Space operates as a powerful instigator of memory, fostering belonging while simultaneously enforcing boundaries. In a solo exhibition by Subodh Gupta called A Fistful of Sky, this intangible yet ever-present condition becomes a structuring device, guiding the viewer’s encounter with the works. The title, when read in Hindi, evokes the well-known 1973 song by Kishore Kumar: Har koi chahta hai, ek mutthee aasman. In pursuit of this metaphorical sky — another elusive yet persistent presence — the exhibition unfolds vertically across the four floors of the Art House at NMACC in Mumbai. Claire Lilley, the curator of the exhibition supported by Nature Morte, writes, “Each level unfolds as a staged environment in which domestic ritual, dream, motion and reflection interweave. The exhibition rises through these interconnected states, mirroring both the artist’s own trajectory and the social and economic transformations that shape contemporary India.”
The exhibition is organised into four conceptual strata, each articulating distinct yet interrelated conditions. The first level, foregrounding discipline, ritual, belief and threshold, introduces School (2008). This installation comprises a grid of chowkis, low-seating furniture common in Bihar, where the artist grew up. Typically associated with communal gatherings, the chowki is embedded within an unspoken social discipline, wherein individuals resist being the first to rise, a behavioural nuance that informs the work’s title. The piece is also inflected with Subodh’s personal memory, “About 10-15 years ago, when I went back home, I found this stool that my father used to sit on, and I picked it up and brought it with me to the studio.” This intimate association is materialised through the engraving of his father’s initials on the brass surfaces of the stools.
“The object itself does not change. What changes is the situation around it. In a home, it is part of routine; you use it without thinking. In an exhibition, it is placed, repeated, or brought together with other objects, and that shifts how you see it. For me, the work is about creating that condition. When objects come together at a certain scale, they begin to hold space differently. You slow down, you notice them, and they start carrying other meanings”
Subodh Gupta





