Sunday 30 December 2012

Thursday 6 December 2012





COORG
The super-interesting, intriguing, amazingly proportionate niche at the museum in Nisargadhama near Kushalnagar in Coorg

Thursday 18 October 2012


Selected to exhibit as a part of enter2012. Thank you Watermans and Irini Papadimitriou for this opportunity. For everyone in London, do drop by.

http://www.watermans.org.uk/exhibitions/exhibitions/enter12.aspx


Exhibitions | enter12

Mon 22 October 2012 - Fri 4 January 2013
Deshna Mehta
Khalid Rafique
Samia Rajar
Owl and the Abacus
Akriti Devi
enter12 is Watermans’ annual exhibition of the year’s finest work by South Asian Digital Art and Design Graduates.

Hosted by Watermans New Media Gallery, enter provides a platform to showcase the emerging talent in the field of digital art, design and media production.  This year’s exhibition includes work that involves innovative processes and diverse material ranging from design, interactive installation, film, graphic and communication design.

The exhibiting artists have been handpicked from some of the country’s leading Institutes that offer unique opportunities in exploring digital art, design and innovative technologies. The selected artists take different approaches to the use of technologies in their practice in order to articulate their responses to contemporary issues in an innovative manner.

Selected artists
Deshna Mehta - MA Visual Communication, Royal College of Art
MA Graphic Design, London College of Communication
A CONSCIOUS CONTRADICTION
Passive traces of an ‘act’ive performance
If you think of acting spontaneously, it is no longer spontaneous because you are conscious of it. The only awareness of spontaneity comes from thinking about it as having happened in the past. The minute you reflect on the act of being spontaneous, you go back into the past and lose out on the present. In a spontaneous act, is it the death of the observer? Without an observer is there any observation? The nuances of these complexities surface in my (conscious) practice seeking for an answer, more often than not, only culminating into several questions. This pursuit led to the exploration of quantum physics and eastern mysticism expressed metaphorically through a performative installation.
What quantum mechanics says is that nothing is real and that we cannot say anything about what things are doing when we are not looking at them. Nothing is real unless it is observed …. and we have to accept that the very act of observing a thing changes it.- John Gribbon
Those who speak do not know, those who know do not speak.- Lao Tzu
What you will witness here is only a document, a re-enactment and a few traces extracted from the interaction with a performative installation which expresses that something’s cannot be documented or the act of documenting changes what ‘is’ being documented, therefore it ceases to be what it ‘is’. This installation is a ‘conscious’ attempt to ‘experientially’ bring forth the beauty and power of spontaneity(a moment that stems out of the sub-conscious/unconscious) embedded in the phenomenon of direct experience. For the very fact that it is a conscious attempt, it takes away from the act of ‘being’ or being spontaneous.
Therefore, a conscious contradiction.
Deshna is a graphic designer and a visual artist with a passion for photography. She holds a BFA from Sir J.J. Institute of Applied Art (Mumbai, India). Starting her career in India, Deshna moved to London in 2008 to pursue a masters in Graphic Design at London College of Communication. After having obtained her MA, short work stints and several freelance projects characterised her design journey in London and Mumbai. Her trajectory began with typography at the undergraduate level following on to exploring photography, printmaking, publishing design, design writing and research at the masters in LCC. She then felt compelled to find a strong voice to express what she stood for and believed in; which led her to pursue a second master’s in Visual Communication at the Royal College of Art in London. Since then, her approach to design has been very holistic and content-driven, where the solution to a project can perhaps be found in a book, a film, an installation or a piece of writing. This opened several doors allowing her to explore drawing, installation art and curation alongside her graphic design practice.
After a fulfilling four year learning (coupled with working) odyssey in London, Deshna has now moved back to Mumbai to pursue her research (that she began at the RCA and for which she was awarded a distinction) ; wanting to re-define graphic design in an Indian context in order to make it more relevant for the masses in India. She believes that writing a process-focussed history of graphic design practices in the country from the time it existed in its unnamed state would be the first step towards actualizing her ambitious vision.
She continues to earn a living by practicing graphic design and hopes to expand her artistic practice through her spontaneous drawings and conceptual installations rooted in Indian thought, philosophy and spirituality. She senses the magic of the ephemeral, the elusive, the intangible, the emotive, the experiential and the subtle; which is what she aspires to communicate to her audiences, very often leading to conscious contradictions in the attempts of bringing out these understated moments.

Tuesday 16 October 2012

First he raked until the grounds were spotless. Then in a gesture pregnant with Wabi Sabi overtones, he shook a tree trunk, causing a few leaves to fall.




Wabi-Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers, 
Leonard Koren, Imperfect Publishing







Friday 21 September 2012






















Triangular memories from the insides of Transcend 

Thursday 6 September 2012





Immersed in their own rhythms,
they sang, wrote, drew, yawned, smiled, cried, stretched, whispered, danced, learnt.....
Their instant gleaming smiles from the simple joys of being fed, sheltered and educated,
Made me re-think my goals and ambitions...

The biggest eye - openers,
The best teachers.

I can’t thank them enough...

NASIK, INDIA





Yoko Ono Inspiration, Serpentine Gallery, London


Tuesday 4 September 2012

Conceiving my work space / mind space:

Mythical nor a house, nor a home nor an office nor a studio but just a place, a space, splendorous, yet conversing in quiet tones.

A bag full of small anecdotes woven in an unending story as if ongoing.

- Balkrishna Doshi, Paths Uncharted





From the thinking to the sensing mode in the graced land.

Thursday 30 August 2012


New Spaces
New Inspiration

N A S I K



Friday 24 August 2012


The world speaks many languages, the boy thought. - The Alchemist
THE TRANSITION/ 15th AUGUST 2012/ LONDON - MUMBAI










Tuesday 21 August 2012

http://trendjournal.mudpie.co.uk/?p=8983#more-8983


Graduate Design: RCA 2012 Visual Communication


Words by our partners at ARTS THREAD.
Spanning across several floors of the Stevens Building, the Royal College of Art’s 2012 Visual Communication graduates showcased the fruits of their labour. From web-based GIFs to unconventional storytelling, ARTS THREAD chooses a few of the best projects on show.
Waiting for Google by Stuart White is an ongoing project inspired by the time we waste while waiting for content to load on the internet, presented in the form of a series of animated gifs.
Minjae Huh created a campaign highlighting the government’s recent announcement of the closure of the Post Study Work visa that allows non-EU students to work in the UK for two years. The campaign, titled Future Without PSW, featured a display typeface, postcards, posters and other propaganda.
Byung-hak Ahn presented Images of Spectacle, a project that explores the themes of capitalism and material culture while fellow student Jiyeun Sung made us giggle with a humorous series of illustrations highlighting the difficulties of learning English.
Deshna Mehta’s To Observe Is To Change is a really engaging installation in which members of the public are summoned into a dark booth where, using inks, chalks and other materials, are invited to draw the shadow of the hand they are drawing with. See ARTS THREAD’s online editor Calum Ross’ dismal attempt above!


Thursday 2 August 2012

Amidst the pandemonium contained within the ancient (opened in 1774) Covered Oxford market, she sat unperturbed and focussed unveiling the intricacies of the anarchic 'wabi-sabi-ness' of the still-life that surrounded her. She inspired as she drew. She inspired as she meditated one-pointedly through her drawing.




Monday 30 July 2012

Dock leaves grow near the stinging nettles to soothe the sting  
The Winchester getaway