Magnum ki Tasveer – Exceptional Photographs of India

Emily Jane Cushing shares a note on the Magnum ki Tasveer photography exhibition. 

India: Seagull Foundation for the Arts, Kolkata.

Magnum ki Tasveer, a collaboration of Magnum Photos and Bangalore’s Photo Gallery, opened first in August 2012 at Mumbai’s Institute of Contemporary Art with its truly insightful and thought provoking images of a diverse and multifaceted India. The exhibition combines images shot through the lenses of eight internationally acclaimed photographers all associated with Magnum Photos and in under a year has journeyed India from Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore to its most recent showing at The Seagull Foundation for the Arts in Kolkata featuring fifty-six dazzling images.

Magnum’s engagement with India began in the late 1940’s with founding member Henri Cartier- Bresson famously capturing the last days of the funeral for leader of the Indian nationalist movement Gandhi in 1948. Bridging the sixty years of Indian history that followed, the images document the on-going developments in India through changing styles and fashions and varying subject matter. Many featured photographers are not Indian but have travelled the sub-continent for many years documenting a changing Indian landscape and society. One may think India’s radiant colour and light may be enough to draw the eye of a world renowned photographer however, the selection of photographs go deeper than exterior beauty; some depict dark moments from the famines of the past and moving portraiture of a suffering people.

One of the highly regarded Magnum artists featured in the Magnum ki Tasveer is Indian photographer Raghu Rai, born in in Jhhang which is now part of Pakistan. Rai’s wide-angled shots capture a collection of complex human emotions and often, as seen in his early photographs of the aftermath of the Bhopal gas tragedy in 1984; these are heart-wrenchingly raw. Apart from this event Rai’s earlier work focussed on images of Missionaries of Charity founder Mother Teresa, by whom Rai had been particularly moved. His later pieces, some of which have been auctioned by Saffronart, concern a cosmopolitan India, one very much alive with traditions and customs and a landscape decorated by both urbanisation and rural indigenous culture.

Wrestlers through the painted gate. Paharganj, Delhi, India.2009 Image Credit; http://www.tasveerarts.com/group-shows/magnums-vision-of-india/view-individual-images/?p=21

Wrestlers through the painted gate. Paharganj, Delhi, India.2009
Image Credit; http://www.tasveerarts.com/group-shows/magnums-vision-of-india/view-individual-images/?p=21

The Swiss photographer Werner Bischof is one of the artists who has travelled India extensively, capturing delicately composed portraits whilst doing so. In 1951 Bischof was commissioned by Life magazine to shoot images of the famine in Kolkata; the poignant work shown is a compelling colourless shot of this era. Among the works by Bischof in the Magnum ki Tasveer is this image of a man, with his body stretched across packed sacks of grain in Kolkata he is visibly drained and malnourished. Knowledge of the troubled environment in which this man was living adds to the evocative nature of the work.

One of the youngest and newest members of Magnum, Olivia Arthur, selected the Ramnami sect from Chhattisgarh, central India, as her subject. The portraits show clearly the distinctive tattoos unique to the sect, who are known as the untouchables, which represent objection towards the repressive caste system. This particular shot shows clearly the tattooed face of a sect member with the name of Lord ‘Ram’ inked across it.

Also a member of Magnum is internationally renowned photographer Steve McCurry, two distinctive aspects of his work is the use of coloured vignettes and the frequent portraiture with subject making direct eye contact with the viewer. An example of both these elements is the image ‘Red Boy’; taken during the Holi festival of colour the young boy is smothered in vivid red dye.

More information of the Magnum ki Tasveer exhibitions is available here.

Between Princely India and the British Raj: The Photography of Raja Deen Dayal

Elisabetta Marabotto recommends Raja Deen Dayal’s exhibition at the Royal Ontario Museum

London: The Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto is hosting “Between Princely India and the British Raj: The Photography of Raja Deen Dayal” until January 2014.

Raja Deen Dayal (1844-1905) was the first Indian photographer to achieve international success. Over the course of his career, Dayal documented Indian history, artistic heritage, and its landscapes and peoples. In 1894, he was also appointed court photographer to the sixth Nizam of Hyderabad.

The present exhibition features over 100 photographs from three main collections including the ROM’s collection.

A view of the North Gate of the Great Stupa at Sanchi, Raja Deen Dayal

A view of the North Gate of the Great Stupa at Sanchi, Raja Deen Dayal. Image Credit: http://www.rom.on.ca/en/exhibitions-galleries/exhibitions/current-exhibitions/between-princely-india-and-the-british-raj-the

This exhibition was oraganised in collaboration with The Alkazi Collection of Photography, New Delhi, and coincides with a major publication: “Raja Deen Dayal: Artist-Photographer in 19th-century India.”

Char Minar, from album "Views of India", Raja Deen Dayal

Char Minar, from album “Views of India”, Raja Deen Dayal. Image Credit: http://www.rom.on.ca/en/activities-programs/events-calendar/raja-deen-dayal-revealed

Concurring with the exhibition there will be an event held on 9 May at the Museum.

For more information on the exhibition and event click here.

Guggenheim’s No Country: Contemporary Art from South and South East Asia: A Review

Manjari Sihare reviews the Guggenheim’s latest exhibition – No Country: Contemporary Art from South and South East Asia 

New York:  The exhibition, No Country: Contemporary Art from South and South East Asia represents the diversity of contemporary artistic practice from the region by way of a selection of work by twenty-two cross-generational artists. “No Country” implies borderlessness and that is the very essence of this show. In recent years, we have seen American museums such as the Rubin Museum of Art and the Asia Society host surveys of art from specific regions, whether it is modern and contemporary Indian art or Pakistani art, but this is probably the first time an American museum is showcasing a collective survey of South and South East Asian art . It facilitates a new way of seeing South and South East Asian art as an important part of and within the larger international contemporary art scene.

The curator of the show, June Yap, in her introductory note stresses on the choice of title adapted from a W.B. Yeats poem, a phrase that reads “No Country for Old Men” the show’s purpose, “to propose an understanding of regions that transcends physical and political boundaries”, and its outcome, “…it confirms that South Asia’s contemporary art is multifarious and highly evocative.”

Its raining Asian Art at the Guggenheim New York

Its raining Asian Art at the Guggenheim New York

Untitled 1, Rustam Series, 2011–12. Watercolor, gouache, and ink on paper, 27 1/2 × 19 5/8 inches (69.9 × 49.8 cm). Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York Guggenheim UBS MAP Purchase Fund, 2012 2012.143. © Khadim Ali

Khadim Ali, Untitled 1, Rustam Series, 2011–12. Watercolor, gouache, and ink on paper, 27 1/2 × 19 5/8 inches (69.9 × 49.8 cm). Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York Guggenheim UBS MAP Purchase Fund, 2012 2012.143. © Khadim Ali

It is noteworthy that the works in the show are part of a larger body of work acquired by the museum through funds made available by the Swiss bank, UBS, the main sponsor of the MAP initiative. The museum itself is representing a strong pan-Asian focus with its Manhattan flagship currently peppered with exhibitions of artists from the region. Of a total of six shows currently on view, four center around Asia – a retrospective of Gutai, Japan’s most influential avant-garde post-war collective, a solo show of New York based artist of Indian origin, Zarina Hashmi, an installation by Danh Vo, a Vietnamese artist living in Denmark, and the No Country exhibit. More so, the museum has recently announced the inauguration of another initiative to further the discourse on contemporary Chinese art.  The Guggenheim is joined by other museums in New York to focus on contemporary art from Asia, most noteworthy among which are of course the Rubin Museum and the Asia Society and more recently the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Met has roped in noted Pakistani contemporary artist, Imran Qureshi to create a site-specific work atop its Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Roof Garden (which has previously hosted works of international contemporary artists such as Tomas Saraceno). Such initiatives speak volumes about where the attention of the international art world is. Economics, of course has played a prominent role in defining this focus. But it is not limited to that. South and South East Asian Nation States have been challenging the western world’s monopoly in many disciplines, as is illustrated in the international art market in recent years.

What strikes most about the exhibition is the innovative selection of artists, more biennial regulars that art market favorites. It is a surprising selection but a very refreshing one. The twenty-two artists are from the length and breadth of the region including India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Myanmar, Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia and Vietnam. The works largely address effects of colonization and globalization on national identity. Many of these nations have similar pasts, as a result of which, all the works speak to each other in a collective way.

Navin Rawanchaikul
Places of Rebirth, 2009
Acrylic on canvas, 220 x 720 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Guggenheim UBS MAP Purchase Fund
© Navin Rawanchaikul and Navin Production Co. Ltd.
Photo: Courtesy the artist

Among the works that stood out for me were Navin Rawanchaikul’s 2009 canvas titled “Places of Rebirth” and Bani Abidi’s “The boy who got tired of posing”. Rawanchaikul is a Thai artist whose ancestral roots are in the Hindu-Punjabi communities of present day Pakistan. He holds a Japanese permanent resident status. In this iconic canvas rendered in quintessential Bollywood hand-painted hoarding style, the artist explores his personal identity. The canvas reads “A lonesome son of Hindu Punjabi diaspora and product of cross-cultural negotiation….From remote villages of Punjab to Northern Thailand…then a return after 60 years of wonder.” In the center, one sees the artist himself, with his Japanese wife and daughter riding the Tuk Tuk (ubiquitous Thai taxi and important symbol of the country’s tourism). The vehicle bears all three flags of the artist’s identity- India, Pakistan and Thailand. The Tuk-Tuk driver wears a cap “anywhere, anynavin” evocative of the impact of migration, colonization on individuals alike. This is a documentation of the artist’s first trip to Pakistan since his family moved out. The panoramic canvas is a humorous cinematic tale infused with symbolism from the history of India and Pakistan and the relationship of the two nations. You thus see pictorial anecdotes such as Khushwant’s Singh famous book on the partition of India, “Train to Pakistan”, a guard from the “lowering of the flags ceremony” at Wagah border, Pakistani truck art etc. At the center of most Rawanchaikul’s works is the notion of collaboration which we see here as well in the form of credits in the lower half of the canvas. The title points to the artist’s attempt to reconstruct the place where he is now as a site of rebirth.

Bani Abidi’s “The boy who got tired of posing” (see right)
Installation view: No Country: Contemporary Art for South and Southeast Asia, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, February 22–May 22, 2013
Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation

Bani Abidi’s “The boy who got tired of posing” is a three – part photo and video installation centered around an eighth century Arab war hero, Mohammad Bin Qasim, credited  to be the first colonial founder of Pakistan owing to his victorious invasion of Sind in 711 CE. The video has humorous undertones. Through three imagined narratives – a series of studio photographs of a young boy posing as Bin Qasim, a video clipping of a TV drama on in Qasim’s conquest of the Sindh telecast in 1993, and present day photographs of a young man believing himself to be Bin Qasim – Abidi presents her take on the ‘Arabization’ of religious and cultural identity in Pakistan. A Pakistani artist based in Karachi and Delhi, Abidi usually deals with the political and cultural tension between India and Pakistan in her work. In an interview with Nafas Art Magazine, Abidi explains, “by presenting exaggerated scenarios of a nation that takes refuge in a selected glorious past, I hope to engage viewers in questions about the need or the extent to which we limit our identities.”

Tayeba Begum Lipi Love Bed, 2012Stainless steel, 81.3 x 213.7 x 185.4 cmSolomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Guggenheim UBS MAP Purchase Fund© Tayeba Begum Lipi Photo: Kristopher McKay © Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York

Tayeba Begum Lipi
Love Bed, 2012
Stainless steel, 81.3 x 213.7 x 185.4 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Guggenheim UBS MAP Purchase Fund
© Tayeba Begum Lipi
Photo: Kristopher McKay © Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York

Other interesting works included Bangladeshi artist, Tayeba Begum Lipi’s Love Bed, a stainless steel structure composed of razor blades and paper clips, exhibited last at the 2012 Dhaka Art Summit; Shilpa Gupta’s 1:14:9, a sculptural piece documenting the numerical data about the fenced border between India and Pakistan; and Filipino artist, Norberto Rolden’s diptych canvas showing an F-16 fighter jet flying over Afghanistan on one side, and a quote by former US president, William McKinley on the other. The work is a commentary on the politics around the colonization of Philippines.  Another notable inclusion is a group of three contemporary miniature paintings by Pakistani artist, Khadim Ali.

Norberto RoldanF-16, 2012Oil and acrylic on canvas, 182.9 x 365.8 cm overall, diptych Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Guggenheim UBS MAP Purchase Fund© Norberto Roldan Photo: Courtesy the artist and TAKSU, Singapore

Norberto Roldan
F-16, 2012
Oil and acrylic on canvas, 182.9 x 365.8 cm overall, diptych
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Guggenheim UBS MAP Purchase Fund
© Norberto Roldan
Photo: Courtesy the artist and TAKSU, Singapore

Complimenting the exhibition is a series of 5 videos/films which are on view on all days except Friday when the New Media Theatre plays host to a special educational film program. I missed this but will definitely go back for these works. Holland Cotter’s review in The New York Times also lists Amar Kanwar’s work as worth seeking out.

All the works in the show are juxtaposed with interpretative captions for the global audience which sometimes leave you asking for more, especially in the context of specific regional references, unknown to an American audience. The exhibition is scheduled to travel to Singapore and the Asia Society in Hong Kong wherein the Guggenheim team will collaborate with curators at these venues to adapt the display to the audiences there. It will be interesting to see how and whether the interpretive materials are transformed for the Asian venues, where the audience is most likely to be more familiar with the histories and references than their American counterparts.

The overall reception of the exhibit is best summarized in this reaction from an American woman viewing the show: “Thank God! No Al Qaeda!” The exhibition, though small, has moved beyond the cliches that have shadowed the region.

From Delhi to London: Atul Bhalla’s Yamuna Walk

Elisabetta Marabotto recommends a visit to ‘Walk On: 40 Years of Art Walking’ at the PM Gallery & House in London

London: If you are looking for something interesting to do during the Easter break in London, one of the options is a newly opened exhibition “Walk On: 40 Years of Art Walking” at the PM Gallery & House.

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010. Image Credit: http://sepiaeye.com/atul-bhalla-s-yamuna-walk

This is the first exhibition revolving around the basic and natural act of walking. This show looks at the different ways artists from all over the world have tackled this theme in the last 40 years. Many different media are involved in the exhibit, and every artist worked in a different setting, some in the countryside, some in the city, but they all shared the act of walking and the experiences and memories around it; ultimately all thinking that walking is a way of freeing their imagination.

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010. Image Credit: http://www.atulbhalla.com/images/thumb/instthumb/ecoart/1st_text.htm

Atul Bhalla is one of the artists whose work is featured in the exhibition. His work, “Yamuna Walk” made in 2010, is a photographic account of the journey the artist undertook around Delhi along the Yamuna river. Bhalla shows how different the life along the river is, depending on the area, underlining the recurrent paradoxes within India. While some areas are breathtakingly beautiful, others are laid to waste by poverty.

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010. Image Credit: http://www.atulbhalla.com/images/thumb/instthumb/ecoart/1st_text.htm

Through this work, Bhalla also highlights the paradox of the Yamuna river, considered sacred by Hindus but at the same used for refuse disposal. The artist believes that by doing so we are  polluting the city aesthetically but also spiritually.

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010

Atul Bhalla, Yamuna Walk, 2010. Image Credit: http://www.atulbhalla.com/images/thumb/instthumb/ecoart/1st_text.htm

Click here to see the full work by Atul Bhalla, and here for more information about the exhibition.

The Otolith Group presents: The Radiant

Elisabetta Marabotto explores one of the MoMA’s night of films in New York

London: Yesterday the MoMA presented the latest movie by the Otolith Group as part of “Documentary Fortnight 2013: MoMA’s International Festival of Nonfiction Film and Media”.

The Radiant by The Otolith Group, 2012

The Radiant by The Otolith Group, 2012. Image Credit: http://otolithgroup.org/index.php?m=current

The artist collective founded in 2002 by Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun, in its latest production, reflects upon the terrible happenings which followed the Great Tohoku earthquake in Japan in March 2011.

The Radiant examines different issues around nuclear energy, the past and future threat that radiations can cause and it uses the illuminated cities and villages as an example of what can be changed to avoid these tragedies and must not happened again.

More information on the documentary fortnight and this video work can be found on the MoMA website and the Otolith Group‘s website.