05/03/2026
There is a an image of Mumbai traditionally celebrated by artists, media and in popular culture, as we saw in the last series. In this series of works the artists shift our focus onto the labour and lives of the working classes who have shaped the physical and social infrastructures of the city-like Nalini Malani’s depiction of cable layers or Chittaprosad’s linocut of workers at a foundry. These images also represent the performances, poetry and paintings being created within the city to celebrate the everyday lives of workers. The styles of the artworks attest to the circulation of popular media throughout the city, including posters, pamphlets and street performances that may have been ephemeral in nature, but informed calls to action and mediated popular responses to the city.
🎨 Altaf, Hands of Oppression, Oil on canvas, 1970, 39.0 x 27.0 in.
Chittaprosad, Untitled, Linocut on paper, 11.0 x 8.2 in., 15.0 x 11.0 in.
Navjot, Squeezed, Ink on paper, 1979, 19.2 x 12.2 in.
Sudhir Patwardhan, Untitled, Acrylic on canvas pasted on ply board, 1999, 20.0 x 20.0 in.
Nalini Malani, Laying a Cable, Gouache on paper, 1983, 11.0 x 15.0 in.
Navjot, Bhiwandi Collage I,1985, Serigraph on paper, 17.0 x 14.0 in.
Collection: DAG
Altaf, Hands of Oppression, Oil on canvas, 1970, 39.0 x 27.0 in.
Sudhir Patwardhan, Untitled, Acrylic on canvas pasted on ply board, 1999, 20.0 x 20.0 in.