28 August 2025, 06:30 pm
Nagaland and the Art of Indigenous Presence in Postcolonial South Asia
Programme Type
Talks
Venue
Annexe Lecture Room II, IIC Annexe

Speaker: Dr. Akshaya Tankha, Assistant Professor of Art History at the University of Washington, Seattle

Discussant: Dr. Annapurna Garimella, Art Historian and Designer

In 2005, chastened by the Baptist elders of a village in the predominantly Christian state of Nagaland in northeast India for making a “pagan statue” that could awaken the Tribal lake-spirit it visualized, Lepden Jamir defended his wood-carved sculpture by exclaiming, “I am a Naga and an artist.” Jamir’s embrace of and the villagers’ anxiety over the efficacy of the visualized icon go to the heart of what Tankha seeks to highlight in this talk: often dismissed as matters of 'belief', ideas like the sentience of matter are critical resources that artists mobilize to make situated claims about art, history, and place, and respond to the state’s hegemonic politics of inclusion.

(Collaboration: The Alkazi Foundation for the Arts)