An Exhibition At The Bengal Biennale Will Explore Kali's Permanence Across Art & Culture

Promotional images for 'Kali: Reverence and Rebellion'.
Kali: Reverence and Rebellion is on view at the Alipore Museum as part of the Bengal Biennale until January 5, 2025.Madhvi Parekh/DAG
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She is fierce. She is ferocious. She’s the destroyer of demons and the protector of the devout. She is Kali, the dark-skinned goddess who represents the inevitable force of time — embodying the power to create and destroy life and the universe at large. She is unique in how she is both formless and absolute, and mercurial in her ever-changing forms. 

A first print taken from a freshly engraved lino-plate, this work is of an ashtabhuja or eight-armed Durga. Instead of a warrior goddess, she appears as a mother figure to bless her devotees with extended palms.
Untitled, linocut on paper, 7.0 × 6.0 in. / 17.8 × 15.2 cm (1967)Chittoprasad / DAG Museum

Over the course of several centuries, the worship of Kali has undergone dramatic change in the Indian subcontinent. From the feared and ostracised goddess of the ‘thuggees’forest-dwelling cults of robbers and murderers who looted travellers and caravans in the early colonial period under British rule — to becoming the subject of syncretic mystic Ramakrishna’s familial worship and humanist teachings in the 19th centuryas well as a symbol of rebellion invoked by freedom fighters like Aurobindo Ghosh and Subhash Chandra Bose, her reputation has oscillated between the fearsome and the protective.

Similarly, disenfranchised tribal groups, peasant communities, trans persons, women and Dalits, householders, and devotees, too, have turned to Kali as their champion within India’s complex and uneven caste and gender 'kyriarchies'.

Promotional images for 'Kali: Reverence and Rebellion'.
The Hindu Goddess Worshipped By India's Transgender Community
This Untitled work from the Maa Kali series seems to be painted from the reference of tribal art, almost indigenously rooted. It is painted in a style that seems to convey a complex set of ideas that ‘sophisticated’ art may sometimes lack. It’s in its seemingly simplistic, naïve style that the work becomes profound, spontaneous.
Untitled (Maa Kali Series), gouache and ink on card pasted on mount board, 7.0-inch × 5.0-inch (1971)Biswanath Mukherji / DAG

Beyond the furious Kali of the Devi Mahatmayam depicted in north Indian miniature paintings, there exist many diverse historical incarnations of the goddess found throughout South Asia. In the East, she is given an entirely different physical visage, drawing from Tantric traditions of both Hinduism and Buddhism. In 19th-century Bengal, she took on the role of a maternal figure for Ramakrishna and his followers, who saw her in syncretic and secular terms. In Bengal, she also entered the vocabulary of the popular vernacular presses, advertisements, and calendar art.

In the South, the lore of Bhadrakali grew to hold a significant social relevance for the downtrodden, particularly in how local narratives reinterpreted Kali and the myths that surround her as a protector. Performed entirely by male actors through dramatic and spectacular staging, Bhadrakali advocated for women and the oppressed along the Malabar Coast.

The legend of goddess Durga in her Mahishasurmardini avatar—where, as Kali, she slays the buffalo-headed demon Mahishasura—is one of the more popular themes from Hindu mythology to be attempted by different artists across generations. Madhvi Parekh had a rather close encounter with this subject during her stay in Calcutta for a decade (1964-75) with family, when she absorbed the heightened outpouring of artistic expression around this legend during the annual Durga Puja festival. She has made quite a few works on this theme; in fact, in 2005, when this monochromatic work was made, Parekh made a colour version as well. Both, however, are rich in details and symbolism to effectively convey the essence of the story—the victory of good over evil, and the supreme power of the divine feminine.
Kali on Mahishasur, acrylic on canvas, 18-inch × 24-inch (2005)Madhvi Parekh / DAG

Within the work of contemporary artists, too, Kali’s portrayal is freed from ritual associations or a rigid religious iconography, and she is represented in a more personal and intimate light. Drawing on both narrative and abstraction, Kali continues to fascinate as a fluid and deeply engaging subject in art, retaining her allure and profound resonance.

DAG’s ‘Kali: Reverence and Rebellion’ traces the dark goddess’ pervasive influence on artists across the Indian subcontinent. The exhibition explores Kali and her cohort of the divine feminine in their many forms.

The exhibition, curated by Gayatri Sinha, surveys Kali’s influence on Indian art from the Kalighat Pats and Jaipur miniatures to modern Indian artists like Chittoprasad, M.F. Husain, K.G. Subramanyan, K. Laxma Goud, and Gogi Saroj Pal to contemporary artists like Madhvi Parekh and K.C. Pyne.

Kali: Reverence and Rebellion is on view at the Alipore Museum as part of the Bengal Biennale until January 5, 2025.

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