বৃহত্ত্ব / Immensity, an independent, non-profit artistic initiative, was designed to foster interdisciplinary exchange among emerging artists. Bringing together students from diverse creative fields—including printmaking, painting, sculpture, and poetry—the project provided an immersive residency in the remote landscapes of the Bandarban region in 2017. Participants engaged in deep reflection, honing their artistic voices and expanding their technical skills in resonance with their personal creative inquiries. Following the residency, the project culminated in a month-long open studio and exhibition at the Abinta Gallery of Fine Arts, Dhaka, offering a platform for public engagement and discourse around the artists’ evolving practices.
Immensity is an independent and nonprofit art project intended for students in various disciplines of the arts. At its core, Immensity proposes to its participants to examine alternative understandings of their artistic practice. It relies on the belief that students must get the opportunity to reflect on their own individual expression and to develop skills that are in tune with their own understanding of what they wish to express.
The selection of participants to this project was a defining factor. This selection was not only made on the specific skills or academic merit of participants but also on their capacity to be creative and think "out of the box" and across disciplines.
On view in this exhibition is the first interaction of Immensity, which started as an art residency project in December 2017. The residency was deliberately held in a remote rural area in Bandarbans, the Fasiakhali Range of Lama. There, in the middle of green valleys and hills, far from the city they inhabit all year long, participants were invited to connect with the essence of nature and develop new or different aesthetic concepts.
After this residency, participants could further their ideas during a one-month open studio program in the premises of Abinta Gallery of Fine Arts in January, 2018. The open studio was a time dedicated to practice, during which participants transformed their ideas into specific individual works in different disciplines. Finally, preparation for the exhibition also constituted a central phase of the project. The discussion with the curator to develop a visually compelling body of work, the collective development of material for the exhibition publication, and the various post-production activities were an important first for many participants. They plan to take this further during the entire length of the show, during which they will arrange several tours for art school students and talks for the greater community.
Bishwajit Goswami
Curator and Co-founder, Brihatta Art Foundation
বৃহত্ত্ব
/ Immensity
is a journey.
The scope of this experimental student art project is not merely to produce, but document human behavior, in an open space where established conventions are put on pause, so that our curiosities are able to manifest itself against the banal complexities of real life. It is a process of discovery.
Our likes. Our dislikes.
Our dreams. Our fears.
Our heaven. Our hell.
The education
system of our Fine Arts Faculty has a deep-rooted traditional background. We
deliberately tend to keep the old methods alive.
“Education system of Fine Arts is going
through a radical change across the globe. In comparison, we are quite far from
the shift.”
Some of the
youngest of our teachers went abroad for studies and are now researching different
educational content. Equipped with keen eyes and bold techniques, they are
creating a strong impact in the contemporary art scenario. One such
distinguished artist is Bishwajit Goswami, the curator of this art project, who
also happens to be a lecturer at the Faculty of Fine Arts.
From what I've
seen, this project added a valuable new dimension to our fine arts academia
here in Bangladesh.
We, like other
art facilities, have several departments. We provide eight majors in our
faculty. But such collaboration in a project among students of various
departments is missing nowadays. In the past, we used to have a combined
foundation programme, which was done by the 1st and 2nd year students.
I noticed a
number of interesting things. Participants from outside the Fine Arts Faculty are
also here, including ones from photography or engineering backgrounds. Creating
diversity with this multi-disciplinary character in an open-minded space like
this has been the purpose of this project.
Secondly, when an
art camp is held, participants usually visit these arrangements as tourists.
They go there, (and perhaps) paint some landscapes, make some sculptures or
installations, and that's it. But accomplishment goes further in this art
project. We notice the tendency to engage in deeper thought in contemporary art
practices. Picking up on the realisations and understanding after visiting a
place, enriching these views with different takes along with the environment
and the nature, connecting the feelings with the interacting people, exploring
all the different layers. The new experiences they will get here will relate to
the perception of nature, the place, and understanding each other. They return
after staying a few days and get to work immediately; that's not how it works.
A more contemplated understanding, planning is needed. One must understand the
whole perspective. The art project ran for a month in this manner. Abinta Kabir
Foundation provided them with this opportunity.
Our faculty could
have been considered for the site, but doing this at the gallery was indeed a
blessing in disguise. If they were to work at the campus premises, their
structured activities would get in the way. Their habitual routine would've
worked against them there.
Rather than
hanging out with friends and sharing things with them, they solely focused on
the studio work and shared things among themselves. They discussed everything
at the gallery without external influence.
I suppose the
traffic jam of Dhaka worked in their favour. Returning from a place is also
very tough, not easy at all. But when they went there, they made total use of
their time. I was very impressed.
The process of
their work is very innovative, creating the layout, gradually moving forward
through the process. Bishwajit worked with them as well. It must have been a
great opportunity to watch his work more closely, along with the other processes
of the students from other disciplines, especially for a graduate pupil
watching the work of a master's student.
Our previous
education system used to take 4-5 years for a first-year student to reach a mature
level. But at present, talent is so important, the significance of innovative
ideas or concepts is often the case that a second-year grad student can express
himself better than a senior, to think and observe more maturely.
This is why “I liked the
selection process very much. When I saw everyone's work, they were so mature. They
did it very successfully. I think Bishwajit could share this project's
experience with the young teachers as well, which can make a big change in the
academic system.”
We have students
who are lost, who don't know what to do. The support they are supposed to get,
they don't find it here. We do not have this subject in our course curriculum.
The students here have the quality. But they do not know how to arrange all
this. They have no idea what they will do after their graduation. They don't
know how to build themselves, how to organise an exhibition, or how to express
themselves properly. They have the quality, but they do not even know that they
are capable of doing these. They cannot identify themselves. They don't go through
the proper practice here.
So I am really
amazed by this art project. I think the people who fostered this project should
inspire more people to do the same. They should also realize that this is the
right way. I think this is a way that the Bangladeshi art scenario can improve
in the coming days.
Nisar Hossain
Dean, Faculty of Fine Arts
University of Dhaka
Talk about the "Immensity" project with Bishwajit Goswami, its initiator and curator, and a mischievous smile is likely to light up his face. "The project is a bit different from what we usually do at the Faculty", says the Professor. "It encourages artists to dig into themselves to find their own voice. They have to be active in this process, and cannot just rely on following a curriculum".
The claim to put young artists at the center of their creative process may seem trite, but the project initiates a welcome opening in the local academic system, often based on authority and repetition. It allows participating students to elaborate on what they are normally told to do, and to experiment with or indeed deconstruct their learned baggage. In that sense, "Immensity" does not counter academia, but rather complements it.
Another important feature of the project is its multidisciplinarity. Students training as print-makers and painters, aspiring sculptors and poets gathered together during a residency in a remote area of the Bandarbans. Participants spent their days practicing there, while they could elaborate on their endeavour during group discussions in the evening. Goswami screened documentaries about internationally acclaimed artists to further expose them to different approaches and thinking. Participating artists, therefore, agreed to be exposed to the scrutiny of their pairs in this discursive approach; it compelled them into structuring their own thinking and finding strength in the collective examination of their works. The method encourages students to think by themselves and voice their own opinions, things they rarely do elsewhere.
A close observer of the Bangladeshi art scene, I am always struck by the strength of its collective spirit. Perhaps more than elsewhere, artists here have a tendency to organise themselves in all sorts of groups, collectives, and movements. Together, they innovate, try out different approaches from what they were taught, and overcome the many challenges they face in their practice. In encouraging artists to reach out to their inner creativity, in forcing them to expose themselves to the group, Goswami has found a resonance with that spirit in "Immensity".
Hadrien Diez
Freelance Cultural Journalist
The modern
connection between nature and men is the centerpiece of Auntora Mehrukh Azad's
work. Auntora exaggerates how the landscapes of wilderness have been shaped by
the influence of humans for years. Expressing through an artificial color
palette and citified representation of natural elements, she portrays how urban
aspects control and limit our lives like traffic signs.
Auntora's
installation is a large-scale panoramic landscape comprising two parts. A
painting of a reference photograph from the land art created during the stay at
Lama. The other is an archival print photograph of the reference shot,
horizontally rotated; the photograph our nature and the painting its reflection
-citified, more vivid but sketchy. Spots left blank in the photograph intends
to evoke the feeling of how we wound and scar the nature beyond healing through
alteration.
For this project she examines the relationship
between womanhood and nature. Explores the inner expression of women around her
and tries to transform their deepest feelings through bold traits, and the
prominence of the black. She blends elements of traditional Rickshaw Painting
to this expressionist language, using motifs and forms inspired from nature. In
doing so, she contrasts the beauty of typical natural elements with the
resistant nature of strong women trapped into daily lives they did not choose.
Some nightmares bring people into reality, other force them outside of their realistic mindset. Chhobi has worked with such thought while doing her performative installation, which deals with entrapment and the passing of time. If a person has lost the joy of living in a closed house, then all her freedom is restrained. That person is sitting in a chair, enclosed by four walls, locked for hours.
Imam relates more
to pencil drawing than to other media. For this project he took inspiration
from nature by collecting photo references of natural elements - trees, trunks,
leaves, etc. He then identified the most striking parts of the photograph,
which he decomposed and magnified, losing the representational connection to
his subject in the process. Branches morph into traits that could be galaxies,
the meeting of two souls, a mystery or indeed anything else. He refers to this
technique as "Goosebumps", for it gives the subject matter a feeling
or current and energy.
Jayanta Sarkar John's art is about people, their dreams and fears, the unevenness - but also the symmetry - of life and society. In this art project, he reinvents nature in a romantic and personal way. Experimenting with various watercolor techniques and diverse color palate, he gradually achieves his final pieces of art in trying to recreate the first, fresh impressions that a newly discovered nature made upon him.
Kutubul thinks of art as a language to
communicate with people. This attempt led him to examine his own feelings and
taught him to empathize with people around him. While exploring the nature for
this art project, he came to closely see the impact of urbanization on nature.
The wild is no more the home for wild animals. The wild had to make room for
the humans and the non-human population has started to extinct gradually.
Kutubul hopes to show the real picture of what we call nature today through his
works of art.
A photographer interested in poetry meets a
poet who works with images, and their journey begins. Photographer Kamol and poet
Apu's collaboration produces works where the image speaks for itself though
poetry and creates their Rhythm of Reflection, or "Aaina kabbya".
The photographs captured by Kamol are
presented with two lined poem written by Apu, where he reacts to them with his
words. Their pieces typically concentrate on everyday life, the nature around
us, and the challenges and solidarity they find in it.
Prosun's work is generally interested in the lives of women. In this art project, Prosun examines Mother Nature depicted in the various stages of a woman's life: love, beauty, agony, spirit, and care. To that effect, he selected famous Western master pieces and combined them with illustrated Bangladeshi female figurines. This imposes the universal character of a woman's journey across cultures and geographies.

As we are entering modern times, things belonging to the past epochs are slowly fading away. Despite belonging to modern times, Sakib Salim has developed an interest in history and ancient civilizations, and the extinct animal kingdom. By looking at ancient artifacts like coins, gems, stones, and extinct animals, historians can date back and estimate a lot of things about the era these objects belong to. He has chosen to work on extinct animals, old civilizations and cultures, and artifacts belonging in the past. His art explores these early ages, of which he wants to bring the stories to the fore.