Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Exhibition of works by artist-in-residence Micheal Bullock

About: Born in Western Australia, Michael Bullock is a Melbourne based artist working mainly in sculpture, Michael will present an exhibition of works produced during the Asialink/Spaced Reciprocal Residency program at 1.Shanthiroad. Michael’s residency is a collaboration between the organisations: Asialink, Spaced and 1.Shanthiroad. Spaced is a recurring international event of socially engaged art. Conceived and coordinated by International Art Space (formerly IASKA), Spaced brings together international and Australian artists with communities throughout Western Australia to explore the relationship between globalisation and local identity.
Michael’s residency is a reciprocal program that sees Mumbai based artist, Archana Hande in the town of Laverton, Western Australia.








Sunday, December 15, 2013

Past Futures of Old Media I Gulammohammed Sheikh’s Kaavad I Travelling Shrine I Home, talk by Karin Zitzewitz























Past Futures of Old Media:  Gulammohammed Sheikh’s Kaavad: Travelling Shrine: Home
 a lecture by
Karin Zitzewitz
Art Historian, Michigan State University, USA

Over the past decade, Gulammohammed Sheikh has extended his career-long exploration of narrative, autobiography, and place-making by experimenting simultaneously with new media and old forms of visual storytelling.  Sheikh’s monumental project, Kaavad: Travelling Shrine: Home, extends his longstanding inquiry into the relationship between painting and modernity, which appears here as a secular critique of art’s secularization.  This paper focuses on two aspects of Sheikh’s work—its critique of secularization and its use of digital media—in order to argue that Kaavad provides a crucial opening from which to observe how the artist’s longstanding engagement with the history of representation is based upon a sophisticated critique of historical time.  Sheikh’s Kaavad, in both its representation of his own past work and in its careful assembly of an historical archive of images and figures, offers to viewers an open-ended visual and narrative experience that is at once grounded in a pre-modern past and surprisingly future-oriented.  Overall, it constructs a counterfactual world history in which the secular is absent, and then asks us to re-imagine temporality.  Though sheltered in known artistic forms and authoritative historical precedents, it imagines alternative futures for the past and, therefore, provides a utopian alternative to the present.

Karin Zitzewitz is Assistant Professor of Art History & Visual Culture at Michigan State University.  Her book, The Art of Secularism:  The Cultural Politics of Modernist Art in Contemporary India, is forthcoming from Hurst & Co Publishers (UK) and Oxford University Press (US).  She occasionally curates, including Naiza Khan:  Karachi Elegies (2013) and an untitled exhibition of the work of Mithu Sen (2014), both at the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University.