Exhibitions/ Nasreen Mohamedi

Nasreen Mohamedi

March 18–June 5, 2016

Exhibition Catalogue

Bringing together new scholarship, this essential volume illustrates more than 200 works spanning Mohamedi's entire career.

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Exhibition Overview

One of the most significant artists to emerge in post-Independence India, Nasreen Mohamedi (1937–1990) created a body of work that demonstrates a singular and sustained engagement with abstraction. Her minimalist practice not only adds a rich layer to the history of South Asian art but also necessitates an expansion of the narratives of international modernism. The Met Breuer exhibition, the first museum retrospective of the artist's work in the United States, is an important part of the Met's initiative to explore and present the global scope of modern and contemporary art.

Mohamedi mainly worked with gestures of pencil and ink on paper, experimenting with organic forms, delicate grids, and dynamic, hard-edged lines. Her cosmopolitan outlook enabled her to draw upon a range of aesthetic sensibilities, from the poetry of Rilke and Camus, as well as Indian classical music, to the modernist architecture of Le Corbusier's Chandigarh.

Spanning Mohamedi's entire career and bringing together more than 130 paintings, drawings, photographs, and rarely seen diaries, the exhibition traces the conceptual complexity and visual subtlety of the artist's oeuvre.

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Featured Media

 

The Restrained Discipline of Line: Nasreen Mohamedi

 

The Maximum out of the Minimum: Reconsidering Nasreen Mohamedi


The exhibition is made possible by Nita and Mukesh Ambani and the Reliance Foundation.

Reliance Foundation

The exhibition is organized by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía with the collaboration of the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art.




Nasreen Mohamedi (Indian, 1937–1990). Untitled, ca. 1975. Ink and graphite on paper; 20 x 28 in. (50.8 x 71.1 cm). Sikander and Hydari Collection