Titled "Carbon-12," after the most common natural isotope of the non-metal, a two-day-long exhibition of the artworks beginning today, attempts to offer a unique intersection of art and science by shedding light on man's relationship with earth while highlighting the impact of his carbon footprints.
One of the artworks titled 'The Sun' is of a dark-skinned Egyptian woman donning a crimson red bindi, who looks back at her viewers with teary-eyed rage, as if in rhetoric.
Her works are also symbolic of a peaceful amalgamation of cultures with her subject, who at first glance appears to be African, but wears a familiar Egyptian hairdo with the quintessential red Indian bindi.
Norkute's works are an effortless mix of oil, graffiti, calligraphy and photo on collage.
The selling art show was inaugurated last evening at the Egg Art Studio here by Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar, who termed it as one that "easily touches your heart."
The minister who was part of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris last year and later at the UN Climate Summit in New York, said that the only way to face the challenge of climate change was "common will, collective wisdom and joint efforts."
"The challenge can be met by common will, collective wisdom and joint efforts. And therefore, what we decided in Paris and later in New York is about mitigating the challenge of climate change.
In layman's language, carbon footprint can be essentially termed as impact of human beings on the environment measured by the greenhouse gases they are responsible for creating.
Claudie Dimbeng hailing from Ivory Coast uses the concept
of 'mixed art relief' to drive home the message of how carbon footprints are affecting the planet.
Her work titled, "We are life, We are earth" is a textured piece of abstract art in myriad colours often rendering a 3-dimensional effect. Its relevance to the theme of the exhibition lies in how she has created the artwork.
"My artistic concept is mixed art relief which is mixed media technique and also a way to the mix of cultures, but it is very ecological and organic. The purpose for me was to produce a green organic artwork which will be nature friendly because it is all about our impact on the planet.
"I also wanted to produce an artwork with a mix of cultures. So this is inspired by the colours of India matched with the colours of Africa," said the artist, who has been living in Paris for the last three decades.
For Indian-born artist, Premila Singh, the element of carbon has both positive and negative, and the focus should not be on eliminating it from the environment altogether, but to strike a balance.
Her work in oil, showcases, the "carbon crying for help. Not the earth, but the carbon, because even they feel saturated."
Various 'grey' gas emissions from the 'green' earth rise up to disturb the nature, making the background 'black' with pollution as "carbon tears" fall on to the earth crying for help.
Other artists participating in the show include Joan Belmar (USA), Grete Marsten (Norway), Roya Delkhush (Iran), Katherine Mann (USA), Lithuanian artists and Giedre Riskute, Audrius Grazys, Margarita Chacon (Mexico) and Bo-Suk Lee (South Korea).
Artworks in the exhibition that ends on May 4 are priced between Rs 4 lakh to 8 lakh.
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