18 MAR - 18 JUN 2017
Early in 2017, the
Stedelijk Museum will show the exhibition Nalini Malani: Transgressions. The
heart of the exhibition is the installation Transgressions, a unique
combination of painting, video, and moving shadows that Malani terms
“video/shadow play.” In collaboration with Malani, several additional works
have been selected to be shown. These works provide a contextualization of the
themes and variety of literary and classical sources brought into play in
Transgressions.
Early in 2017, the
Stedelijk Museum will show the exhibition Nalini Malani: Transgressions. The
heart of the exhibition is the installation Transgressions, a unique
combination of painting, video, and moving shadows that Malani terms
“video/shadow play.” In collaboration with Malani, several additional works
have been selected to be shown. These works provide a contextualization of the
themes and variety of literary and classical sources brought into play in
Transgressions.
Nalini Malani (1946,
Karachi) is an artist who combines a variety of mediums in a unique way in
order to cast attention towards political engagement. As a refugee herself
during the separation of India and Pakistan, her work is permeated by themes
such as migration, globalisation, poverty, and the oppression of women. These
topical issues are often combined in Malani’s work with motifs from classical
literature and mythology.
The heart of this
exhibition is the installation Transgressions, a unique combination of
painting, video, and moving shadows, termed by Malani as ‘video/shadow play.’
The work is created out of four cylinders of Mylar plastic which were painted
by the artist from the inside (the so-called ‘reverse painting’ technique).
Moving slowly at a rate of four rotations per minute, the cylinders are
traversed by three video projections on the wall.
Transgressions is rich in
storylines. The exotic-looking video projections start by showing the skin of a
Caucasian person, upon which the shadows of the Mylar paintings form a game of
moving tattoos which transform into colorful segments of Bollywood movies and a
rain of the exhaustive diversity of Indian languages which are gradually disappearing due to the lack of attention they
are given in Indian schools. On the cylinders themselves are Kalighat-style
paintings, featuring, for instance, a Western hunter on an elephant, the female
deity Durga, and two boxing figures representing Pakistan and India, entangled
in an eternal battle.
The recorded text, in which
the impact of globalization is of central importance, features a recurring
female voice saying: "I speak orange, I speak blue (which refers to the
advancing mobile phone sector in India, in which ‘Orange’ was the market leader
in mobile telephony at the time when this artwork was created and it had
propagated its services for an amount equivalent to the Indian cheapest street
snacks). In addition, a child's voice is asking her mother if she can please
attend 'English School.’ With this aspect Malani addresses the notion that
without proper command of the English language, it is not possible to succeed
in the society of the future.
OTHER WORKS
For the purpose of the
exhibition and in collaboration with Malani, a selection of additional works
were chosen which feature diverse themes and references to the literary and
classical sources seen in Transgressions. Moreover, the range of her
extraordinary multimedia practices are traced, from her films of the 1960s and
70s, video and theatre pieces from the 1990s to her ‘reverse paintings’ and
artists books from the period 1991-2016.
An important part of the
exhibition will be a wall drawing created by Malani in the week prior to the
opening. Wall drawings are of late a topical medium, especially among a new
generation of artists from both India and the West. For Malani, it has been an
important medium since 1991 in order to confront the audience with artistic
forms outside the boundaries of painting and to instead immerse them into her
world. They represent therefore a first step in the development of the later
immersive shadow installations. Malani’s mural in the Stedelijk Museum will
combine a critical portrayal of the current migration crisis with her
fascination for literary and mythological motifs in which women play an important
role (including but not limited to Medea, Cassandra and Sita). On the last day
of the exhibition, the wall drawing will disappear via Erasure Performance, an
event in which the erasure of the drawing will be performed by a
to-be-determined group.
THEORY
Malani’s work has been
frequently discussed by theorists such as Andreas Huyssen and Claudia Bentien.
However, a very important departure point for this exhibition is the extensive
publication In Medias Res, Inside Nalini Malani’s Shadow Plays (Hatje Catz,
2016), by Mieke Bal, Professor of Literary Studies, in which an entire chapter
is dedicated to Transgressions.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT
Malani’s work is shown
increasingly worldwide. In 2016, she had a solo exhibition at the ICA Boston
(June 29-October 16, 2016) (for which Bal’s publication functioned as a
catalogue). In late 2017, the Centre Pompidou in Paris will host a
retrospective of Malani’s work, which will thereafter travel to the Castello di
Rivoli in Turin.
- See more at:
http://www.stedelijk.nl/en/exhibitions/nalini-malan#sthash.t1VcnMuz.dpuf
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