Monday, January 14, 2019
Sunday, December 16, 2018
Young Subcontinent 2018
Through the last two editions, the Young Subcontinent project attempted to chart the contours and sightlines of South Asian art imagination and art practice, illustrating and celebrating the lines of convergence, the commonalities in historical experiences, the entanglements of its cultural roots, and most crucially, its shared aspirations and dreams. These tapestries of art practices from across the continent meditated upon and mediated the complex social, religious and political spheres of life in the Subcontinent. While, the first edition triggered dialogue and exchange between the artists from the region, the second edition probed further the socio-cultural and political tensions and struggles that animate and also in many ways, restrict imagination and art-making in the region. YS opened up contemporary aesthetic parallels to the much-trodden trade routes of yore, tracing common lineages of art history and practices, shared traditions of faith and ideas and ideologies of the sacred and the secular. The experiences of sharing a common space/platform at YS and the exchanges it provoked and pursued, brought to the surface the need to reinvent and reassert vital connections and traditions of exchange, to strengthen arts infrastructure and the urgency of developing vibrant platforms for intercultural dialogues and synergies. These interfaces invariably pointed to the potential of art in excavation and celebration, assertion and redirection of tools and techniques, resources and efforts towards rediscovering and reasserting the cosmopolitan roots and global imagination of the region. In the present global art, economic, and political context, such articulation of creative discourses and fresh sightlines are essential to foresee and forge new, exciting common futures through art-making, art-thinking and art-organising.
The geopolitical dynamics of South Asia is subject to several local, regional, national and global factors. On the one side is a kind of globalisation imagined and imposed by capital, aggressively moulding the structure and direction of economics and politics of nation states in the region. On the other are the menacing forces of fundamentalism and totalitarianism that threaten the democratic fabric and ways of living in this region. So an art project like YS is necessarily a struggle against monolithic culturalism and narrow nationalism based on othering, and one that argues vehemently for the coexistence and celebration of pluralities that constitute South Asia, its societies, identities, politics, economy and culture.
With this in view, the YS project ought now expand points of contact, explore sightlines of common struggles and aspirations, look at reassertion and reinvention of geographies, facilitate conversations and narratives of peaceful coexistence and democratic aspirations. YS aspires to imagine and develop into a free platform of art-making and theorizing, storytelling and mentoring, that will draw, and draw from, new sightlines for inter-cultural and political diplomacy.
Monday, December 10, 2018
Under Construction // 2018
an exhibition curated by Anuj Daga
5th to 10th December 2018
Delhi.
Landscapes of construction have become common sites of encounter within everyday life in South Asian cities. Infrastructural expansions, large scale housing and institutional projects along with repairs and redevelopments seem to perpetually churn people within the flux of construction activity. On the one hand, the manoeuvring of construction sites plead for us to deal with blockages, dangers, risks, inconveniences and diversions thereby demanding in us a slowness to labour the growing city; and on the other hand, they infuse amazement and amusement in our everyday routine. Thus, contemporary urban life in South Asia inevitably gets produced within the poetics and politics of construction. In perpetual making, its cities allude to ruins, waiting to be completed, suspending us in an uneven field of promise and hope. Bodies and desires remain as incomplete as our built environment. Life and action intuitively begin to articulate form and intent in the tension of the finished and the unfinished.
How and what do people negotiate with and draw from constructions around them in their everyday? What new relationships get forged in living through the cumbersome, irritant, yet hopeful environments of sites under construction? How does construction aesthetic inform everyday life and thinking? How does growing up in a landscape of construction shape and feed into cultural production of a place and people? This project brings together seven artists / architects whose works draw from sites under construction, or who strategise its logic to open up new readings and relationships with the ever changing environment. In the process, they attempt to open up a discourse on the aesthetics and politics of construction.
Under Construction may offer an appropriate positioning for South Asian cities as a place of longing and hope but more so as one that invents new forms of life within the process of becoming. New vantages are extended to us in diversions and new places are formed in the crevices of inconvenience. In their journeys of making, objects and spaces carry a multiplicity of dispositions that may hold immense possibilities of adapting and intervening into emerging urban dynamics. Construction sites offer rich metaphors in order to understand life and work as an ongoing practice. They shift our attention from products to processes, from objects to tools and from solutions to possibilities, which may allow us insights into new geometries of speculation.
participating artists: Avijit Mukul Kishore, Karthik Dondeti, Nisha Nair-Gupta, Poonam Jain, Pratap Morey, Ritesh Uttamchandani, Shreyank Khemalapure
Here is a link to the catalog:
Curatorial Intensive South Asia Brochure
Images from the exhibition:
Under Construction
Seven artists / architects draw ideas inviting us to engage in the poetics and politics of living that reveals in the manoeuvring of construction sites around them - those that demand in us a slowness to labour the growing city on the one hand; and infuse amazement and amusement in our everyday routine on the other.
5th - 10th December, 2018, Khirkee Studio, S-4, Khirkee Extension, New Delhi - 110017
Avijit Mukul Kishore
The Concrete Lift
HD video, colour
28 minutes, loop
2018
Avijit Mukul Kishore has been filming the changing landscape around the building that he lives in, from the windows of his eleventh floor apartment, for several years. He lives in the suburb of Borivali East in Bombay, which used to be an industrial area. With the very visible de-industrialisation of the city due to real-estate pressures, the landscape of this area began to change rapidly. The industrial landscapes were vast and largely low-rise. These are replaced by high-rise residential buildings which at present are around thirty storeys high.
The video presented looks at this changing landscape and scale - both of the city and the human body. The TATA Steel Wire Division factory, an important landmark in Borivali, was demolished after its operations shifted to a new site outside the city. In its place and all around came up residential buildings. These were built with the slow and systematic labour of young migrant workers, many of them in their teens. One sees in the film, how these workers toil through heavy rain and sun; through day and often night. Their implements and machinery look rudimentary and unsafe. When looked at through a telephoto lens, one can see them work with a playful sense of concentration, with their lean, young, but able bodies. These are the real bodies of workers, much romanticised in political and art history. The scale of a young male body in a dense urban landscape makes for an intriguing conversation with the exalted body of the labourer or peasant, as represented in most cultures.
The video consists of observational material, looking at these young workers demolish and rebuild the city, at different times of day, across different seasons.
Karthik Dondeti
The Discomposition Machine
software code, 24 inch screen
2018
Ideas about development within the public realm are received by people through several sources that flow through informal and formal channels. These are recorded in the form of reportage, journals, public announcements, popular discussion and independent reflections over the internet. Such literature becomes the field for imagination of occupying the yet-consolidating urban landscape. Drawing on five such online archives indexing architecture and construction since the last national elections, this project invites users to build “news” through the discomposition of text. The code created by architect and coder Karthik Dondeti harnesses fragments of text from chosen sources turning news itself into a work of urban fiction. It is here that the project makes a political commentary on the narrative of developmental politics.
Nisha Nair-Gupta
Love Under Construction
artbook, digital print
4 × 6 inches
2018
‘Love Under Construction’ is a record of contemplations conceived in the longing for a companion and/in the city of Mumbai in its continual process of infrastructural transformation. Strung through metaphors of construction, and impressions of splashing concrete, city and life hallucinate and metamorphose into each other.
Poonam Jain
Looking forward : Looking backward
water color on paper
91 cm × 150 cm each (set of four)
2018
Poonam Jain’s immersive water colours attempt to inhabit the landscape of construction equipment, scaffolds, large scale moulds, machines and frames within which the phenomenological experience of the city is suspended for the everyday passerby. The everyday act of looking forward and backward gets reconfigured when parcels of areas that we access regularly are cordoned off, diverted, blocked, rerouted. Tiny doorways within huge forms hint at the new passages created within the crevices and gaps of construction infrastructure, which also become temporary homes for migrant labour. Poonam’s drawings encapsulate the experience of entangled manoeuvrings of urban space in the prolonged state of being under construction.
Pratap Morey
A Tension - II
ink on Korean Hanji paper
79 cm × 143 cms
2017
Borrowed from the series ‘A tension”, Pratap Morey’s work presented here reflects critically upon the new infrastructures built for frictionless commute – namely the skywalks and the metros. Lifting up the people from the “messiness” of the ground, they often get too intimate to direct passers-by to peek into kitchens and bedrooms of those whose apartments are too close to these skywalks. Morey draws his artistic language from the superimposition of these infrastructures to highlight the fragmentation of the sky, the splitting geometry of cityscape, and the forever increasing tension between the old and the new.
Ritesh Uttamchandani
Afterlife
photographs on flex
10 × 10 feet, 10 × 3 feet
2018
Photojournalist Ritesh Uttamchandani notes: “As I move through the city of Mumbai, I am always looking for photographs - things with subtle humour, exploring not the beginning or the end, but the in-between. In the run up to the General Elections of 2014 and subsequent State elections after, I noticed a booming of political propaganda posters. In spite of various legislative actions banning these hoardings, politicians continue to use them in campaigns - directly or otherwise. Over time they have only gotten bigger and unpleasant.”
Afterlife is a photograph series that emerged from the ways people innovate these flex pieces into their everyday constructions. Upcycled by the city dwellers, they are used as covers for shops, sleeping mats, protection from rain or even temporary shelters. Of the several promises that politicians make over election campaigns - those including employment, pothole-free roads, healthcare, housing, etc.; these political flex-banners come to fulfil at least some, although quite amusingly, in their afterlife.
Shreyank Khemalapure
Waiting Bars
construction models
mild steel, galvanized wire mesh, borax, wood, fine aggregate
dimensions variable
2018
‘Waiting Bars’ is a building construction term, referring to the steel reinforcement bars left open ended in columns and beams to receive future additions. ‘Waiting Bars’ thus literally wait to take on more construction, or further life.
Typically, additional foundations and columns are left around the existing building (even after completion) such that a couple of floors can be added above, or rooms can be extended sideways. Such frames give a unique character to buildings in the city, that have extended arms and frames around them.
This work attempts to extract ideas of time and growth embedded within construction processes and is derived from these incremental actions and their resultant architecture. The objects presented here are under construction as long as the bars are waiting.