The Unity of Opposites

June 23, 2017 to July 28, 2017

Gallery Sumukha

The road most taken (Order & Chaos)

The road most taken (Order & Chaos)Tanya Mehta

Canson Canvas Archival Print

2016

Reclaimed (Creation & Destruction)

Reclaimed (Creation & Destruction)Tanya Mehta

Canson Canvas Archival Print

2018

Melancholy

MelancholyTanya Mehta

Canson Canvas Archival Print

2016

Contentment

ContentmentTanya Mehta

Canson Canvas Archival Print

2016

The Penrose Triangle (Order and Chaos)

The Penrose Triangle (Order and Chaos)Tanya Mehta

Canson Canvas Archival Print

2016

Mastered (Day and Night)

Mastered (Day and Night)Tanya Mehta

Canson Canvas Archival Print

2016

Heaven and Earth

Heaven and EarthTanya Mehta

Canson Canvas Archival Print

2016

Becoming (Existence and Non-existence)

Becoming (Existence and Non-existence)Tanya Mehta

Canson Canvas Archival Print

2016

Life and Death

Life and DeathTanya Mehta

Lenticular Print

2016

It’s All In the Mind (Happiness and Sadness)

It’s All In the Mind (Happiness and Sadness)Tanya Mehta

Lenticular Print

2016

Eye in the Sky (The Real and the Imagined)

Eye in the Sky (The Real and the Imagined)Tanya Mehta

Lenticular Print

2017

Only Man Dies of the Cold (Creation and Destruction)

Only Man Dies of the Cold (Creation and Destruction)Tanya Mehta

Canson Canvas Archival Print

2016

A nationally and internationally exhibiting artist, Tanya Mehta works with photography and New Mixed Media to realise her vision through technology. She explores the gaps between our different constructions of knowledge – philosophy, art, science, the metaphysical – and finds, in those gaps, bridges. She hopes to take the audience over those bridges to move to the singular reality or truth that exists for all of us. The key is the imagination. ‘Unity of Opposites’ aims to explore the differences between human perception and reality through an understanding of non-dual opposites. Using portals, circular imagery and various looping mediums to depict the infinity of the universe around us, we explore the narrowness of human perception through what we define as opposites but are, in reality, unified.