Influenced by the signages in Hindi across Delhi, Burmese Canadian artist SawangWongse Yawnghwe, who is on his first visit to the national capital, painted a Hindi signboard to invite visitors to the booth showcasing his works at the India Art Fair.
His works comprising a handful of black rectangular canvases pinned on to the wall besides two rudimentary sketches in black paint on either side of the board is a stark contrast to the sculptures and paintings splashed with the brightest of the colours at the Fair, which opened to the public on January 29.
"I have tried to bridge the distinction between art and the political world. I wanted to question if the Burma that I left is still the same country.
He uses documents based on the archives and photographs of his family which was an active participant in the country's politics. His grandfather, says Yawnghwe was the first elected president until the military intervention in 1962 that was the genesis of an "endless civil war."
The two paintings he has pinned on the wall of the gallery booth depict the inhuman killings of the Rohingya community in Myanmar, the inspiration for which he says was the regular media reports that he read in the newspapers.
While one image shows a man being shot in the head the other is a depiction of the brutal mass graves of the Rohingya community.
Yawnghwe and his Cuban colleague Adrian Melis, who are
being showcased by the Amsterdam based Clark House Initiative, have attempted to come to terms with the oppressive histories of their respective places of origin and forced creativity out of agnostic situations through art.
The video highlights the uncomfortable expressions on the father's face in response to the questions asked by the artist that appear as subtitles.
"For Melis' work, communism in Cuba forms the central focus of creativity. His father has always been an avid supporter of the movement but Melis who is an artist and a global traveler has a different opinion about it," Yawnghwe says.
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