Hunterdon Art Museum,
Clinton, New Jersey.
Kulvinder Kaur Dhew’s
exhibition Torrent, at the Hunterdon
Art Museum, is comprised of eight black and white charcoal drawings completed
between 2008 and 2013. Ranging in size from 6 ½ x 9 inches to 40 inches square,
the drawings depict various cloud formations, a number of them in the midst of
a heavy storm or tornado. Torrent is defined as both a strong and fast-moving stream of
water; and a sudden, violent, and copious outpouring, typically words or
feelings. In this instance, the drawings are meant to evoke both definitions.
At
first glace, the eight charcoal drawings look like a similar group of
photo-realistic cloud formations. Imagining the sounds
of thunder and lightning, and the violent force of fierce winds, it’s easy to
get caught up in the thrill of the moment: Mother Nature’s destructive power. In her statement, Dhew writes, “Using
the storm as a metaphor for any number of contemporary concerns, I am interested
in exploring near-to-almost epic events from an emotive point of view, rather
than a simply descriptive one.” Her ominous, swirling clouds bring to mind
events as diverse as the recent Hurricane Sandy, which had a severe impact on
New Jersey’s shoreline, and the clouds of dust seen on media images after the
destruction of the Twin Towers on September 11th.
The drawings Velocity Series (Alizarin Crimson) and Velocity Series (Blossom) are composed of massive tornado funnels touching
down over a thin strip of landscape. The horizon exists as a temporal anchor, suggesting an implied
narrative. The beautifully
rendered chaos distracts from the haunting notion of what human upheaval lay
just to either side of the frame.
While
other drawings allude to the possibility of physical loss and destruction
brought about by storms, Syrup of Figs
describes a landscape fraught with psychological weight. With a dark and
turbulent sky, and a lonely path leading through an empty field, it’s tempting
to think of Van Gogh’s Wheatfield with
Crows. However, Dhew’s central focal point combined with an animated and
gestural description of the tempest reveal an admiration for the London-born
(where Dhew also originally hails) Romantic artist J.M.W. Turner. The drawing’s
curious title Syrup of Figs, a
Cockney rhyming slang for the word wigs, could either confirm the reference to
the wig-maker’s son, or more likely describe the coiffed nature of the clouds.
Without
a horizon, Beijing Elevator stands
out from the rest of the drawings. One of the largest of the group at 40 inches
square, the work is mostly black, with a clump of billowy clouds peaking out
through a dark curtain. While violent storms would evoke references to Turner,
another British artist noted for his landscapes, John Constable seems
appropriate here. Constable’s practice of “skying”, painting on-the-spot
studies of clouds, captured the movement and magic of his English weather
conditions. Like Constable, Dhew’s picture sets the viewer aloft, airborne amid
the dramatic dark and light of the clouds. In this horizon-less composition, a
poetic interpretation of the picture seems possible. Staring at the drawing of
a cloud, the viewer is able to reveal imagery seen only by themselves, from
within the floating vapor.
The
nature of Dhew’s medium—charcoal on paper—lends an immediacy and directness to
the works that translates into a landscape in motion. This cinematic quality is
part of what embodies the pictures with so much emotion; each rendering of the
turbulent sky becomes personal and meaningful to the viewer. By pausing the
scene mid-action, Dhew leaves her audience wondering what will come next.
Kulvinder Kaur Dhew
Velocity Series (Blossom)
Charcoal on archival paper
22.5 x 30 inches
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Kulvinder Kaur Dhew
Syrup of Figs
Charcoal on archival paper
6.5 x 9 inches
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Kulvinder Kaur Dhew
Velocity
Series (Alizarin Crimson)
Charcoal on archival paper
30 x 38 inches
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Kulvinder Kaur Dhew
Velocity Series (Saturn)
Charcoal on archival paper
10 x 13 inches
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Kulvinder Kaur Dhew
Cell Type 1
Charcoal on archival paper
10 x 13 inches
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Kulvinder Kaur Dhew
Beijing Elevator
Charcoal on archival paper
40 x 40 inches
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Kulvinder Kaur Dhew
Torrent 45
Charcoal on archival paper
40 x 40 inches
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