N. N. Rimzon (born 1957) is an Indian artist known primarily for his symbolic and enigmatic sculptures.[1]
His metal, fiberglass and stone sculptures have won him international acclaim, though in recent years his drawings have gained recognition.[2]
N. N. Rimzon's work has been featured in solo and group exhibitions worldwide and can be found in the collections of The National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi and Mumbai, the Talwar Gallery in New York City and New Delhi, The Foundation for Indian Artists in Amsterdam, and the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney.[4]
Works
Born in the Indian state of Kerala, Rimzon's artistic vocabulary finds root in symbols derived from the rural landscape of southern India: the village compound, the palm tree, the temple, the forest pathway and the handmade canoe. In Rimzon's drawings he develops the themes that are found in his sculpture. Charcoal and dry pastel is used with a simple grace of line to create an often eerie and evocative stillness. This pristine tranquility seems to be intruded upon by symbols such as the sword and the felled tree. A sense of tragedy or alienation underlies depictions of what might otherwise be thought to be rural idylls.[2] Rimzon's later works seem as much concerned with ecological threats as with communal aggression.[5]
As a young man Rimzon experienced the political upheaval that accompanied Indira Gandhi’s Emergency during the mid-1970s. This was one factor that moved him away from narrative painting to experimentation with conceptually motivated sculpture. Rimzon concentrated on themes that depicted humanity's entrapment and anguish in a hostile environment that was of man's own making. In The Inner Voice (1992), a sculpted nude figure, cast in fiberglass, is displayed with its back against the wall and surrounded by a semicircle of cast iron swords. In Speaking Stones (1998), a crouching nude figure uses its hands to both hold its head and shield its eyes. The figure is surrounded by naturally sharp stones, which rest on photographs depicting massacres, demolitions, and other acts of communal violence that have been part of India's more recent history.[1]
His most recent show at Talwar Gallery in New Delhi, The Round Ocean and the Living Death, is a continuation of his career's effort to unite the beautiful traditions of India to the complexities of its modern life through an artistic language. The sculpture the show is named after depicts mother-goddess figure seated at the center of a circle representing a quiet power. Rimzon's work requires no prerequisites for engagement, but rather speaks to an older and deeper level of humanity.[6]
References
^ abAmrita Jhaveri (2005). A Guide to 101 Modern and Contemporary Indian Artists. India Book House. ISBN81-7508-423-5.
^ abChandran T. Payyanur, N.N. Rimzon, Kashi Art Gallery, 2005
^Ashish Radadhyaksha, Contemporary Art In Baroda, Tulika Publishers, 1997, ISBN81-85229-04-X
^Anoop Skaria and Dorrie Younger, N.N. Rimzon, Kashi Art Gallery, 2005
^Karen Miller-Lewis, Back to Nature, Art India, Quarter III, 2007