Algorithms in nature 

- May 19, 2021
| By : Proma Chakraborty |

Fascinated with the planetary phenomenons, artist Jitish Kallat’s exhibition gives the viewers a peek into the galactical forces Artist Jitish Kallat’s practice is deeply preoccupied with measuring planetary phenomena. He does this through his own self-invented parameters. His work in recent years has often taken the form of studies conducted over defined periods of time […]

Integer Study (Drawing from Life), 2021

Fascinated with the planetary phenomenons, artist Jitish Kallat’s exhibition gives the viewers a peek into the galactical forces

Artist Jitish Kallat’s practice is deeply preoccupied with measuring planetary phenomena. He does this through his own self-invented parameters. His work in recent years has often taken the form of studies conducted over defined periods of time that mark interactions between earth’s elements and the forces that constantly reshape it.

His works are on display online at Nature Morte’s Integer Studies. Since 2015, he has been conducting Wind Study (The Hour of the Day of the Month of the Season) drawings that he refers to as the transcript of a conversation between fire and wind. 

From 2016, he began making drawings titled Rain Study (The Hour of the Day of the Month of the Season) using paper overlaid with fast-drying pigment momentarily exposed to rain. 

In the second half of 2020 under constraints imposed by the global lock-down, he carried out Circadian Study (Contact Tracing) as a series of observations of the sun’s cyclical rhythms made by tracing the contours of moving light and shadows cast by fallen twigs. Upon completion, these studies simultaneously take on telescopic and microscopic proportions executed through self-devised studio regimens that Kallat refers to as a “vocabulary of studio rituals”.


Over the past months, Kallat has been measuring the planetary present mediated through the algorithmic count of the current world population. Titled Integer Study (Drawing From Life), these studies emerge out of a hyper-abstraction of human lives rendered as numerical figures via big data centres harnessing real-time information from around the world. Since the 1st of January Kallat created one drawing each day carrying a combination of marks and three sets of integers, along with the time-stamp of the moment in the day when they were taken.

“While drawing I feel that the coming together of these numbers, which have a peculiar density of meaning to them, seem like the heaviest elements in the work…and they produce a reflective condition that allows for forms to gradually appear through this triangulation of life: through the tropes of birth, death, and time,”says Kallat

The exhibition is on display at Nature Morte’s website

 

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