Business Standard
Tuesday, Feb 14, 2012
drived banner
drived banner
  Advanced Search
RSS
Content Guide
Follow us on  
||||||Life & Leisure||| 
 Section Home | People | Features | Enterprise | Columnists | Gadgets & Gizmos | Travel | How to Spend It | Book Review | Leisure & Sports
Home > Life & Leisure
 

Closing the loop
Gargi Gupta / New Delhi Jun 27, 2010, 00:44 IST

As more and more Indian artists collaborate with their foreign counterparts, cultures and nationalities blend in creative ways.

Jugalbandis are accepted practice in music, but in the plastic arts you rarely hear of collaborations. And collaborations across cultures and nationalities — almost never. That is now changing, with greater interaction between artists from different countries through arts residencies, exchange programmes or the Internet.

 Click here for Cloud Computing
 
 
 
Related Stories
News Now
-Think of this as Husain's IPO
-A common thread
-Keya Sarkar: Clash of cultures
Amitesh VermaTake Amitesh Verma, a 34-year-old Delhi-based artist known for his detailed sketches of horses. In November last year Verma was in Marnay-sur-Seine, France, on an arts residency. He met and made friends with Brazilian artist Myra. When she came to India for a residency at the Sanskriti Foundation in Delhi, he went to meet her. There he met another artist, Andrew Connelly, associate professor of sculpture at California State University in the USA. Sharing notes on their travels and working at residencies around the world, the two found themselves agreeing about the “value to an artist in travel and the ability to work in different environments with other artists from far away and from different perspectives”, says Connelly. “We thought it would be interesting to show our work made while in residency from our respective experiences.”

Andrew ConnellyThe result, ‘Crossing Over’, a two-man show paid for by both artists, ended at Delhi’s Shridharani Gallery this Friday. It was a disparate show, with Connelly showing sculptural installations influenced by India, in materials such as bamboo, rice, Holi colours, and thread used for religious ceremonies. Verma, for his part, had paintings that revealed a classical European sensibility that he’d imbibed in France. Connections, and the oblique ways in which they are forged in today’s globalised world, thus, were what held the show together.

A similar chance connection brought together Shelly Jyoti, fashion designer and artist from Baroda, and Laura Kina, Chicago-based lecturer on art. They didn’t meet at a residency; it was their shared interest in textiles and cultural identity that got them talking at the show of a common artist friend, Shelley Bahl, and they went on to collaborate on Indigo, held in Delhi and Mumbai early this year.

Jyoti ShellyThe exhibition had other threads in common — such as indigo dye and the use of embroidery as a cultural artifact. If for Jyoti indigo evoked Mahatma Gandhi and its importance in the political history of India, for Kina its blue colour had more personal associations. Kina’s grandparents were sugarcane farmers in Okinawa, Japan, and wore indigo-dyed shirts and kimonos. Also, the colour blue is sacred to Judaism, to which Kina converted after marriage.

For Kina, the show was a truly trans-national effort. ‘Devon Street Sampler’, as her series was called, had works based on street signs that she saw in the multicultural, multi-racial neighbourhood of Devon Street, Chicago, where she lived. The works were conceived on computer in the USA and sent to women embroiderers at MarketPlace: Handwork of Work, a fair-trade organisation in Mumbai. “They would send pictures and I would coordinate from Chicago,” says Kina.

Laura KinaIf there’s an element of chance in the coming together of Verma and Connelly, Jyoti and Kina, Mumbai-based artist and activist, Tejal Shah, and Han Bing, from Hunan, China, have had a more sustained partnership. They showed together at the Asian Triennial Manchester in 2008 before coming together in March 2010 for ‘A Cry from the Narrow Between’ at Gallery Espace in Delhi.

There’s greater synergy in their art too, in the way they make full use of video, performance, photography and public intervention to address issues of sexuality, power and violence. While the LGBT community is Shah’s concern, Bing’s works have an erotic charge, juxtaposing the naked human body with blocks of concrete and construction material. The violence of everyday life is presumably common across nationalities and cultures.

New Ipad Application :Business Standard's all new IPad App
Click here to download for free
Arrow Other Stories     
- Wall Street opens higher on Greek deal
- Oil cos seek compensation for losses on petrol
- Centre for 6% road tax on cars, two-wheelers
- RBI raises bank rate to 9.5%
- Axis Bank reappoints Shikha Sharma as Managing Director
  Read Business news in 
- Now property search gets more exciting than ever before!
- IndianOil Citibank Card at Zero annual card fee
- Save over Rs.3000 with IndianOil Citibank Card
- Are You Serious About Your Future? Click here to know more
- Financial Learning now made easier and more convenient.
- India's No. 1 Property Site. Click here to know more..
- Exim Bank Conclave on India - Africa Project Partnership. Know more..
- Be part of it The World's Largest Aircraft.
- Creating Wealth made simple the SIP way. Know more..
- Only Developer to give a guarantee on time space & rate.
- Office 365 for professionals and small businesses.
- Buy Your Property with Our Triple Guarantee in India.
- Improve Patient Care & Experience. Click here to know more
- Win a Business Class Ticket to Europe..Know more..
-  Introduce a New Automotive Luxury Car.. know more
- Health is Wealth..... Insurance + Savings... Know More...
- Making lives better through Social Innovation Business..
Sorry, comments to this story are closed
Latest Messages
SmartInvestor+ E-zine
  Pay Rs.747/- for 3 years and
  get a branded watch FREE

  Subscribe Now
Most Popular
Read
E-Mailed
Commented
   
- Vanita Kohli-Khandekar: The halo around the internet
- Shiv Sena, MNS to charm young voters this V-Day
- SBI: Change in strategy paying
- Hackers bring down Microsoft India website
- A K Bhattacharya: Regulating the regulators
 
 More  
New Ipad Application
 Business Standard's all new IPad  App
 Click here to download for free
  BS Specials  
    Full coverage of elections in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Manipur and Goa
  Hot Searches  
 
Ambassador car |  Uttarakhand |  TCS |  Sarfaesi Act |  Vodafone |  DZire |  Aakash tablet |  Sodexo |  NHAI |  Companies Bill 2011 |  Playbook |  Rupee |  Samsung Galaxy Note |  Kingfisher Airlines |  FDI in retail |  Silver |  Provident Fund |  income tax refund |  Anna Hazare |  iPhone |  Reliance Industries |  SEBI |  BSNL |  BSE |  NSE |  Mukesh Ambani |  Anil Ambani |  TCS |  Infosys |  Pranab Mukherjee |  Sonia Gandhi |  Rahul Gandhi |  New Pension Scheme |  Reliance |  RBI |  GDP |  Gold |  Ratan Tata |  ICICI |  B-School |  Sensex |  Tax calculator |  Home Loan |  Personal Finance |  inflation |  oil prices |  Barack Obama |   
 
  Member Area Write to the Editor RSS Archives Advanced Search
  Subscribe to BS print product BS e-paper Newsletter Portfolio Tracker
  BS Products BS Hindi BS Motoring BS Books
FOR HOT PRODUCTS
BS Bazaar.com
Home | Markets & Investing | Companies & Industry | Banking & Finance | Economy & Policy | Opinion
Life & Leisure | Management & Marketing | Tech World
About Us | Partner With Us | Code of Conduct | Careers | Advertise with us| Terms & Conditions | Disclaimer | Contact Us