Sayanee Sarkar’s debut solo exhibition, Alchemy of Absolute Intimacy, presents a poetic reimagining of body, gesture, and intimacy. In contemporary discourse, the body is often positioned as the locus of identity, politics, and desire, subjected to regimes of excess visibility and analytical scrutiny. It is continually summoned to perform and generate meaning. Perhaps, it is against this compulsive and saturated meaning-making that Sarkar’s practice emerges, offering a more nuanced, sensorial, and intimate encounter. Rather than merely representing these differently, her work invites viewers to reconsider the very frameworks through which the body is perceived.
Her painterly language is immediately distinguished by its ethereal chromatic sensibility. Her works, whether on raw canvas, paper or wood panels, are suffused with translucent washes and stratified colour tones that accumulate through staining rather than inscription, producing spaces of paradoxical depth. Through the layering of closely related hues, Sarkar constructs pictorial fields that evoke interiority and volumetric presence, where figure and surroundings dissolve into one another. These iterative gradients of unsaturated colour destabilise the boundaries between form and ground, rendering them categorically elusive. The figures that emerge from this fluxare neither fully abstract nor fully figurative; instead, they inhabit a suspended intermediary realm like a ‘fog of dream’. One senses the brush oscillating between hesitation and assertion, generating imagesthat remain perpetually unsettled and always in the process of becoming. Delicate washes punctuated by abrupt impasto strokes further intensify this condition of emergence, as though the figures are being gradually coaxed into visibility.
At the core of her artistic practice lies a consistent rethinking and revisiting of intimacy that resonates with Arthur Rimbaud’s declaration, "Love needs re-inventing.” Her practice engages this injunction quite literally. She does not portray it as a fixed relational category, but rather as an indeterminate field of affect. The grammar of intimacy typically relies upon an arsenal of perceptible and familiar signs of closeness. But the figures in her work systematically subvert these gestures. They remain amorphous, suspended in muted tones. One cannot easily discern whether the depicted encounters are erotic, platonic, familial, or something more indeterminate. Here, the uncertainty produced by this ambiguity does not alienate the viewer; rather, it evokes personal sensations, desires, traumas, and narratives. These figures do not offer themselves as objectsof complete recognition, but as occasions for partial, mobile, and self-implicating forms of attention.
The spaces Sarkar depicts are interiors with no clear architectural demarcation, yet they often imply a sense of privacy, frequently suggesting a bedroom or an intimate corner of domestic space. Within these environments, the question of looking becomes particularly acute. The evasive and fragmented figures resist the pleasure of easy recognition. This deliberate foiling of the gaze recalls Joan Copjec’s critique of the visual field as a site structured by desire and lack. Copjec argues that the gaze is not simply a mode of looking, but a structure in which the subject is already caught before vision fully begins. Here, the gaze circulates within the pictorial field and becomes implicated in a shared condition of partial seeing. There is always something that escapes the vision, a lack that stipulates the vision.
Intimacy is often reduced to the economies of sex and romance as the primary metric ofcloseness. To apprehend it merely as an index of affective proximity is to overlook its broader capacity to generate and cultivate fields of consciousness. The term ‘alchemy’ in the exhibition’s title, a proto-scientific and mystical practice associated with the transformation of base matter into gold, functions metaphorically to articulate Sarkar’s artistic approach. It resonates with Sayanee Sarkar’s incessant engagement with body, gesture, and their perceptual zones. In this alchemical sense, intimacy is not a lucid state to be attained, but a perpetual negotiation between presence and absence, self and other, the visible and the invisible.
Sayanth R S
