It is the secret anxieties of a migrant that the works of Gagandeep Singh express – a fear that never subsides however he gets naturalized in his new environ. Religious and social history comes under his microscopic analysis, as he creates a series of narratives using ink drawings as his medium. These also reveal the secret pleasures that the city offers. These narratives are quirky critiques on a city- perhaps not about Connaught Place alone. The linearity of drawings, the simplicity of thematic selection and the complexity of conceptualizing the theme are starkly noticeable in Gagan’s works.
The alchemy of enrolling in art classes, reading Sikh history,
taking Amrit, visiting art galleries, reciting the bani, and leaping
out into the unknown, led Gagan to a life defined by art and
spirituality. A recurrent theme in his work is Sikh history- it’s
anecdotes and narratives, religious and secular. He also extensively
explores Sikh miniature drawing practices and has incorporated
techniques and elements from the same into his works, to build a style
that foregrounds the art and stories of the past with a very
contemporary sensibility and a very fresh and absolutely original
vocabulary.
Pen, ink, and paper are a medium he has mastered with a rare
sensitivity and passion. He approaches each idea as a visual
storyteller; first taking photographs of his subject, and then drawing
numerous sketches before he settles on a final design. He then combines
text, other images, and even symbols, to balance the composition of the
piece. As a rule, he lets the vision materialize on its own, without
pre-determining the outcome. “I never try to envision the final result,
because then it would become too boring for me. So I keep on changing
the line quality, the form, and especially the theme, to allow for
variations as they emerge.”
Boredom, he says, is a signal to take a break from the piece and
exchange fresh ideas with other artists, spend time at an art gallery,
or travel to a new territory in his imagination in order to keep his
work captivating. He says “Everything today seems to be weighed down by
the temporality of things; people have so much to say about life, but
it is mostly depressing, vague, confusing and fantasy-like. I explore
Sikh history and spirituality in my work, and it helps me remain
crystal clear. It’s as if it has become as necessary as air and water.”
He remains true to Sikhism as his subject matter and finds himself with
an unlimited source of themes, ranging from Sikh history to Sikh
architecture to verses from the bani.