Nandita Mukand on Ephemerality, the Hard Edges of the City and the Process of Growth and Decay, Object Lessons Space, Mar 7, 2020
"Everything is connected. If you pull on one thread within the fabric, everything else unravels very quickly." (click on image or title to read more) |
The Origin: The Tree and Me & The Unborn by Esther Vincent, Tiger Moth Review, Feb 5, 2020
Nandita Mukand's practice is concerned with how urbanization with it's attendant lifestyle choices continuously changes us as individuals, and by extension, changes us as individuals, and by extension, transforms the collective psyche of our world. (click on image or title to read more) |
Exploring the Line between Man and Nature by Toh Wen Li, The Straits Times, April 8, 2019
Step into The Private Museum in Waterloo Street and you will be greeted by the curious sight of brown "vessels" suspended from the ceiling or resting on the floor. They seem organic, almost nest-like, but get closer and their devious architecture - hollow structures fashioned from thousands of coniferous seeds held together by wire - have a clearly man-made imprint. The idea for Empty Vessels, one of a dozen artworks now on display at the two-woman show From Lost Roots To Urban Meadows, was sown in the mind of Singapore-based artist Nandita Mukand three years ago when she was walking through a forest in Spain. Mukand, who was then on an arts residency in the north-eastern region of Catalonia, spotted cypress seeds on the forest floor. (click on image or title line to read more) |
From Lost Roots to Urban Meadows: Exploring the Crisscross Relationship Between Natural and Urban Landscapes by Kane Kwek, danamic. April 4, 2019
“CITY LIFE YIELDS CHOICES THAT CHANGE US, WEAVING AN URBAN VEIL THAT THICKENS; WE NO LONGER SEE OURSELVES AS PART OF THE NATURAL WORLD.” The typescript imprinted on a wall of The Private Museum was attributed as a quote to Nandita Mukand, one of two artists behind the museum’s latest exhibition, ‘From Lost Roots to Urban Meadows’. (click on image or title line to read more) |
On the Scene with Eugene, 938 Now, March 26, 2019
Radio Interview for From Lost Roots to Urban Meadows. (click on title or image for full interview) |
Where The Wild Things Are by Usha Chandradas, Plural Art Mag, February 2019
Singapore-based artist Nandita Mukand’s solo show Mind(less) Wilderness offers a masterclass in understanding the dividing lines between sculpture and paintings. (click on image or title line to read more) |
Paintings at the exhibitions: Mind(less) Wilderness by Nandita Mukand by 75gramsofpaintings, February 2019
But the main feature was the newer wall sculptural works which are more complex and more chaotic to represent decay and the way nature and the urban mix. Also she showed larger free standing sculptural works. (click on image or title line to read more) |
Nandita Mukand by Sam Allen, Creative Arts Social, August 2018
Nandita was educated in Lucknow, India and graduated as an electronics engineer. After enjoying a successful career at Proctor & Gamble, she decided to become a full time artist about ten years ago. In 2014 she graduated at the top of her year with a first class BA Honours in Fine Art from Goldsmiths College of Art, London, via LASALLE College of the Arts in Singapore. Nandita’s work encompasses sculpture, installation and paintings, exploring the recurring themes of nature, materiality, spirituality and connection within an urban environment. She has shown her work in Australia, Spain and at Sweden’s biennale. She has also had several high profile collaborations and solo shows in Singapore. (click on image or title line for interview) |
ARTIST PROFILE :: Nandita Mukand at One East Asia by Yen Phang, Artitute, January 2018
Nandita Mukand talks with us about her second solo exhibition “Forest Weft, City Warp”, which is currently showing at One East Asia as part of Singapore Art Week. Mukand discusses her meditations on nature as a city-dweller, how flora inspires her work, and how she visually expresses the continual changes that occur in life, death and decay. (click on image or title line for full article) |
Paintings at the Exhibitions: Forest Weft City Warp-Nandita Mukand by 75gramsofpaintings, November 2017
Nandita was featured previously in a February 2017 post. We liked her works then and these are even better. She did more sculptural works to hang on the wall, a table top sculptural work which was placed on a mirror surface (to good effect) and a few flatter works. The works are really excellent! Definitely an improvement from the works which she showed at OneEast Asia earlier in the year and captures / expresses her artist statement really well. (click on image or title line for full article) |
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TEDx NITW-Nature and Breaking the Mould
Artist Nandita Mukand shares how communicating with the natural world has had a profound impact not only on her artistic practice, but also in enabling her to find the strength and clarity to set aside a traditionally coveted corporate career and pursue her dream of being a full-time artist. (click on title or image to watch the full video) |
Imaginarium: 9 Artists Explore New Ways of Seeing and Experiencing the World at SAM, Art Radar, Singapore. 11th July, 2017
Indian-born and Singapore-based Nandita Mukand (b. 1975) examines themes of connection and spirituality through an attention to nature and materiality within her practice. She often looks at the relationship between city dwellers and the natural world, questioning how urban life impacts the way people see the world. (click on image or title line for full article) |
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En biennal i mansklig skala, by Leif Mattsson Omkonst-Open Art 2017, Orebro. 30th June, 2017
Translation from Swedish "...Perhaps then, as with Indian artist Nandita Mukand who urged the public to donate dried plants and flowers, which she then built a kind of hanging memory chapel of. The catalog tells about one of the gift givers who contributed with aged birthday bouquets and their own bridal bouquet to the artwork (in Artstation)." (click on image or title line for full article) |
OpenART: Offered a First Impression, Narkes Allehanda, www.na.se, 16th June, 2017
"The first shown work is by Nandita Mukand from Singapore and consists of dried flowers. A work for which openart had gotten help from the people of örebro to gather the material." (click file for full article) ![]()
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Ten Minutes with Nandita, a Singapore-based Multidisciplinary Artist at Singapore Art Museum "...As the world is getting more urbanised each day, we lose sight of how the natural world is co-existing with us....." (click on image or title line for full article) |
From bombs to mushrooms: 5 reasons to check out Singapore Art Museum’s new family-friendly show, by Mayo Martin, Channel News Asia, 5th May 2017
"Exploring parks can sometimes be a source of inspiration. Just ask Singapore-based Indian artist Nandita Mukand. Her two-in-one work The Origin: The Tree And Me & The Unborn was inspired by exploring East Coast Park and the wildlife of Spain’s Catalonia region..." (click on image or title line for full article) |
Imagination Behind Imaginarium, by Melanie Lee, The A List Singapore, 2nd May 2017
"Mukand will be presenting two works “The Origin: The Tree and Me" (2017) as well as “The Unborn" (2017), both of which are made out of materials such as newspapers, vegetables, grass, seeds, cones and pods. (click on image or title line for full article) |
Artist Residencies Abroad, 2015/2016, Lasalle Year-in-Review, Pg 80
“The L’Olivar Residency in Spain was set amid beautiful woodland and olive groves, making it particularly suitable for creating art related to nature and the landscape." (click on image or title line for full article) |
First Look: Untapped Emerging 2016- by Junni Chen, Arthop, Singapore. 8th June, 2016
"...Nandita Mukand’s oil and varnish works flanked the right. Form and colour are experimented with here, with the colours sprawling, even almost dripping, across their chosen mediums..." (click on image or title line for full article) |
VADA: Untapped Emerging-by Anastasia Ong, Intersection Magazine. May 2016
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El Projecte Olivart Presenta El Programa Anual De Residencies Artistiques-by Bonart Revista, Spain. 9th February, 2016
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Artist of the Month: Nandita Mukand- ARTLOFT, Interview with Artloft Asia, January 2016
"...I know how privileged I am to be living the life I dreamt of..." (click on image or title line for full article) |
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Collaboration journey with Instinc AIR Denise Schellmann November 2015
A record of working collaboratively with Austrian artist Denise Schellman. (click on title line to view full video) |
Meet Nandita Mukand, www.urbandesis.com, April 2015
"...She is an alumna of the reputed Indian Institute of Management Calcutta. Before that she also has a degree in Electronics Engineering. She moved to Singapore 12 years ago when she was offered a job with Proctor & Gamble..." (original link expired. Please refer to pdf for article) ![]()
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Vitality Exploded on the Paintings, By Yian Ping Chow, Lianhe Zaobao, 12th March, 2015
"...The colors seem to explode on the surface of her work. In the past Nandita’s pallete was largely brown, yellow, black but now there are bright pinks, blues, greens that give a sense of infinite vitality to the work..." (original link has expired. Please refer to pdf for article) ![]()
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NAFA vs LASALLE: we are all #1, by Yian Ping Chow, Lianhe Zaobao, 2nd September, 2014
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