Across the Spectrum: Material, Method, Meaning at India Art Fair
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Debiprasad Bhunia, Visible & Invisible Structures -
Debiprasad Bhunia, Coexistence Insect Architecture, 2025 -
Debiprasad Bhunia, Between What is Built and What is Borne, 2026 -
Debiprasad Bhunia, Structures That Almost Hold, 2026
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Mayadhar Sahu, The Karma -
Mayadhar Sahu, Village Banana -
Mayadhar Sahu, Village Drink -
Mayadhar Sahu, Village Market
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Mayadhar Sahu, Village Mushroom -
Nabibakhsh Mansoori, Untitled - 25, 2025 -
Nabibakhsh Mansoori, Untitled -
Nabibakhsh Mansoori, Untitled - 26
In a moment where contemporary art is defined less by a singular aesthetic and more by its diverse voices and techniques, 'Across the Spectrum: Material, Method, Meaning brings together seven remarkable artists : Debiprasad Bhunia, Mayadhar Sahu, Nabibakhsh Mansoori, Pragati Mathur whose practices reflect the expansive possibilities of medium, material, and meaning in today’s visual culture.
This exhibition envisions an immersive space where painting, sculpture, installation, textile, and mixed media do more than simply coexist - they engage in dialogue. Each of the four artists brings a distinct material vocabulary and conceptual approach: Debiprasad Bhunia’s mixed-media works that layer texture, gesture, and emotion; Mayadhar Sahu’s remarkable sculptures that investigate form, structure, and balance; Nabibakhsh Mansoori’s compelling abstract canvases that open up new sensory and spatial possibilities; and Pragati Mathur’s refined textile-based practice that transforms fabric into narrative and tactile experience. Across their diverse methods, experimentation becomes the core language through which meaning is shaped, underscoring how material, method, and idea remain inseparable in contemporary art.
The title 'Across the Spectrum' is both a literal and conceptual framework acknowledging the varied aesthetic approaches, material processes, and conceptual frameworks employed by the artists. The works range from deeply personal to socio-political, from poetic abstraction to material-based inquiries.
Rather than being organized around a single theme, the exhibition explores how technique, material, and process serve as foundations of meaning in contemporary art. Each artist, in their own way, pushes the boundaries of their chosen medium - be it through the manipulation of form, the layering of imagery, or the poetic subversion of material. For instance, Pragati Mathur’s handwoven installations transform soft materials like cloth and thread into immersive environments that challenge the division between craft and contemporary sculpture, offering a tactile experience that is both intimate and monumental.
Together, these works highlight how versatility in medium leads to versatility in message, as contemporary Indian artists navigate the intersections of the global and the local, the traditional and the experimental. At the heart of these practices lies a deep engagement with craft and technical skill, not as mere formal accomplishments, but as vehicles for innovation and layered meaning. Whether drawing from centuries-old textile traditions, architectural motifs, or digital interventions, each artist in the exhibition expands the language of their medium, challenging the boundaries of material, form, and narrative. This commitment to experimentation anchored in skill transforms technique into a site of conceptual inquiry and cultural reflection.

