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A posthumous exhibition celebrating the contemplative artistic legacy of late painter Mona Bendre is currently on view in the capital, offering audiences a chance to revisit an oeuvre shaped by stillness, spirituality and close observation of everyday life.Titled The Poetics of the Ordinary, the solo show is being presented by Art Magnum from February 2 to March 14, 2026, at its Yusuf Sarai space. Curated by Subhra Mazumdar and Gayatri Mathur, the exhibition brings together 23 oil-on-canvas works that trace the artist’s long engagement with intimate spaces, modest objects and nature-bound imagery.Bendre, who was married to noted modernist N S Bendre, developed a distinctive visual language centred on restraint rather than spectacle.
Her paintings transform corners of rooms, still-life arrangements, modest landscapes and floral studies into meditative sites shaped by memory and presence.A hallmark of her work is its subdued, earthy palette — maroon browns, muted ochres and layered tonal surfaces that evoke atmosphere rather than drama. Textured applications of paint suggest time, repetition and lived rhythms, lending her canvases an introspective, almost tactile quality.
Floral compositions recur across the exhibition as a symbolic thread. Many of these works were inspired by blossoms gathered from her own garden, reflecting the artist’s connection with nature and her sensitivity to everyday rituals. Each flower is treated as an individual presence, rendered through subtle tonal variations and painterly techniques.The show also includes early works from the late 1960s, demonstrating Bendre’s confident use of impasto and expressive texture, alongside a still-life series marked by brighter hues and metallic accents that introduce a more vibrant counterpoint to her otherwise earthy compositions.Organisers note that the exhibition has been made possible through the efforts of the artist’s family, particularly her son Padmanabh Bendre and granddaughter-in-law Sonia Bendre, whose efforts helped bring this body of work back into public view.Running until mid-March, the exhibition positions Bendre’s art not as grand statement but as an invitation to pause — reminding viewers that meaning often resides in the overlooked rhythms of everyday life.




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