Shikha Baheti
Coletivo Amarelo is proud to bring another amazing artist to our repertoire. Shikha Baheti Lohia is an Indian artist with a unique vision and artistry.
Meet Shikha Baheti, an artist who expresses her experiences through botanical art and black ink
Shikha Baheti's works are a visual summary of his reflections and principles on facets of nature that are not just aesthetic, but existential. After all, time and experience, wisdom and age, death and survival are intrinsic parts of the process of living.
An emerging artist from Hyderabad, capital of Telangana state, Shikha created abstract botanical designs assimilating the physiological aspects of survival, age and wisdom, using flowers as the theme of her work. The artist deconstructs the flower to expose its primordial aspects of reproduction, hunger and survival.
Drawing parallels with coming of age after becoming a mother, Shikha looks beyond the beauty and fragility that flowers are often associated with and sees them as a matriarchal beacon of wisdom, determination and resilience. His use of black ink is inspired not only by his educational background, but also by the fact that black and white are all-encompassing and, in his opinion, the purest, humblest, and truest colors.
Currently, the artist is on display with two exhibitions, one at the Art Mela and another at The Holy Art Gallery, in London, a gallery dedicated to emerging artists.
It is an honor to welcome Shikha Baheti to the Yellow Collective.
The representation of flowers in feminine art
Shikha Baheti is not the first woman to use the representation of flowers in her art. We selected four female artists who, throughout their careers, represented flowers in their artistic vision.
Georgia O'Keeffe
The American artist is known for her poetic paintings of different species of flowers and is considered one of the leading female figures in art history.
Her use of color and the organic shapes of flowers bring a feminine and delicate air that also comes from the painter's great interest in music. Flowers have appeared in her paintings since 1918, but it was not until 1924 that she painted her first enlarged flower. Between 1918 and 1932, the artist produced more than 200 paintings of all kinds of flowers: roses, petunias, poppies, camellias, sunflowers, etc.
Red Canna, Georgia O'Keeffe
Marianne North
Marianne was an English biologist, also known for her paintings of flowers, plants and natural landscapes. His work has remarkably and incredibly accurately captured the deepest details of botany.
In 1870, he traveled to Brazil, where he spent 8 months producing more than 100 paintings from the observation of the ecosystem and fauna he found there. This passion for landscapes and painting led the artist to seclusion in a cabin in the forest, where she painted in oil the landscapes she found.
Anna Atkins
Botanist and photographer, Atkins was the first artist to publish a photo book with images, as well as being one of the first female photographers. Anna produced cyanotypes, which are images printed in blue, in the artist's case, of flowers and plants. His frames were revolutionary for the time. In them, the artist placed plants on photographic paper, producing delicate photograms. The amazing thing about this process is that it was done in 1850!
Cystoseira fibrosa Cystoseira, Anna Atkins' British Algae
Hilma af Klint
The Swedish Hilma af Klint is considered a pioneer of abstract art. In the mid-1890s, the artist produced some botanical studies and transferred them to detailed drawings in watercolor and graphite on paper.
Between the years 1906 and 1915, Hilma created more than 150 paintings.
On the Viewing of Flowers and Trees, Hilma af Klint
Shikha Baheti walks her path to join these great artists as a woman who uses flowers to represent the full complexity of her existence. Coletivo Amarelo is very proud to be part of this history. Buy Shikha's exclusive works now.