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Shilpa Gupta

 The artist Shilpa Gupta has created a number of on-line art works. Gupta creates
artwork using interactive video, websites, objects, photographs, sound and public
performances
 Artwork is done to probe and examine subversively such themes as desire, religion,
notions of security on the street and on the imagined. She touches on aspects of
current, universal issues including environmental degradation, globalization,
terrorism, war, intolerance, gender politics and human rights.
 Gupta is a Mumbai based artist who explores the development of modern politics by
examining notions of technology, human rights, militarism, and security and the
development of these fields upon contemporary artistic reality throughout each of her
works.

Anish Kapoor
 Anish Kapoor, Indian-born British sculptor known for his use of abstract
biomorphic forms and his penchant for rich colours and polished surfaces.
 Kapoor was increasingly recognized for his biomorphic sculptures and installations,
made with materials as varied as stone, aluminum, and resin, that appeared to
challenge gravity, depth and perception.

Atul Dodiya
Dodiya’s paintings, assemblages and sculpture-installations embody a passionate,
sophisticated response to the sense of crisis he feels, as an artist and as a citizen, in a
transitional society damaged by the continuing asymmetries of capital yet enthused by the
transformative energies of globalization.

Jitish Kallat
"My art is more like a researcher's project who uses quotes rather than an essay,with each
painting necessitating a bibliography," Jitish Kallat, while defining his art. His obsessive use
of the self image in his paintings as the main protagonist makes his works autobiographical.
The autobiography addresses personal relations as well as the ones he has with his
ancestory, time, death...

Ravinder Reddy
Ravinder Reddy's sculpture is heraldic. Many of his sculptures are larger than life heads.
Invariably, they look frontally through wide-open eyes, the characteristic attitude of one
who proclaims. None of the sculptures looks sideways, or over the shoulder. The one who
predicts may draw material from the past, but he has only the future to address. And the
message, or prediction, that is about to be announced can be read from sculpture to
sculpture in the gold emblazoning, or the searing red which covers the head, or in the
complex hair-dos on the female heads, all of which are emblematic designs.

Subodh Gupta
Subodh Gupta is a contemporary Indian artist. Working across a variety of
media, he is best known for his monumental sculptural works composed of
everyday metal objects such as lunch boxes, tin cans, and cookware. Self-
described as a representative of a cultural history, his work translates a
spiritual quality through the items from which they are compLike many artists
working in India today, Gupta's work encompasses a shifting economic and
cultural Indian landscape, where materialism and political sway shape the
future, rather than tradition. By using quintessentially Indian icons that
possess innate dichotomies—such as a colonial-style ambassador’s car, sacred
cow dung, or the stainless steel utensils of a typical South Asian kitchenosed.

Wajid Khan
 Based in Indore city of Madhya Pradesh
 Only Nails and hammer is used for portrait making no sketching is done
beforehand. Different sizes and shaped stones are also used for portraits
Mohit Lakhmani
 3D Paper Sculptor
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=QvtJIMl8svU&list=PLL5BKEmnxmG3vzm8FDU1ksGTnaGwqlH4Z&i
ndex=12&t=0s

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