"There is a new artistic sensibility at work here. Art is growing more conceptual, emancipating itself from the idea that it is something that is fixed on the canvas into a larger space where it is in movement and flux," said Satchidandan, who visited KMB 2016 today.
He noted that curator Sudarshan Shetty had put together an 'astonishingly diverse exhibition' that offered a multi sensual experience wholly different from previous editions.
"The exhibition is a reminder of what has happened to human beings, to objects, to nature, and also how the world could be better, different, beautiful, more egalitarian, more just if we would think and act differently," he said, adding that this was something only the artist can do.
From memories of the Partition to witness accounts of the devastation of war and the 'Sea of Pain that life forces one to wade through', he noted the sense of tragedy and longing was counterbalanced by narrative of togetherness - as represented by the coming together of peoples, perspectives, forms and styles - in evoking the possibility of this kinder world.
Satchidanandan noted that the spirit of collaboration and conversation at KMB 2016 was both a reflection of the contemporary art scene and an 'admirable return' to a time when artists worked with ideas, words, scientific concepts, sounds, videos as much as paint and brush.