Everything Is Inside

With the monographic exhibition of Indian artist Subodh Gupta’s works, the MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst is launching its new concept: the MMK 1.

The Subodh Gupta retrospective “Everything Is Inside” is a paradigm of the museum’s new programmatic orientation: to an increasing degree, the collection and exhibition programme of the MMK 1|2|3 will include perspectives of non-Western contemporary art.

The survey is build on the artist’s first retrospective at the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi.

Top: Subodh Gupta, Faith Matters, 2007-2008. Photo: Sergei Illin. Above: Subodh Gupta, All in the Same Boat, 2012-13. Photo: Ravi Ranjan

Gupta lives and works in New Delhi. From 1983 to 1988 he studied painting at the College of Art in Patna; meanwhile, however, he works primarily in the sculpture, photography, installation, video and performance media.

He gained world fame with his large-scale sculptural ensembles consisting of objects used in everyday life in India: stainless steel dishes, pans, milking buckets, bicycles and shopping carts serve him as materials with which he creates mega-structures. The themes of cooking and eating often echo in these installations, and are also encountered in his performative pieces. Gupta is interested in these topics as manifestations of daily cultural practice, but also as symbols of essentiality and existence. This is also evident in his performative work: five times during the show, a traditional meal will be prepared in an exhibition room especially designed for that purpose, and served to the visitors.

Subodh Gupta, Season, 2013 Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth, Photo: José Lius Guitiezzez, Dominique Uldry

Again and again, Gupta alludes to socio-economic developments in his native India as well as changes brought about in the country’s everyday reality by globalization and modernization processes. In this context he depicts India as a land in which traditional values and spirituality are just as important as the consistent pursuit of modernization. His multifaceted oeuvre revolves around issues that place the local in a global context and inquire into universal values and symbols.

By employing objects of Indian life which connect people’s everyday realities across the boundaries between the urban and rural, he calls attention to the disparate and contradictory factors that have shaped contemporary Indian culture and society.

Left: Subodh Gupta, Guard, 2014. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Graham Crouch. Right: Subodh Gupta, Mind Shut Down, 2008 Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth

He makes elaborately polished stainless steel replicas of the simplest and cheapest aluminium cooking and eating utensils, casts ordinary bicycles and motorcycles in bronze, and has the lunchboxes used by millions of people all over the country recreated in marble in oversize dimensions. Whereas the Western viewer perceives the marble lunchbox as the elevation of a commonplace everyday object to luxury status, the Indian public recognizes in the marble a standard construction material used for the floors and bathrooms of the Indian middle class.

The materials thus bear a close connection to socio-political aspects. To an equal degree, however, they are also strongly related to the artist’s personal biography – from its beginnings in a small rural town to his personal and professional development in New Delhi, and ultimately to his career as an internationally successful artist active worldwide. Materials such as cow dung, loam, jute, wood, bronze, marble and stainless steel are charged with meanings that have their roots in Gupta’s own familial, personal and social experiences and conceptions of the world.

The exhibition encompasses twenty large-scale works, among them two major installations and one performative work developed by Subodh Gupta especially for the occasion at the MMK. It will be accompanied by a comprehensive monograph on the artist.

Subodh Gupta, <i>School</i>, 2008 Courtesy the artist und Hauser & Wirth, Photo: Stefan Altenburger Photography Zürich
<b>Left</b>: Subodh Gupta, <i>My Family Portrait</i>, 2013. Photo © Ram Rahman. <b>Right</b>: Subodh Gupta, <i>Terminal</i>, 2010. Installation view "Subodh Gupta. Take off your shoes and wash your hands", Tramshed, Glasgow, Scotland, 2010. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Alan Dimmick
Subodh Gupta, <i>This is not a Fountain</i>, 2011-13. Installation view "Subodh Gupta. Everything is Inside", National Gallery of Modern Art, Delhi, 2014. Photo: Ram Rahman
Subodh Gupta, <i>Untitled</i>, 1995. Photo: Subodh Gupta
Subodh Gupta, <i>Two Cows</i>, 2003-08. Photo: Ravi Ranjan


until January 18, 2014
Subodh Gupta
Everything Is Inside

MMK1
Domstraße 10, Frankfurt am Main