Invitation

Nek Chand

Brooke Anderson

Sculptures

Photos

Press Release

Reviews

 

Nek Chand Exhibition
visionary sculptor known for Rock Garden in Chandigarh

& talk by

Curator Brooke Anderson

Thursday June 15 , 2006
6:30-8:30 pm

Lady Fetching Water

American Folk Art Museum, 45West 53rd Street, New York City.

Rsvp: aroon@iaac.us

Guests will be taken on guided tours of the exhibition immediately following Curator Brooke Anderson’s talk on the Nek Chand exhibition. A reception will follow. Wine courtesy Bilimoria Wines.

  

Nek Chand

"I started not with the idea that it would become so famous." - Nek Chand

"I built a town for Goddesses and Gods." - Nek Chand

Nestled on the outskirts of the Indian city of Chandigarh is Nek Chand's Rock Garden, a magical environment that testifies to its maker's life philosophy as a follower of Gandhi, his spiritual inclinations as a Hindu, and his approaches to recycling, the landscape, and environmental preservation.

After the partition of 1947 between India and Pakistan, Nek Chand (b. 1924) became a "displaced person" and left his small village situated on the freshly marked border between the two countries. He settled permanently in Chandigarh in the 1950s and worked as a road inspector for the city while also obsessively collecting oddly shaped rocks. At this time, the architect Le Corbusier (1887-1965) was transforming more than twenty small villages into his vision of a modernist urban center, Chandigarh, for the newly independent India. Witnessing this public project of a global scale, Chand borrowed concrete construction techniques from Le Corbusier and worked - in secret - on his private outdoor art installation of rock formations and numerous cement, figurative sculptures.

Discovered in the 1970s by local government officials, Rock Garden was at risk of destruction, but because of public support the politicians and leaders of the region finally embraced it. Today, Rock Garden is more than twenty-five acres in size and contains more than two thousand works of art. It is now the second-most visited tourist site in India; only the Taj Mahal attracts more people.

In the mid-1980s, Nek Chand was invited to build a "Fantasy Garden" for the National Children's Museum, in Washington, D.C. The result was the creation of approximately one hundred sculptures representative of the much larger project in India. When the National Children's Museum vacated its property in 2004, the American Folk Art Museum received twenty-nine of these artworks, creating a perpetual link in New York to Nek Chand's remarkable art environment in Asia.
  

 
 
   

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