Trishla Jain, a self-taught abstract artist and a meditation practitioner, will hold her first solo exhibition titled ‘Nowness in Time’ at the Akira Art Gallery in Mumbai from August 10 to September 18.
About the exhibition
The exhibition will showcase her most recent series ‘Yantra’ and ‘Tantra’, which she has been creating since 2020. Both the series converse with each other even as they take on individual identities of control and letting go, of pattern and abstraction, of awareness and transcendence.
Trishla akins these series to the principle of yin and yang, where ‘Yantra’ and ‘Tantra’ “behave as a pair of equal opposites - the inhale and exhale - that balance and complement each other.”
Gaze out at space,
aware of multicolored
luminosity.
Permeating everywhere.
(Yukti Verses 53 | Bhairava Tantra)
Athena (Yantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 60 x 60 inches, 2023
I am immersed in the flame
The flame of time,
The flame of love,
The flame of life.
The universal fire
flows through me.
(Yukti Verses 29 | Bhairava Tantra)
Flame (Tantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 48 x 48 inches, 2022
This is your school.
Just you and infinity.
The texture of the Self
is untamed freedom.
(Yukti Verses 32 | Bhairava Tantra)
Jade (Yantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 48 x 48 inches, 2023
The roar of joy
that set the world in motion
is reverberating in your body
and the space between
all bodies.
Beloved, listen.
(Yukti Verses 16 | Bhairava Tantra)
Kali (Tantra)
Gold Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 60 x 60 inches, 2022
Two Suns (Yantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 30 x 30 inches, 2021
Mind dissolves into heart.
Heart dissolves into space,
Body becomes
a vibrating field.
Pulsing between fullness
and emptiness.
(Yukti Verses 3 | Bhairava Tantra)
Yagya (Yantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 60 x 60 inches, 2022
Trishla Jain: A brief introduction
Trishla Jain grew up in New Delhi and is now based in Palo Alto, California. She studied English Literature at Stanford University 2007 followed by the Teaching of English at Columbia University, New York 2008. In 2009, Jain returned to India and to her childhood foray with the canvas. She had two monographic exhibitions and several group shows between 2010 and 2014. Her early works, autobiographical in nature, were mixed media assemblages of text, images and found objects. Over time the images dissolved into a choreographed interplay of lines, dots and dashes, moving her work into metaphorical realms of breathing, meditation and mindfulness.
In 2015, Jain returned to live in Palo Alto with her family. Here, her daily meditation practice began to integrate with her painting. Moving beyond the autobiographical and into the space of a larger collective consciousness of the ‘present’, Jain's recent works harnesses breath awareness and 'Samādhi', the human mind’s innate capacity for deep, undisturbed peace and focus. She describes her paintings as devotional practice and pure meditation on canvas.
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Nowness in Time
Trishla Jain, a self-taught abstract artist and a meditation practitioner, will hold her first solo exhibition titled ‘Nowness in Time’ at the Akira Art Gallery in Mumbai from August 10 to September 18.
About the exhibition
The exhibition will showcase her most recent series ‘Yantra’ and ‘Tantra’, which she has been creating since 2020. Both the series converse with each other even as they take on individual identities of control and letting go, of pattern and abstraction, of awareness and transcendence.
Trishla akins these series to the principle of yin and yang, where ‘Yantra’ and ‘Tantra’ “behave as a pair of equal opposites - the inhale and exhale - that balance and complement each other.”
Gaze out at space,
aware of multicolored
luminosity.
Permeating everywhere.
(Yukti Verses 53 | Bhairava Tantra)
Athena (Yantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 60 x 60 inches, 2023
I am immersed in the flame
The flame of time,
The flame of love,
The flame of life.
The universal fire
flows through me.
(Yukti Verses 29 | Bhairava Tantra)
Flame (Tantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 48 x 48 inches, 2022
This is your school.
Just you and infinity.
The texture of the Self
is untamed freedom.
(Yukti Verses 32 | Bhairava Tantra)
Jade (Yantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 48 x 48 inches, 2023
The roar of joy
that set the world in motion
is reverberating in your body
and the space between
all bodies.
Beloved, listen.
(Yukti Verses 16 | Bhairava Tantra)
Kali (Tantra)
Gold Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 60 x 60 inches, 2022
Two Suns (Yantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 30 x 30 inches, 2021
Mind dissolves into heart.
Heart dissolves into space,
Body becomes
a vibrating field.
Pulsing between fullness
and emptiness.
(Yukti Verses 3 | Bhairava Tantra)
Yagya (Yantra)
Ink and Watercolour on Canvas, 60 x 60 inches, 2022
Trishla Jain: A brief introduction
Trishla Jain grew up in New Delhi and is now based in Palo Alto, California. She studied English Literature at Stanford University 2007 followed by the Teaching of English at Columbia University, New York 2008. In 2009, Jain returned to India and to her childhood foray with the canvas. She had two monographic exhibitions and several group shows between 2010 and 2014. Her early works, autobiographical in nature, were mixed media assemblages of text, images and found objects. Over time the images dissolved into a choreographed interplay of lines, dots and dashes, moving her work into metaphorical realms of breathing, meditation and mindfulness.
In 2015, Jain returned to live in Palo Alto with her family. Here, her daily meditation practice began to integrate with her painting. Moving beyond the autobiographical and into the space of a larger collective consciousness of the ‘present’, Jain's recent works harnesses breath awareness and 'Samādhi', the human mind’s innate capacity for deep, undisturbed peace and focus. She describes her paintings as devotional practice and pure meditation on canvas.
Comments ()^ Back to Top
+Refrain from posting comments that are obscene, defamatory or inflammatory, and do not indulge in personal attacks, name calling or inciting hatred against any community. Help us delete comments that do not follow these guidelines by marking them offensive. Let's work together to keep the conversation civil.
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