We review Bhupen Khakhar: Tate Modern ★★★★★

'A missed opportunity': Bhupen Khakhar London exhibition falls a little flat

DETAIL: Bhupen Khakhar artist, You Can't Please All 1981, Purchased 1996 © Bhupen Khakhar, Tate Modern London
India's most famous Modernist arrives at the Tate Modern – with mixed results

Following a trip to London, the late Indian artist Bhupen Khakhar observed that:

“You are not allowed to smile during the winter season which lasts for ten months of the year. If you are sensible then try and look as grumpy as possible. English people appreciate sulk.”


Man in Pub © Bhupen Khakhar

Khakhar found London grey, hostile and isolating. This will surprise nobody who has encountered his proudly garish works. The paintings at a new Tate Modern retrospective possess exactly the opposite spirit. Jostling jewel-brights buoy his palette. He deals in jokes, dreams and escapism. Under the influence of Rousseau and Brueghel, his works are purposefully, sometimes irritatingly, childlike. It is no great wonder that he felt out of place in our rainy, reticent capital.

This is the first international retrospective of Khakhar’s work since his death in 2003. He is well known in his homeland as a lodestone of Indian modernism. His satirical paintings discuss sexuality, class and religion. He marries the high and low; horror and comedy – all in the frank pseudo-naïve style that defines his work.

Just because his works are child-like does not mean they are always easy to understand. “The painting that directly preaches preconceived ideas is more like an instruction manual than a painting”, Khakhar remarked. His works often take a great deal of reading – especially as the artist comes from a very different culture. The distance puts a barrier between the art and the viewer. Despite the lavish palettes, you’re left a little chilly; the Tate could have done so much more to aid our understanding.



Man Leaving (Going Abroad) © Bhupen Khakhar

Khakhar was openly gay, and much of his work explores his sexuality. The frankness of this homoeroticism is remarkable. Some of the work is explicit, but it is love, not sex, which the artist portrays. It is wonderfully encouraging to see so much LGBT pride hanging on the walls of one our most important cultural institutions.

The Tate are right to dedicate an exhibition to a non-Western artist. But they have failed to frame it adequately: it cries out for context. As it stands, you'll walk out more interested in Khakhar’s life than his art. A missed opportunity – what a shame.
TRY CULTURE WHISPER
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What We review Bhupen Khakhar: Tate Modern
Where Tate Modern, Bankside, London, SE1 9TG | MAP
Nearest tube Southwark (underground)
When 01 Jun 16 – 06 Nov 16, Mon - Thurs, Sun 10am - 6pm, Fri & Sat 10am - 10pm
Price £Prices not yet released
Website Click here for more details




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