Shigvan VENUE: Nehru Center Art Gallery, AC Gallery, Dr. Annie Besant Road, Worli, Mumbai 400018 Timing: 11am to 7pm Contact: +91 77108 68631 / +91 77759 87011 Kiran Shigvan: Kiran Shigvan’s sculptures operate at the intersection of anatomical precision, restraint, and a sensitivity to material behaviour. Working primarily in fibreglass and bronze, he demonstrates a disciplined command over form, allowing the human figure to emerge not as show but as a site of quiet psychological intensity. His sculptures often appear paused mid-thought or mid-breath, suggesting an inward turn rather than an outward performance. There is no excess here, gesture is economised, surfaces are controlled, and the body is treated as a vessel of lived experience rather than an object of idealisation. What is striking is Shigvan’s ability to let material speak without overpowering the subject. Fibreglass lends his figures a contemporary immediacy, while bronze anchors them within a longer sculptural lineage, creating a productive tension between the present and the classical. His figures carry the weight of ordinary vulnerability; fatigue, contemplation, resilience, rendered with dignity and restraint. In an age of overstated narratives, Kiran Shigvan’s sculptures insist on slowness, silence, and deep looking. Karuna Shigvan: Karuna Shigvan’s sculptural language is lyrical, devotional, and inward-looking, shaped by an enduring engagement with feminine presence, musicality, and mythic memory. Her figures, often women, musicians, or dual-faced visages are not portraits in the literal sense but embodiments of states of being: listening, offering, waiting, remembering. Working with bronze and fibreglass, she builds surfaces through intricate texturing that recalls textiles, jewellery, and ritual ornamentation, allowing the skin of the sculpture to carry cultural memory and form. There is a musical rhythm in her work; the flute, the peacock feather, the inward-tilted head, suggesting sound translated into...

ARTIVAL FOUNDATION Presents ART CONTINUUM 2026 An Art Exhibition By 30 Contemporary Renowned Artists From Across India At Carpe Diem Art Gallery, Goa

January 28 to February 8, 2026 ARTIVAL FOUNDATION Presents “ART CONTINUUM 2026” An Art Exhibition by 30 contemporary renowned artists from India VENUE Carpe Diem Art Gallery, 81/2, Godinho (Jaques Godinho) House, Gomes Waddo, Costa Vaddo Road, Majorda, Goa 403713 Timing: 11am to 7pm. For More Details CALL / WHATSAPP + 91 9920804573 + 91 9833949788 Art Continuum: A Journey Through Artistic Expression This Grand exhibition is a harmonious convergence of 30 revered contemporary artists, hailing from the present art world. The talented and renowned artists participating in this exhibition include Art Continuum is a landmark exhibition bringing together 30 respected contemporary artists from across India, reflecting the breadth and vitality of the present art landscape. The participating artists include Bhiva Punekar, Chandrakant Tajbije, Damodar Madgaonkar, Deepak Garud, Dhammapal Kirdak,Gautam Mukherjee, Gopal Pardeshi, Jaydeb Dolui, Jayshree Savani, Kappari Kishan, Manoj Das, Maredu Ramu, Mohan Naik, Mohit Naik, Nanda Pathak, Nilanjana Roy, Paneri Punekar, Pradip Sarkar, Puja Agrawal, Rahul Kirdak, Raju Autade, Reshma Shirke, Rucha Wavare, Satish Wavare, Seemmaa Hedaoo, Shailesh Gurav, Shashikant Patade, Dr. Shefali Bhujbal, Simrit Luthra, Tania Fatnani, Vaishali Vijay, Virendra Chopde, Vishal Phasale, Vishwajeet Naik among others. Throughout the grand chronicle of humanity, art has served as the cornerstone of civilization. Long before the dawn of spoken language, our ancestors began to etch narratives and dreams onto cave walls, laying the foundation for the powerful language of visual communication. From the prehistoric whispers on stone to the contemporary hum of AI-generated artistry, art has been the enduring thread weaving together tribes, societies, and the very fabric of human experience. Art transcends the boundaries of individual disciplines, permeating every field of knowledge and fostering a rich network of expression through diverse styles and cultural voices. While the undeniable visual impact of art remains captivating, it is the platform itself that truly ignites artistic evolution. Art shows and...

JMD Art Gallery Presents “Breath Of The Infinite” A Group Exhibition Of Paintings By 5 Contemporary Renowned Artists

From: January 16 – 31, 2026 JMD Gallery Presents “Breath of The Infinite” A Group Exhibition of Paintings by Chetan Katigar, Dinesh Kumar Parmar, Pradip Kumar Sau, Ranjit Kurmi, Santosh Kumar Sandilya VENUE: JMD Art Gallery J – 109, Ansa Industrial Estate, Saki Vihar Road, Saki Naka, Near Shiv Sagar Restaurant, Andheri East, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400072 Phone: 093231 29595 / 09221133506 www.jmdartgallery.com Timing: 11am to 7pm Breath of The Infinite A Group show of Paintings by five contemporary renowned artists – Chetan Katigar, Dinesh Kumar Parmar, Pradip Kumar Sau, Ranjit Kurmi, Santosh Kumar Sandilya will be displayed at JMD Art Gallery, J-109, Ansa Industrial Estate, Saki Naka, Andheri(West), Mumbai from 16th to 31st January 2026 between 11am to 7pm. Santosh Kumar Sandilya paints Kashi not as a picturesque city but as a living cosmology, where architecture, river, boats, and human ritual are bound into one breathing organism. Working with Ganga -jal as both medium and meaning, his layered ghats turn Varanasi into a site where faith, time, and everyday life flow through the same visual bloodstream. Ranjit Kurmi’s abstraction moves like a charged weather system; bands of colour collide, fracture, and recombine, producing a painterly turbulence that feels both lyrical and volatile. His canvases hold the tension between structure and release, where pigment behaves like memory in motion rather than fixed form. Chetan Katigar builds a lush narrative theatre where myth, music, flora, and human presence fold into a single ornamental rhythm, giving devotional storytelling the pulse of contemporary colour. His figurative worlds feel ceremonial yet intimate, where Krishna, musicians, animals, and forest become a single breathing choreography rather than separate motifs. Pradip Kumar Sau constructs a metaphysical theatre in blue, where floating heads, ascending triangles amidst celestial bodies, and drifting bodies map the human mind’s restless pull between gravity and transcendence. His paintings stage the psyche as a...

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