- Vishal Tondon
Here are details of the art show EXCLUSIVELY INCLUSIVE! held at the Anveshi Research Centre for Women's Studies, Hyderabad
Here are details of the art show EXCLUSIVELY INCLUSIVE! held at the Anveshi Research Centre for Women's Studies, Hyderabad
Exclusively Inclusive!
Celebrating
diversity through art
5th
- 11th of October 2012
The art exhibition, ‘Exclusively Inclusive’, highlights the
pluralities of gender and sexuality. The show is an initiative of our group,
the Wajood LGBT Society. We are proud to have as our hosts the Anveshi Research
Center for Women’s Studies.
We decided to bring together for this groundbreaking show an
international bouquet of artists.
The impetus of the curatorial effort is to push the philosophy of
Wajood Society, which reads, “Exclusively Inclusive.” The word ‘Wajood’
literally means ‘Existence’. Ours is a community-based organization for LGBT
(Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender) people as well as their friends,
families and supporters. It is registered with the Office of the Registrar of
Societies, Hyderabad. Soon after this art exhibition, we will also be
spearheading a major LGBT pride parade at Hyderabad. This art exhibition is one
of the pre-pride activities.
This
show is one of the many ways in which we are working to sensitize various
communities to diversity in the context of gender, sexuality and identity. Our
objective also is to take art to academic as well as public spaces, so that the
public at large can engage with it.
The
exhibition reflects the spirit of Wajood as well as the philosophy of Anveshi; empowerment
of minority groups rather than appeal on the basis of victimhood. Most of the
artworks here are therefore self-affirmative and celebratory. Not all of the
artists in this show identify themselves as queer. Rather, most of the artworks
here reflect the fluidity of gender and sexuality. That is the most important
point this show attempts to make. There are no fixed identities. We have to
appreciate and celebrate differences. Only then will we be able to achieve our
full potential as a society.
We
are showcasing a spectrum of identities in this show. To begin with there is
the artist couple that comprises of Elizabeth Stephens and Annie Sprinkle from
the USA. They call themselves “Ecosexuals.” To put it simply, they take the
earth as their lover and through a series of performances they get married to
its natural resources such as trees, snow, sky and mountains. Then there are
artists such as Jehangir Jani and Waswo X Waswo, both from India, who question
through the works displayed here the assumption that there are only two natural
genders, the male and the female.
The
art of Qasim Riza Shaheen of UK is a series of beautiful performances where
multiple personalities speak out of the photographed subject. Gender, sexuality
as well as identity are in his work curiously twisted to create mystifying
self-portraits. In his photographs and performances, the personalities of the
people he has known overlap with his own: a comment that our lives and
identities are inter-related.
The
show also includes two Indian women artists who do not identify themselves as
queer, yet admit to queerness in their artworks. Mithu Sen mockingly turns the
conventions of feminine beauty on their head by depicting herself as comical,
devilish and as genderqueer. Manjari Chakravarti, on her part, uses art as an
escape into the forbidden world of erotica. Her work is a soliloquy of
hush-hush sex words discussed between women in mofussil towns behind closed
doors.
We
hope this show reaches out in ways so as to enable a better
understanding and acceptance of minorities.
-
Vishal
Tondon
Curator
Artist Biographies
Jehangir Jani is a Mumbai
based artist who has consistently tackled caste and class issues in the context
of sexuality in his two decades long career. He has had solo shows at Kalakriti
Art Gallery, Hyderabad (2012), Gallery Sumukha, Bangalore (2008), Gallery
Espace, New Delhi (2006), Guild Art Gallery, Mumbai (2004), Gallery Chemould,
Mumbai (2002), NGMA, Mumbai, 2000, and Fine Art Resource, Mumbai (1998). He has
participated in major group shows including Iconography
in Transient Times, India Habitat Center, New Delhi (2004), Ways of Resisting – 1992-2002, Rabindra Bhavan, New Delhi (2002), The Pink Sun – Making an Entrance, NGMA,
Mumbai (2000) and Artists Stamps –
Independent India, SAHMAT, New Delhi (1997). He has participated in the
Khoj International Workshop (2003) and has curated a show, Conversations, for The LOFT, Mumbai (2009). His short film Make Ups has been screened at Kashish
Queer Film Festival, Mumbai (2010), the Uppsala Short Film Festival, Sweden
(2005) and IAAC Film Festival, New York (2005).
Waswo X Waswo was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in the U.S.A. He studied at the
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, The Milwaukee Center for Photography, and
Studio Marangoni, The Centre for Contemporary Photography in Florence, Italy.
His books, India Poems: The Photographs,
published by Gallerie Publishers in 2006, and Men of Rajasthan, published by Serindia Contemporary in 2011, have
been available worldwide. The artist has lived and travelled in India for over
ten years and he has made his home in Udaipur, Rajasthan, for the past
seven. There he collaborates with a
variety of local artists including the photo hand-colourist Rajesh Soni. He has
also produced a series of autobiographical miniature paintings in collaboration
with the artist R. Vijay. Waswo is represented
in India by Gallerie Espace, New Delhi and Sakshi Gallery, Mumbai, and in
Thailand by Serindia Gallery, Bangkok.
Qasim Riza Shaheen is a British artist based in Manchester with an
international repertoire. His work has been presented at prominent venues and
festivals throughout the United Kingdom, including at the Victoria and Albert
Museum, London; the National Review of Live Art, Glasgow; the Liverpool
Biennial; and British Dance Edition. Internationally, Shaheen’s work has been
programmed as part of several film festivals; British Council’s showcases of
Live Art in Denmark, Spain and Belgium; and at numerous art museums and galleries
in Pakistan, India and in the USA. His art works have been acquired by museums
and collectors internationally. His publications include Only the Moon to
Play With (Arts Council England, 2004), Khusra: Stains & Stencils
(Shisha, 2007), Liliquoi Blue: God Made Me a Boy (City Arts, 2010) and Nine
Acts of Reciprocity (Anokha Laadla, 2010).
Elizabeth M Stephens & Annie M
Sprinkle are two
ecosexual artists-in-love who have been collaborating with each other, and with
various international communities, for 11 years. They created a new field of
research, “Sexecology,” exploring the places where sexology and ecology
intersect in our culture– in art, theory, practice and activism. Their ecosex
performance art weddings have involved thousands of collaborators and participants
in eight countries. They also do Sexecological Walking Tours, visual art
installations, and are finishing a film about mountain top removal coal mining
destruction in Appalachia called Goodbye Gauley Mountain—An Ecosexual Love
Story. Stephens is a professor of art at UCSC and a Ph.D. candidate in
performance studies at UC Davis. Sprinkle is a popular visiting artist who
holds a Ph.D. in human sexuality. They love to collaborate!
Manjari Chakravarti trained in printmaking at Kala Bhavan, Santiniketan. She has worked
extensively in diverse media and has had solo shows at Galerie Beatrice
Binoche, Saint-Denis, France (2011), Akar Prakar, Kolkata (2010), Art Alive,
New Delhi (2008), Gandhara Art Gallery Kolkata (2007), Galerie 88, Calcutta
(1999) and Art Heritage, New Delhi (1994). Her installation The Vanishing Wives of Santiniketan was
shown at Enduring Legacy, Gallery
Neumeister, Munich and Indian Embassy, Berlin in association with Akar Prakar,
Kolkata and ICCR, and also at the India Art Summit 2011, New Delhi. She was
awarded the Junior Fellowship for Outstanding Artists in the Field of Visual
Arts, Ministry of Human Resources Development, Department of Culture, India, in
1996-98.
Mithu Sen is one of the vibrant faces on the Indian
contemporary art scene. An alumnus of Kala Bhavan, Santiniketan, she has had
solo exhibitions at Gallery Nature Morte and British Council, New Delhi (2006),
Gallery Chemould, Mumbai (2006), Lakeeren Art Gallery, Mumbai (2003),
Machintosh Gallery, Glasgow (2001) and Art India Style, New Delhi(2000). She
won the Charles Wallace India Trust Award in the UK for 2000-2001 and was
nominated for the Magna Young Achievers Award for 2003. She also won the 2010
Skoda Award for Indian contemporary art. Mithu lives and works in New Delhi.
The show:
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