Zarmeene Shah - Curatorial Lecture: Spatial and Visual Impacts of a Conflicted City: Contemporary Art in Karachi
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Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery 1825 Main Mall, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z2

Zarmeene Shah, 2021
photo by Benish Mahmood
Curatorial Lecture: Zarmeene Shah
WEDNESDAY 28 APR 2021 AT 5:30 PM PST
VIRTUAL EVENT
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In her public lecture Spatial and Visual Impacts of a Conflicted City: Contemporary Art in Karachi, curator and writer Zarmeene Shah presents a continued investigation into the changing face of the sprawling metropolis of Karachi through codes of overt and covert conflict, as explored through ideas of power and control, geography and territory, right and access. Viewing curating as a series of (interlinked) research-based projects, these concerns have manifested in a broad range of exhibitions and writings, with a sustained focus over some years on the study of the visual and spatial impact of measures of barricading, policing, securitization, militarization, surveillance and control in the urban context, and how this relates to the position/rights of those that inhabit the city. This investigation branches further into the ways in which conflict manifests in our interaction with the city, its land, and its environments, impacting both the human and the non-human. Tracing these concerns through the research-based practices of contemporary Pakistani artists, including Seema Nusrat, Bani Abidi, Seher Naveed, Sohail Zuberi and Madiha Aijaz, amongst others, and taking as a case study the changing face of the city of Karachi, marked by a history of violence and conflict, Shah’s research unfolds into a larger regional, and then global framework. This presentation will include a pre-recorded lecture followed by a live Q&A session.
This lecture is presented by the UBC Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery and Department of Art History, Visual Art and Theory with support from the Audain Endowment for Curatorial Studies and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Exchange, and in partnership with the Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver.