ArtAsiaPacific

THEN AND NOW

1997

AAP 37: “Shilpa Gupta,” by Johan Pijnappel

Cassette recordings of people expressing joy, paintings made from clothes stained by menstrual blood, canvases blessed by holy men—these are some of the projects that Shilpa Gupta created in the 1990s and early 2000s. In an Essay on the Mumbai-based artist’s practice, curator Johan Pijnappel contextualized Gupta’s works as critical takes on India’s new consumerist society, one in the throes of globalization and in thrall to the new fast lanes of the worldwide web. Gupta’s technological savvy (2001), typically shown in the exhibition context on a single desktop computer. Pijnappel also explored Gupta’s perspectives around the place of women in society, noting that the sectarian violence of 1992–93 in Mumbai took place during the artist’s student days at the Sir JJ School of Art, and cited Rummana Hussain and Nalini Malani as established artists whose works of the time made powerful feminist statements. In one untitled installation work from 2001, Gupta fashioned together clothing that women had used, at the artist’s request, to absorb menstrual blood. Wrestling with the flux of Indian society and art-making itself, at the time Gupta embodied a post-conceptual, post-studio and post-national position as an artist—even if those terms hadn’t come into being just yet.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ArtAsiaPacific

ArtAsiaPacific2 min read
Amar kanwar
Having become accustomed to consuming short-form content on social media, submerging oneself in long-duration video works can often induce a certain restlessness. But watching The Peacock’s Graveyard (2023) by New Delhi-born filmmaker Amar Kanwar, wh
ArtAsiaPacific3 min read
Scratching At The Moon
The Model Minority myth that arose in response to historical events surrounding Asians and Asian Americans during the Second World War has been hard to shake. Not only is the stereotype incorrect as applied against a wide-ranging category that includ
ArtAsiaPacific3 min read
Heman Chong Meditations on Shadow Libraries
Over the past two decades, Heman Chong has harbored a deep fascination with knowledge circulation through his multifaceted, conceptually driven practice. “Meditations on Shadow Libraries” at STPI gallery represented the Malaysian-born, Singapore-base

Related