Moving Still: Performative Photography in India
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Vancouver Art Gallery 750 Hornby St, Vancouver, British Columbia V6Z 2H7
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Pushpamala N, "Sunhere Sapne (Golden Dreams)," 1998
hand-painted silver gelatin printCourtesy of the Artist.
The Vancouver Art Gallery proudly announces a major exhibition of works by thirteen artists based in India whose photographic practices focus on constructing and reconstructing realities. Moving Still: Performative Photography in India will showcase more than one hundred works, dating from the 1800s to the present. This exhibition examines themes of gender, religion and sexual identity using photography, an important medium in India since the mid-nineteenth century.
“Moving Still shifts the focus from India’s preeminent and historical traditions of sculpture and painting, to its rich and diverse history of photography,” says Kathleen S. Bartels, Director of the Vancouver Art Gallery. “While this exhibition examines contemporary practices, it tells a fascinating narrative of the artistic impact and influences across three generations of artists who turn the camera onto themselves in ground-breaking ways.”
Not long after the camera’s invention in France in the nineteenth century, photographers based in Bombay (Mumbai), Calcutta (Kolkata) and Madras organized lectures and exhibitions, and published journals, fostering an active culture of experimentation and exchange that continues today. Moving Still begins by examining key works from this early period, including prints from Sawai Ram Singh II, the Maharaja of Jaipur from 1835 to 1880, known as India’s first “Photographer Prince.” It also looks at work by Umrao Singh Sher-Gil, who in his self-portraits engaged in reading, writing, yoga or spiritual solitude constitute for many historians the beginnings of a modern self-fashioning in the country.
Framed through this historical context, Moving Still showcases contemporary works by Vivan Sundaram, the grandson of Umrao Singh Sher-Gil, who reconfigures his grandfather’s photo archive into digital photomontages, creating an alternative family story. The exhibition also prominently features work by Pushpamala N, one of India's leading figures in conceptual photography, video and performance. Her photo series Sunhere Sapne (Golden Dreams)(1998) presents an ironic look at the Indian family post-independence by staging herself as both a stereotypical middle-class housewife and her fantasy alter-ego, a wealthy socialite.
Sunil Gupta explores experiences of gay life, often in terms of his own identity as an HIV-positive man and the differentiating social and personal implications he encounters living between England and India as presented in Sun City (2011). Naveen Kishore revisits the life of Chapal Bhaduri, who was renowned for his portrayal of female goddesses in Bengali folk theatre. Recounting a nightly metamorphosis from man to goddess, Kishore’s Performing the Goddess: Chapal Bhaduri’s Story (1999) is a video documentary and selection of photos taken on set. Additional artists featured in Moving Still include Nikhil Chopra, Anita Dube, Gauri Gill, Ranbir Kaleka, Sonia Khurana, Tejal Shah, and Kiran Subbaiah.
Public Programs for Moving Still: Performative Photography in India
April 20 | 3 PM Curators in Conversation: Diana Freundl and Gayatri Sinha
A conversation between exhibition co-curators Diana Freundl, Associate Curator of Asian Art and Gayatri Sinha, Guest Curator.
Located in Room 4East of the Gallery. Free for members or with Gallery admission; Registration recommended.
April 27 | 3 PM Artist Talk by Pushpamala N
In partnership with Capture Photography Festival, this talk by artist Pushpamala N. discusses the Bangalore-born artist’s clever work as a photo- and video-performance artist, sculptor, writer, curator and provocateur.
Located in Room 4East of the Gallery. Free for members or with Gallery admission; Registration recommended.
May 15 | 7 PM The Heller Lecture: Vivek Shraya
Vivek Shraya discusses Moving Still as an artist whose body of work crosses the boundaries of music, literature, visual art, and film. Her best-selling book, I’m Afraid of Men (2018), was heralded by Vanity Fair as “cultural rocket fuel,” and her album with Queer Songbook Orchestra, Part Time Woman, earned her a Polaris Music Prize nomination in 2018.
Located at Annex Theatre at 823 Seymour Street.
Tickets available as of April 2019 at vanartgallery.bc.ca
For more up-to-date information on Public Programs, visit vanartgallery.bc.ca
In partnership with Capture Photography Festival, a large photo mural from Naveen Kishore’s work in Moving Still will be presented at the Canada Line Vancouver City Centre Station.