“Even if you do not come up with a picture to remove world poverty, you can make someone smile while they are having a piss – Banksy”
It was a usual sweltering Kochi afternoon and I had just
about gotten done with the exhibits at the Biennale. Roaming around the
streets, looking for a place to eat, I magically led myself to a lane
completely covered with street art. Yep, right there in the middle of the
fishing nets and beef curry, were multiple artworks by Guess Who (BBC dubbed
them as the Indian Banksy, though they aren’t the first ones to be monickered
that) and the Hamburg based street artist Tona, in their own (not so) subtle
way trying to prove a point about the status of street or rather public art in
India.
And Kochi is not the only city. From Mumbai to Bundi
(honours on guessing which state it is in!), Bangalore to Assam, Pune to Delhi,
these street artists over the last few years have slowly but surely begun to
make a mark on the artsy Indian subconscious.
At a time where street art and India don’t sound like they
fly together, St+Art India Foundation, is making inroads in changing the
perception. First of their kind street art festivals were held in Delhi and
Mumbai which saw artists from all over the globe fly down to make the cities
more interesting looking. From Ranjit Dahiya painting the yesteryears’ movie
stars, to Daku’s typography, trance inducing geometrical art by Seikon to
tongue-in-cheek anti-establisharian Tyler, there are several unexpected walls
and crannies waiting to be discovered.
While a lot of street art is usually expected to be about
political activism, proving a point against societal conventions, most of the street
art you’ll see around is an effort to relegate the status from street art to
public art. To make art for a cross section of the diaspora, art that one
doesn’t have to pay for, or be able to enjoy only with cheese and crackers. The
effort primarily is to introduce the public to a new medium of expression and
the response till now has been nothing short of what was expected ; massive
curiosity as pedestrians slow down a little every time they cross one of these
artworks.
We may not followed Banksy all the way to Gaza, but sure
have managed to garner a few following eyeballs.
I wrote this piece for the Bizarre Culture here.
Check out the youtube video on the "Indian Banksy" here
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