Grey holds stories

We have spent centuries looking at classical art and expecting female strength to look a certain way. We search for tired hands or perfectly straight backs to tell us a story of survival. But a woman’s internal world rarely fits into neat black and white boxes. The real story always happens in the subtle grey areas.
Aalekh Arts & Culture Foundation steps right into that space, working to preserve and rethink our diverse artistic traditions. Walking into their latest presentation, Shades of Grey, you immediately notice a shift in how these stories are told. Fresh from a run at Bangalore’s Sabha Gallery, artist Divyaman Singh completely abandons the human figure. He leans entirely on abstract horizons to map out memory and quiet endurance. It makes you stop and stare. Take Edge of Silence, where a pale cliff cuts through heavy shadow, serving as a brilliant metaphor for standing firm against erosion. Quiet Grief handles sorrow differently, not as a sudden, dramatic break, but as a slow, quiet pull. He completely avoids bright palettes, leaning hard into thick textures and quiet greys to capture the things we usually leave unsaid.
The exploration continues beautifully through Threads Beneath Silence, where delicate, intersecting lines weave an invisible web of responsibility and layered memory. Similarly, Unspoken Calm offers a horizon of gentle greys, capturing those necessary moments of inward withdrawal and quiet introspection away from external expectations. Then out of nowhere, a sharp streak of crimson in Ember Between Horizons breaks the quiet, reminding us that real fire often burns right beneath a calm surface.
Foundation founder Rennie Joyy sees this exploration of the spaces between binaries as a necessary, shared conversation. Working the oil directly into the canvas with his own hands and palette knives, Singh maps out an inner reality you cannot actually see.
The entire collection hits hard, leaving you with a very clear realisation — an artist does not need to paint a physical face to make you feel something real.

Divyaman Singh’s textured greys quietly reveal hidden strength, memory and inner fire — an intimate map of endurance beneath calm surfaces
