Extending spaces with-in and out
“Home Memories”....
an exhibition with
Alexis
Boucher- France
Diana Valarezo – Ecuador
Hemant Sareen - India
Isabel Herguera –Spain
M.Pravat- India
Manmeet Devgun - India
Samudra Kajal Saika - IndiaDiana Valarezo – Ecuador
Hemant Sareen - India
Isabel Herguera –Spain
M.Pravat- India
Manmeet Devgun - India
“Home Memories” looks to study notions of home as explored through representation of displacement, nostalgia and personal attachments to architecture, geographic locations and memory.
The exhibition addresses questions of homesickness, family and nationality.
The selected works portray the experience of home moving, migrations, and personal attachments to places, lands and objects. These visual narrations work as personal as well as stories and
collective acts of memory.
Curated by Jose Abad Lorente.
Within the
premise of “Home memories”, an exhibition conceptualized by Jose, we developed
a concept for a site specific work and executed it recently. The work has
multiple facets and thus I would like to talk about it in the following
segments:
1. Do not touch the art objects, but feel free to step in my house
This is spatial work, done on the floor of the tarace and to see the work one has to walk
upon the work itself. The work is not “permanent” and is not in the
“traditionally excepted” mediums. i.e. it is not a work like oil on canvas,
printed on acid free archival papers, casted in bronze etc. the work is not to
be preserved inside a dark room, or to be kept in a museum or gallery. But at
the same time, it is a part of very much “mainstream” gallery space practice.
It is a part of the initiative taken by “Abadi Art Space”, Lado Sarai, Delhi.
One cannot sale it. One cannot own it. The only thing one can do is, to
experience it.
The value (and price) of the artwork is always determined
by the ways or presentation, and the ways of preservations. So a sense of care,
how the way you are taking care of it, definitely matters a lot. But in this
particular case, the work is done outside, left open for sunlight, autumn dust,
and all other elements of the changing weather in Delhi. Moreover, by proposition, by physicality and
by all conditions this is an art work meant to be foot stepped. This is an art
work what you not only can touch, but also step on it. In fact, without
stepping on it, you cannot see the entire work and cannot get the whole
experience of it.
For some reasons we do not understand the strategies of
‘high’ art. We do not feel comfortable with them, instead we prefer to practice
something that is accessible to a larger audience, and moreover, which is
“touchable”.
2. Aao sakhi Hum Lagri Khelein...
Aao sakhi hum lagri khelein
main jeeta toh tera ghar mera
tu jeeti toh mera ghar tera...
The work was planned in black and white so that it stands out
in the evening lights as well and also goes with the theme of
inside-and-outside. One enters the space and suddenly discovers the drawings on
the floor. Now definitely there is a dilemma in the visitor’s mind whether to
step on or not to step on. Or if step on exactly where to step on. The way of
space divisions and the matter of stepping on them reminded me about ‘Langri’ a
rural Indian fun-game mostly popular among the children.
Now the inscriptions on the floor turned up with a small
poetic piece in Hindi, which says “Come on dear, let’s play Langri. If I win
then your house will be mine, and if you win, then my house is yours”. This
instantaneous couplet appears complementary to the work in many ways. The work
as a whole contains an interplay of positive and negative spaces and the theme
itself is woven around the inside outside experiences.
The ways of saying has a reminiscence of a lyrical
rendering by Hazarat Hussain Shah, a sufi poet from medieval India, where he
says, “Come friend let’s play the dice together. If I win then you will be
mine, and if you win, I will be all yours”.
3. I do not think, but exist
We are artists working in delhi, coming from some
other parts of India. While talking about Home(s) we shared some experiences
around identity, the ways and necessities of proofing an individual’s identity
in a democratic country. This portion of work is a funny retake on the most
famous Cartesian saying: I think, so I exist. Here is written on the floor just
below your feet:
even if I do not think
I exist.
I do not have a voter ID card
I do not have a PAN card
I do not carry a permanent residency card
I do exist
I do not drive a car I do not have a driving
license
I do not have a passport to produce in front of you
Yet I exist
I dont have a rent agrement
I do not have a postpaid mobile connection
Still I exist.
I cannot proof my residency
Still I reside
I cannot establish my dwelling
But I do dwell
But I exist
Yet I exist
Still I exist
Yes
I
4. The house of Kabir, The house of Buddha
One of the most important and interesting aspect of
a site specific work is the improvisation. Mostly the found objects and the
given circumstance become an integral part of the work, being the found
elements of the space also the artistic elements of the work. Here we “found” a
house for Kabir, a ‘matka’, with an inscription- “kabir’s earthen pot, broken,
yet not broken...” and also found a home for Gautama Buddha, “in search of the
origin of sufferings, Buddha had to leave his home”.
We are engaged into a venture what we call
“disposable Theatre”. Whatever we practice, we look for an ephemeral and purely
space-and-time specific artistic execution without the promise of sustainability.
This current work is also “disposable”. It is meant to be foot-stepped, and to
be erased away. Not to be preserved inside a museum, or to be sold in the
market. When in the contemporary capitalist artistic practice the art is being examined
on the basis of the longevity, sustainability and material(ist) quality, this
work, this home, is essentially tries to fade away – stepped away – disposed
away... by its own will....
Note:
The work can be read as an extended practice of the project “DISPOSABLE HOUSE:
The Imagery of ‘House’ in individual and Collective Memories”, a
multidisciplinary project that was being developed since 2004 in shifting
places, along diversified groups and individuals across multilayered mediums.
(It included: Performances, theatres, animation films, short films, blogging,
photo documentations, field-studies, researches, musical shows, installations,
comic strips, book publishing, journalistic writings, cultural criticisms,
artist-interactive-programs, and other individual and collective artistic
sub-projects).
Samudra
Kajal Saikia
kankhowa@gmail.com
mobile:
9811375594
Collaborating
artist: Ashutosh Yadav (Kathputlee Interactive)