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Art As Laughter

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RICHA BHATIA

Posted: Feb 03, 2008 at 0131 hrs IST

It’s tough to define Farhad Hussain as a typical artist, considering his irrepressible sense of humour. The 32-year-old Delhi based artist is almost apologetic for his uneventful life in his hometown Santiniketan in West Bengal. “There were no traumatized childhood or personal demons. Humour is my forte and I like to show the complexities of life through that,” he grins.

Unlike his contemporaries from Santiniketan, who ruminate over the political unrest and the consequences of media blitzkrieg in the society, Hussain gives us flatly depicted scenes of domestic bliss of a nuclear family which is his iconographic focus. But there is a sexual weirdness in his latest series, After the Theatre of Absurdity, all acrylic on canvas, on display at Vadehra Art Gallery in Okhla these days.

The usually reticent artist’s images on canvas which are culled from his acquaintances’ family albums are quirky and mischievous, hinting at society’s sexual double standards.

At first glance, you might be overawed by the big brightly colored grinning members from a family. Incandescent display of love, a violently pink dog and a man with a lascivious grin twiddling with a woman’s underpants appear as though they are in a psychedelic state. “You might be able to spot me as well in one of them,” quipped Hussain. Besides, the illusion of happiness, animals float in and out of the canvas. “They appear as if they have been taken from a Walt Disney cartoon,” says art critic Uma Prakash.

Making a departure from vibrant colours is After the Theatre of Absurdity Part-I which has a mélange of men tugging at each other in a haze of black doom. In the background, caricaturist apes are locked in a waltz. “Humans did evolve from apes and it is in the most subversive of acts that animalistic passions resurface,” explains Hussain. Of all the 12 canvases, Happy Birthday seems the most normal with frolicking adults.

“The work which has a KG Subramanyan touch puzzles the viewer magnificently with its sexual overtones,” said Prakash. The prices of his work begin from Rs 6 lakhs.

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