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Around the world, Sexuality & Art

Homoeroticism of the common man

8 Aug 2018


Captura de ecrã 2018-08-08, às 16.22.56

Last year, in London,  I have seen,   a superb retrospective of Bhupen Khakar the Indian  painter who died in 2003. I   was fascinated. Khakar  was a modest art professor who lived in Baroda who  spent his time giving classes, visiting friends,  walking aroud the city, feeding a gigantic alligator  kept captive by one of his fellows. I was deeply intrigued by his paintings that are  at once naif  and highly sophisticated,  blurring  the boundaries between intimacy and public life. The subject matter of Khakhar´s art work is male homosociability and homoeroticism in the lived world of  Indian common men. This extraneous universe  is both trangressive of  gender norms and devoid of female bodies.  Colonial and post colonial imprints  were  also traceable in the paintings and  biographical notes and citations peppered across the exhibition.  One of them  was a brief  description of  the loneliness Khakar  saw and experienced in British public male spaces during the period when he lived in England.

The revisiting of Article 377 of Penal Code case by the Indian Supreme Court emerged as good pretext  to feature Khakhar´s art work in SPW July 2018 announcement. If nothing else, because  colorful and sad landscapes he painted are evokative of desires and practices that are both  pervasive and interdicted.

Sonia Corrêa

To learn more about Bhupen Khakhar

2_Bhupen_Khakhar_My_Dear_Friend_1983-672x658

My Dear Friend, 1983

To Sir, with love

To Sir, with love

Categoria: Around the world, Sexuality & Art

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