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Sandip Dhurve

Sandip Dhurve

Masterful focus on birds as symbols of memory and continuity

Gond
Experience

10 years

Location

Bhopal

Courses

0

Artworks

6

About the Artist

Sandeep Dhurve was born on July 9, 2001, in Patangarh, a village in the Dindori district of Madhya Pradesh that is, by any account, the heartland of contemporary Gond art. It is the same village from which Jangarh Singh Shyam emerged in the early 1980s to transform the visual possibilities of an ancient tribal tradition, becoming the artist credited with the creation of the Jangarh Kalam, the distinctly modern form of Gond painting that now commands the attention of galleries and collectors worldwide. To be born in Patangarh into a family of Gond artists is to be born inside a living lineage, where the knowledge of how to make, what to make, and why it matters has been passed from hand to hand across generations without interruption.

Sandeep's father, Suresh Kumar Dhurve, is one of the most respected figures in that lineage. Mentored directly by Jangarh Singh Shyam, Suresh Kumar is known for paintings that centre on birds as memory, rhythm and identity, works that began in vivid colour and evolved, over time, into a predominantly monochromatic practice where birds emerge in quiet elegance, their wings etched in rhythmic detailing, their forms simultaneously fragile and strong. His first solo exhibition was held at Bharat Bhawan in Bhopal in 2007, and his work has since travelled to international platforms including the National Gallery of Canada. Suresh Dhurve is among the Bhopal artists who form the core of Jangarh's creative community, a group that continues to advocate for the proper recognition of Jangarh Singh Shyam's foundational role in the tradition that bears his name.

Sandeep grew up watching his father work. Raised and educated in Bhopal, he absorbed the visual grammar of Gond art not as formal study but as daily exposure, the kind of learning that enters the hand before it enters the mind. After completing his college education, he committed to art full-time and has spent the past two to three years building a body of work that is in clear and considered conversation with his inheritance while developing its own distinct character.

Where his father's work is anchored in birds and the emotional world of the natural world's most visible creatures, Sandeep has expanded his subjects to include the less-seen: unusual insects, the quiet complexity of flora and fauna, sealife, and the textures of the forest floor. His motifs are unnamed, drawn not from iconographic convention but from direct observation of natural surfaces: the wrinkle of animal skin, the arrangement of feathers, the pattern that dried mud makes when it cracks in the heat. These are the textures of close looking, of an eye that finds form in what most others overlook. Applied to paper and canvas in monochromatic ink and acrylic, they produce images of considerable density and stillness, works that ask the viewer to slow down and attend.

Sandeep works across paper, canvas and murals, and takes on commissioned projects, maintaining both a studio practice and a connection to the public-facing world of applied Gond art. He has mentored fellow artists, including Gond artist Lata Ji, and continues to refine his practice through workshops. His aspiration is the same one that runs through every generation of this tradition: to make work that people will want to live with, that carries the cultural memory of the Gond people into the homes of those who choose to hold it.

Mediums

Acrylics on canvas/paper

Pigments

colour to monochrome evolution