Gallery
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Arpana Kaur
Arpana Kaur's series World Goes On was inspired by the Sikh massacres
that occurred after the assassination of Indira Gandhi in1984. In these
works, Kaur explores the inevitable tragedies of life, the isolation of
people in despair, and the apathy of the world around them. Painted in
deep, resonant colors, the works are usually divided into three defined
areas of water, earth, and sky. Water, which Kaur often uses to
symbolize death, is often seen as a river or stream at the bottom of the
paintings. The subjects of the paintings always consist of a dying or
suffering figure, onlookers who are indifferent to the suffering, and in
some cases, a deity floating in the sky, representing the unchanging
nature of the gods. Although the composition of the works might seem to
suggest a dreamlike feeling, the undertones of oppression and trouble
make clear that the situations depicted are grounded in reality.
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