Reena Saini Kallat is an artist wholly absorbed by the never-ending cycle of nature, and the fragility of the human condition in its hands. All of her works, whether installations, photographs, paintings or sculptures, reflect the constant shifts between building and collapsing movements, birth, death and rebirth and defeat and resurgence. There seems no greater inspiration in her works than the undefeatable and un-fatigable 'prakriti,' or... 
         
Reena Saini Kallat is an artist wholly absorbed by the never-ending cycle of nature, and the fragility of the human condition in its hands. All of her works, whether installations, photographs, paintings or sculptures, reflect the constant shifts between building and collapsing movements, birth, death and rebirth and defeat and resurgence. There seems no greater inspiration in her works than the undefeatable and un-fatigable 'prakriti,' or nature. A force that is constantly creating and destroying, never resting as one world replaces another, only to end eventually itself.
 
Reena shows us how these dualities are functioning all the time, and how we are blind to them, by either illustrating the transience of our consumerist culture or by showing us how important it is that givens like food and shelter not be taken for granted. 
 
Kallat gives the mundane a surreal twist, when she paints cars and houses in filled balloons, or towering structures made out of slices of bread faced by androgynous and fantastic creatures. "Balloons are fragile so putting these aspirational things inside them is a way of putting across how ephemeral are the objects we most chase," she says.
 
Babies and children also feature provocatively in several of Kallat's works. All these works touch on motifs found throughout her art - the cycle of life, and images presented in a highly exotic and unusual manner.
 
Kallat graduated from the Sir J.J. School of Art in 1996, and belongs to the new generation of Indian artists who have successfully reinterpreted and given a new facet to abstract art. In one of her more recent installations, a part of the 2002 Kala Ghoda Art Fest, she used beach sand to create seven uterine forms on the floor representative of the seven islands that came together to make the city of Mumbai. This piece, called the 'Seven Faces of Dust,' once again represents the transitory nature of all the things we long for, and of our momentary lives as well - it is to be effaced after the showing, and the sand returned to the beach.
 
Reena also trained as a Bharatanatyam dancer for eight years, but as it turned out, painting was her calling and foremost love. She recalls her first showing - that of some poster colours she painted when she was in class IX. Kallat held her fist professional solo show called ' Orchards of Homegrown Secrets' in Mumbai, 1998, and has since held many more exhibitions of her work. Kallat has also been the recipient of several notable honours, including the Gladstone Solomon Award for painting.
 
She lives an works in Mumbai.
    
    
    
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            Lot
                    10
                    of
                    55
                     
            
 
                 
                 
             
            
            
                
                    CONTEMPORARY SOUTH ASIAN ART
                     
                    21-22 OCTOBER 2024
                 
                 
                
                    Estimate
                     
                    
                        $10,000 - 20,000
                         
                        Rs 8,35,000 - 16,70,000
                      
                      
                 
                 
                 
                
                 
                
                
                    Winning Bid 
                 
                
                    $6,000
                     
                    Rs 5,01,000 
                 
                (Inclusive of Buyer's Premium)
                 
                
                     
                     
                    USD payment only.
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    ARTWORK DETAILS 
    
        Reena Saini Kallat  
         
        Penumbra  
        
        2006 
        Stainless steel, acrylic sheet, paint and rubber stamps 
        
        Height: 59.75 in (152 cm) Width: 74 in (188 cm) Depth: 42.25 in (107 cm) 
       
    
    
        Second from a limited edition of three and one artist's proof 
        
    
    PROVENANCE Acquired from Bodhi Art, Mumbai  Property from an Important European Collection
    
    
        Category: Installation 
        Style: Unknown