Painting the Silence of Landscapes: Ashish Kushwaha’s Meditative Worlds
Ashish Kushwaha’s solo exhibition at Palette Art Gallery reimagines nature as a living, reflective space shaped by memory and environmental consciousness
Exhibition Dates: 23 April, 2026 – 23 May, 2026
Timings: 11:00 AM – 7:00 PM
Venue: Palette Art Gallery, 14, Golf Links, New Delhi – 110003
Palette Art Gallery is pleased to present “Where the Sky Remembers,” a solo exhibition of recent works by Ashish Kushwaha, opening in New Delhi. Bringing together a concentrated body of paintings in watercolour on paper and acrylic on canvas, the exhibition foregrounds Kushwaha’s sustained engagement with landscape as a site of memory, ecological reflection, and quiet resistance.
Born in 1987 in a village in Chhattisgarh to a family of farmers, Kushwaha’s early life was shaped by an intimate relationship with the land. Encouraged to pursue his artistic inclinations from a young age, he went on to study painting at the Indira Kala Sangeet Vishwavidyalaya (IKSVV) in Khairagarh, completing his Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2009. A formative period followed at Bharat Bhavan in Bhopal, the renowned cultural centre founded by J. Swaminathan, where his practice began to receive critical attention. After spending several years in Mumbai, Kushwaha now lives and works at the Kaladham Artist Colony in Greater Noida.
Kushwaha’s work is rooted in an expanded understanding of landscape painting. His compositions are marked by sweeping vistas—fields stretching into distant horizons, mountain ranges rendered in quiet monumentality, and water bodies that anchor the viewer within contemplative space. Above these terrains, expansive skies unfold in states of dusk or nocturnal stillness, often illuminated by constellations that evoke both wonder and solitude.

Yet these landscapes are far from passive. Kushwaha’s work reflects on the accelerated urbanisation of contemporary life and the ongoing exploitation of natural resources. Human figures are largely absent from his works, but their presence is implied through subtle traces: a solitary hut, a cluster of houses, a boat on still water, or a vehicle traversing the land. These elements appear at a diminished scale, underscoring the vastness of the environment and the fragility of human intervention within it.
Animals frequently inhabit his compositions, positioned not as secondary motifs but as co-inhabitants of shared ecosystems. Their presence reinforces a worldview in which humans are decentered, and the landscape emerges as a complex, living entity shaped by multiple forms of life. In this way, Kushwaha’s paintings invite viewers to reconsider their relationship to the natural world—not as observers, but as participants within an interconnected ecological continuum.
Travel, particularly to the Himalayan regions of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, and Kashmir, plays a significant role in informing his visual language. These journeys are translated into paintings that are less topographical than experiential, distilling impressions of light, atmosphere, and emotional resonance. In his acrylic works especially, Kushwaha employs a strikingly vivid palette—luminous pinks, saturated blues, and electric greens—to create landscapes that hover between the real and the imagined. This dreamlike quality lends his work a sense of poetic ambiguity, where beauty is interwoven with a subtle undercurrent of unease.

For Kushwaha, painting is also a means of processing the anxieties of the present moment. In the face of ecological precarity and socio-political unrest, his works function as spaces of reflection and catharsis. They hold together stillness and tension, inviting viewers into landscapes that are at once expansive and introspective.
“Where the Sky Remembers” presents a body of work that is both visually compelling and conceptually resonant. In these paintings, the horizon is not merely a formal device but a conceptual threshold—marking the limits of perception while opening onto new ways of seeing and being in the world.


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