Featuring: Badri Narayan | Bhupen Khakhar | Bireswar Sen | F. N. Souza | G. R. Santosh | J. Swaminathan | Jangarh Singh Shyam | Jogen Chowdhury | K. H. Ara | Meera Mukherji | Piraji Sagara | Prabhakar Barwe | Ram Kumar | Sadanand K. Bakre | Somnath Hore | K. K. Hebbar
Gallery Dotwalk marked the opening of its second exhibition at its new Defence Colony space with The Architecture of the Void: Lines on a Postcolonial Skeleton, on view until 30 May 2026. The well-attended preview brought together members of the art community, collectors, curators and patrons for an evening of dialogue around modern Indian art and works on paper. As the gallery’s second presentation in this space, the exhibition signals an important step in Dotwalk’s evolving journey, expanding its dialogue between modern and contemporary Indian art.
The exhibition brings together a significant selection of drawings, watercolours, etchings, and works on paper by major modern Indian artists, including Sadanand K. Bakre, F. N. Souza, Somnath Hore, Jogen Chowdhury, Badri Narayan, Bireswar Sen, G. R. Santosh, J. Swaminathan, Ram Kumar, Bhupen Khakhar, K.K. Hebbar, Piraji Sagara, Prabhakar Barwe and Meera Mukherjee. By focusing on paper, the exhibition highlights a medium often overlooked, yet central to how artists first explored ideas of form, memory, and identity.
Set against the historical backdrop of Independence and Partition, the exhibition reflects on a time when India was redefining itself politically, socially, and culturally. During this period, many artists turned to paper as an immediate and sensitive surface for experimentation. Unlike canvas, paper preserves hesitation, erasure, and fragility, making it a powerful space for expressing the anxieties, ruptures, and aspirations of a newly postcolonial nation.
Rather than grouping works by region, school, or movement, the exhibition follows the path of the line itself. Across these works, lines become architectural, wounded, intimate, mythic, and expansive, creating unexpected dialogues between artists whose works are rarely seen together. In doing so, the exhibition reveals that postcolonial modernism was not one singular style, but a network of diverse artistic responses to a changing world.
For Gallery Dotwalk, this exhibition also marks a new chapter. Known for its close engagement with contemporary artistic practices, residencies, and experimental formats, the gallery is now deepening its exploration of modern Indian art, creating stronger links between historical works and present-day curatorial research.
“Moving into Defence Colony has allowed us to slow down and look again at how modernism in India first wrote itself into being,” says Sreejith C N, Founder-Director of Gallery Dotwalk. “With The Architecture of the Void, we wanted our second show in this space to honour the fragility and courage of those gestures on paper, lines drawn in the wake of Independence and Partition, on surfaces that could tear or vanish. Bringing these works into dialogue with our contemporary programme is, for us, a way of acknowledging that the questions modern artists asked in the postcolonial moment are still alive in the room today.”
The Architecture of the Void is not simply a retrospective look at the past. It is an active reflection on how these fragile modernist experiments on paper continue to influence artists, curators, and audiences today.
Details:
Title: The Architecture of the Void: Lines on a Postcolonial Skeleton
Exhibition Dates: 19 April – 30 May 2026
Timings: Monday to Saturday, 11 am – 7 pm
Venue: Gallery Dotwalk, D-34, First Floor, Defence Colony, New Delhi – 110024
About Gallery Dotwalk:
Gallery Dotwalk is a contemporary art gallery founded by Sreejith C N, who has been part of the Indian art milieu for more than two decades. Supported by a circle of well-wishers from the art fraternity, Dotwalk aims to create a space grounded in integrity and genuineness—one that centres artists, nurtures younger practices, and uses technology and moving-image work to expand how art can be experienced. Established in 2022, the gallery relocated to Defence Colony, New Delhi, in January 2026 to deepen its engagement with a wider public and embed its programme in a dynamic urban and cultural neighbourhood.
To date, Dotwalk has presented close to twenty exhibitions, including participation in India Art Fair 2023, 2025 and 2026, and represents six young artists: Abdulla PA, Amjum Rizve, Chandrashekar Koteshwar, Mehak Garg, Priyaranjan Purkait and Sudhayadas S. Through its parallel initiative, Dotwalk Productions, the gallery has produced films such as The Other Faces (on sculptor Ravinder Reddy) and Skin of Light (on the watercolour practice of Sujith S. N.), extending its curatorial thinking into the cinematic space.
In 2024, Dotwalk also launched the Dotwalk Ajitara Art Residency on the Ajitara family farmhouse in Delhi NCR, offering curated modules and outreach programmes for emerging artists from India and beyond. More than thirty artists have already participated in this programme, making the residency a key part of the gallery’s evolving ecosystem.
For more information, please visit: gallerydotwalk.com






