Glorious Past and a Shining Future for Dhakai Jamdani

22 September 2021, 11:00 am
Glorious Past and a Shining Future for Dhakai Jamdani
Programme Type
Films and Exhibitions
Venue
Art Gallery, Kamaladevi Complex, IIC
End Date
04 October 2021, 07:00 pm

PHYSICAL PROGRAMME

An exhibition of museum quality Dhakai Jamdani sarees from the collection of Siddhartha Tagore. On display are Jamdanis from the late 19th century woven in Dhaka (Bangladesh) and some from an earlier period including some rare pieces produced by the East India Company 

Curated by Puneet Kaushik and Rema Kumar

(Collaboration: Art Konsult)

What To Do With Difference | Art & Artists as a Bridge

15 March 2021, 11:00 am
What To Do With Difference | Art & Artists as a Bridge
Programme Type
Films and Exhibitions
Venue
Art Gallery, Kamaladevi Complex, IIC

PHYSICAL PROGRAMME
An International Artists Exhibition 
A group exhibition of artworks by artists of Art for Change Foundation led by Dr. Rachel Smith, Stefan Eicher, Joshua John, Shalem Kallimel and Isaac Gergan
 
Works by 12 international artists and 9 Indian artists along with works from the Art for Change Foundation's collection will be on view. The artists from the March 2020 International Artist Residency are: Dan Cooper (USA); Elizabeth Kwant (UK);  Sedrick Huckaby (USA); K.W. Bell (USA); Moriah Miller (USA); Heather Harper (USA); Stephanie McDairmant (USA); Jennie Kimbrough (USA); Marianne Lettieri (USA);  Laura Stevenson (USA); Liz Braid (Australia); Shamira Wilson (USA); Navya Sah (India); Sanjeev Mirajkar (India); Sakshi Yadav (India); Mohd. Intiyaz (India); Bernard Cargay (India); Sangeeta Pathak (India); Ravi Chaurasiya (India); Isaac Gergan (India); Mohd. Sultan Alam (India); and Khandakar Ohida (India).

 

 Curatorial note

Connecting with those who are different from us.
In India, as in the rest of the world, we face divisions of every kind. Differences such as gender, religion, politics, socioeconomic status, and language make it difficult for us to understand each other. For this reason, Art For Change Foundation’s theme for the International Artist Residency 2020 is “What to do with Difference? Art and Artist as Bridge”. For two weeks in Delhi, a diverse group of 21 national and international artists came together to engage the issue of difference, from the small and personal aspects of individual relationships, to the perennial questions of community and social identity. 
How does Art address Differences?
Artists are observers, listeners, and storytellers. Through their art, they invite others to engage these stories, generating empathy and reflecting truth. Although solutions to the problems we face are not always clear, art can reveal the complexities of an issue that provide clarity and better understanding. Looking at the strife that differences have caused in the world around us, it is easy to become discouraged. Yet art can provide hope and direction, even when it addresses the worst of circumstances or the things that divide us. 
Bridging Differences
The idea of bridging differences has struck the resident artists in multiple ways. Informed by the collective conversation, their work in this exhibit explores many topics in individual and collaborative artworks. In just two short weeks, in spite of their diversity, the artists found that art has created something that transcends their differences: a community founded on love’s creative nature. We invite you to join this important conversation. 

More about the residency and program can be found at https://artforchange.space/residencies#/difference

Devotion and Syncretism: Pattini – Kannaki Devotion in Sri Lanka

14 May 2014, 05:30 am
Devotion and Syncretism: Pattini – Kannaki Devotion in Sri Lanka
Programme Type
Films and Exhibitions, Webcasts
Venue
Art Gallery, Kamaladevi Complex, IIC

An exhibition of photographs and text
By Sharni Jayawardena and Malathi de Alwis
 
Inauguration on Tuesday, 13 May 2014 at 18:30
 
Devotion to Kannaki-Pattini is an inspiring example of Hindu-Buddhist syncretism in Sri Lanka. Tamil Hindus know her as Kannaki and Sinhala Buddhists as Pattini. However, a large number of Sri Lankans, even devotees, are unaware that she is a shared deity. While some beliefs and rituals of veneration are shared, there are also significant variations between and across the two religions, and regionally. This photographic exhibition attempts to capture that diversity and complexity
 
As part of this exhibition, there will be a talk on Monday, 19 May 2014 at 18:30 in the Art Gallery on
Devotion and Syncretism: Pattini-Kannaki Worship in Sri Lanka
Illustrated lecture by Dr. Malathi de Alwis, Consultant Socio-Cultural Anthropologist