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Subject: Dayanita Singh in Boston - msg#00006List: culture.region.india.goa.saligaoContact the artist: dayanita-Rcf5xc1e9sg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx NYTimes.com > Arts > Art & Design Dayanita Singh/Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum "Raphael, Boston, 2002," in Dayanita Singh's "Chairs" at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. Dayanita Singh's "Chairs" will remain at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston until May 8. ART REVIEW | DAYANITA SINGH Objects of Repose and Remembrance By HOLLAND COTTER Published: March 30, 2005 am able to be international because I am so rooted in India," said the ultra-cosmopolitan Jawaharlal Nehru, the country's first prime minister. And many contemporary Indian artists might well say the same. International they are, for sure, judging by visibility. A big traveling survey called "Edge of Desire: Recent Art in India" is at the Asia Society and the Queens Museum in New York this spring. This summer, the Venice Biennale will have its first Indian pavilion. The Delhi-based photographer Dayanita Singh, 44, in particular is getting around. She has work in "Edge of Desire" and at Sepia International in Chelsea, plus a solo exhibition, "Chairs," at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, a really beautiful one, subtly globalist and time traveling. As it happens, her pictures at the Gardner and at the Asia Society share a Nehru moment. In 2000, Ms. Singh made a series of photographs at Anand Bhavan, the Nehru family home in Allahabad, now a museum. With its displays of the political hero's personal effects in domestic settings, it draws its share of tourists, though Ms. Singh paid little attention to them. Instead, she focused on the objects preserved. Her shot of one of Nehru's white jackets hanging in a cabinet is at the Asia Society; a picture of books in his spare, monkish library is at the Gardner. Both photographs - black-and-white, like all Ms. Singh's work - are reliquary still-lifes of a specific historical past. But a third picture from the series, not in either show - you'll find it in her book, "Privacy," published last year by Steidl - is quite different. In it, Indian tourists peer into one of Nehru's rooms from behind a glass barrier. Ms. Singh shoots them from inside the display, from the perspective of Nehru's ghost, you might say. And dressed in saris and T-shirts, they seem to be from another world, an in-the-now India, jostling for space and feeling the heat, in a frozen-time shrine. Place and time - here and there, past and present - are the poles of Ms. Singh's work, although her early training was in the intensely present-directed field of photojournalism, which she studied in India and at the International Center of Photography in New York. While still her 20's she had assignments for international magazines and newspapers, including this one. And one article, from The Times of London in 1989, turned into a long-term, career-altering project. The article was about Indian eunuchs, who form a distinctive social class within the culture. In researching the subject, she befriended a eunuch named Mona Ahmed, a bright, troubled, charismatic presence whose life she went on to photograph for 13 years. What resulted was the extraordinary book "Myself Mona Ahmed" (Scalo, 2001), a record of a personal past and present locked in conflict. Ms. Singh's interest in photojournalism gradually cooled as she realized that most Western publications were interested in only one India, an India of sensational catastrophes and human failures. And even as she produced significant reports on AIDS and child labor, she was aware that the India of economic privilege that she was born into was going undocumented in a period of radical transition. With no market for the story, she proceeded on her own. In 1992, she started making portraits of wealthy urbanites in their homes in New Delhi and elsewhere, beginning with family friends and branching out into a social sphere in which distinctions between "Western" and "Indian" are in an ever-shifting balance. This dynamic is apparent in the clothes her sitters wear - saris and miniskirts turn up in the same picture - but more tellingly in half-noticed details of interior decor, which range from colonial baroque to minimalist modern, with endless variations between. In houses and apartments in Calcutta in 2002, Ms. Singh found herself taking pictures, as she had at Anand Bhavan, of rooms empty of people but filled with traces of them: an armchair awaiting the arrival of one family member, a desk chair vacated by another; a daybed where someone now dead had once napped. From Calcutta, she traveled to Boston for an artist's residency at the Gardner, a mock-Venetian palace built around 1900 as museum-home. She brought the pictures from Calcutta, and began doing in Boston what she had done there: evoking resident spirits through portraits of furniture. An 18th-century Italian chair, for example, facing a tiny tabletop Raphael "Pietà" had been set in place by Isabella Gardner herself nearly a century earlier and not been moved since. Her ardent, acquisitive gaze lingered there. Ms. Singh was in and out of Boston a lot during this time, and took her camera with her. She photographed rooms wherever she went: first in South India, then in Venice, where she stayed at the home of Fausto Calderai, a furniture scholar who was cataloging the Gardner's collection. Finally, four years after the residency ended, she wrapped up the project with the current exhibition. It's a solo show that is also a collaboration. Taking their cue from the 2002 photograph of the chair in front of the Raphael, Ms. Singh and Mr. Calderai have created arrangements of chairs throughout the museum. In the room that was Gardner's salon, they've placed them in casual groupings to suggest a party just broken up. Elsewhere, a single gilded armchair serves as a screen on which Ms. Singh's photographs from Allahabad, Calcutta, Boston and Venice are projected. The photographs themselves, hung in a special exhibition gallery, are the heart of the show. What's interesting about them is that it's hard to tell at a glance when and where they were taken. They look both old and new. They could be Western or Indian. As Nehru might have recognized, they are, in some sense, both, and the one because of the other. The New York Times Online Edition Special Offer: 1 Week Free
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Previous Message by Date: (click to view message preview)150 things you can do to build social capitalThis list sounds US-centric. Any suggestions of what might work in a Goa or overseas Goan context? FN http://www.bettertogether.org/150ways.htm what to do: 150 THINGS YOU CAN DO TO BUILD SOCIAL CAPITAL Social capital is built through hundreds of little and big actions we take every day. We've gotten you started with a list of nearly 150 ideas, drawn from suggestions made by many people and groups. Try some of these or try your own. We need to grow this list. If you have other ideas, * Some on the list that sound good: * Volunteer your special skills to an organization * Donate blood (with a friend!) * Start a community garden * Mentor someone of a different ethnic (caste?) or religious group * Tape record your parents' earliest recollections and share them with your children * Avoid gossip * Attend PTA meetings * Join or start a babysitting cooperative * Form a computer group for local senior citizens * Help coach Little League or other youth sports - even if you don't have a kid playing * Start a lunch gathering or a discussion group with co-workers * Plan a "Walking Tour" of a local historic area * Have family dinners and read to your children * Say "thanks" to public servants (who work) * Join a nonprofit board of directors * Turn off the TV and talk with friends or family * When somebody says "government stinks," suggest they help fix it * Plant tree seedlings along your street with neighbors and rotate care for them * Volunteer at the library * Use public transportation and start talking with those you regularly see * Ask neighbors for help and reciprocate * Go to a local folk or crafts festival * Call an old friend * Talk to your kids or parents about their day * Say hello to strangers * Exercise together or take walks with friends or family * Assist with or create your town or neighborhood's newsletter * Collect oral histories from older town residents * Start a children's story hour at your local library * Be real. Be humble. Acknowledge others' self-worth * Tell friends and family about social capital and why it matters * Greet people * Cut back on television * Read the local news faithfully * Fix it even if you didn't break it * Pick it up even if you didn't drop it * Start a tradition * Be nice when you drive * Make gifts of time * Volunteer at your local neighborhood school * Send a "thank you" letter to the Editor about a person or event that helped build community * When inspired, write personal notes to friends and neighbors * Build a neighborhood playground _____ _/ ____\____ Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa \ __\/ \ India T +91.832.2409490 M +919822 122436 | | | | \ http://fn.swiki.net http://goabooks.swiki.net |__| |___| / http://www.bytesforall.net http://www.bytesforall.org \/ ----------------------------------------------------- Sign up for low-volume, high-quality news summaries and updates from Goa at http://newsfromgoa.swiki.net * It's free and volunteer-driven. =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--W-E-B--S-I-T-E--=-=-=-=-=-= To Subscribe/Unsubscribe from Saligaonet | http://www.goacom.com/saligao_tinto/ ============================================================================ * Send e=mail to majordomo-fkB0aodkGtPQT0dZR+AlfA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (NOT saligaonet-fkB0aodkGtPQT0dZR+AlfA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) * Leave SUBJECT blank <--- Commom Mistake !! * On first line of the BODY of your message, type: subscribe saligaonet YOUR.EMAIL OR unsubscribe saligaonet YOUR.EMAIL Questions/Problems? Contact: delaneyashley-s8PdfxpoPdHk1uMJSBkQmQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Next Message by Date: click to view message previewAdd your voice...If you feel about this issue, please add your voice here: http://salmonafountain.swiki.net/ Please send in any published (or unpublished) material about this issue, so that it can be added to explain Salmona's relevance. FN _____ _/ ____\____ Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa \ __\/ \ India T +91.832.2409490 M +919822 122436 | | | | \ http://fn.swiki.net http://goabooks.swiki.net |__| |___| / http://www.bytesforall.net http://www.bytesforall.org \/ ----------------------------------------------------- Sign up for low-volume, high-quality news summaries and updates from Goa at http://newsfromgoa.swiki.net * It's free and volunteer-driven. =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--W-E-B--S-I-T-E--=-=-=-=-=-= To Subscribe/Unsubscribe from Saligaonet | http://www.goacom.com/saligao_tinto/ ============================================================================ * Send e=mail to majordomo-fkB0aodkGtPQT0dZR+AlfA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (NOT saligaonet-fkB0aodkGtPQT0dZR+AlfA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) * Leave SUBJECT blank <--- Commom Mistake !! * On first line of the BODY of your message, type: subscribe saligaonet YOUR.EMAIL OR unsubscribe saligaonet YOUR.EMAIL Questions/Problems? Contact: delaneyashley-s8PdfxpoPdHk1uMJSBkQmQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Previous Message by Thread: click to view message preview150 things you can do to build social capitalThis list sounds US-centric. Any suggestions of what might work in a Goa or overseas Goan context? FN http://www.bettertogether.org/150ways.htm what to do: 150 THINGS YOU CAN DO TO BUILD SOCIAL CAPITAL Social capital is built through hundreds of little and big actions we take every day. We've gotten you started with a list of nearly 150 ideas, drawn from suggestions made by many people and groups. Try some of these or try your own. We need to grow this list. If you have other ideas, * Some on the list that sound good: * Volunteer your special skills to an organization * Donate blood (with a friend!) * Start a community garden * Mentor someone of a different ethnic (caste?) or religious group * Tape record your parents' earliest recollections and share them with your children * Avoid gossip * Attend PTA meetings * Join or start a babysitting cooperative * Form a computer group for local senior citizens * Help coach Little League or other youth sports - even if you don't have a kid playing * Start a lunch gathering or a discussion group with co-workers * Plan a "Walking Tour" of a local historic area * Have family dinners and read to your children * Say "thanks" to public servants (who work) * Join a nonprofit board of directors * Turn off the TV and talk with friends or family * When somebody says "government stinks," suggest they help fix it * Plant tree seedlings along your street with neighbors and rotate care for them * Volunteer at the library * Use public transportation and start talking with those you regularly see * Ask neighbors for help and reciprocate * Go to a local folk or crafts festival * Call an old friend * Talk to your kids or parents about their day * Say hello to strangers * Exercise together or take walks with friends or family * Assist with or create your town or neighborhood's newsletter * Collect oral histories from older town residents * Start a children's story hour at your local library * Be real. Be humble. Acknowledge others' self-worth * Tell friends and family about social capital and why it matters * Greet people * Cut back on television * Read the local news faithfully * Fix it even if you didn't break it * Pick it up even if you didn't drop it * Start a tradition * Be nice when you drive * Make gifts of time * Volunteer at your local neighborhood school * Send a "thank you" letter to the Editor about a person or event that helped build community * When inspired, write personal notes to friends and neighbors * Build a neighborhood playground _____ _/ ____\____ Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa \ __\/ \ India T +91.832.2409490 M +919822 122436 | | | | \ http://fn.swiki.net http://goabooks.swiki.net |__| |___| / http://www.bytesforall.net http://www.bytesforall.org \/ ----------------------------------------------------- Sign up for low-volume, high-quality news summaries and updates from Goa at http://newsfromgoa.swiki.net * It's free and volunteer-driven. =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--W-E-B--S-I-T-E--=-=-=-=-=-= To Subscribe/Unsubscribe from Saligaonet | http://www.goacom.com/saligao_tinto/ ============================================================================ * Send e=mail to majordomo-fkB0aodkGtPQT0dZR+AlfA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (NOT saligaonet-fkB0aodkGtPQT0dZR+AlfA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) * Leave SUBJECT blank <--- Commom Mistake !! * On first line of the BODY of your message, type: subscribe saligaonet YOUR.EMAIL OR unsubscribe saligaonet YOUR.EMAIL Questions/Problems? Contact: delaneyashley-s8PdfxpoPdHk1uMJSBkQmQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Next Message by Thread: click to view message previewAdd your voice...If you feel about this issue, please add your voice here: http://salmonafountain.swiki.net/ Please send in any published (or unpublished) material about this issue, so that it can be added to explain Salmona's relevance. FN _____ _/ ____\____ Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa \ __\/ \ India T +91.832.2409490 M +919822 122436 | | | | \ http://fn.swiki.net http://goabooks.swiki.net |__| |___| / http://www.bytesforall.net http://www.bytesforall.org \/ ----------------------------------------------------- Sign up for low-volume, high-quality news summaries and updates from Goa at http://newsfromgoa.swiki.net * It's free and volunteer-driven. =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--W-E-B--S-I-T-E--=-=-=-=-=-= To Subscribe/Unsubscribe from Saligaonet | http://www.goacom.com/saligao_tinto/ ============================================================================ * Send e=mail to majordomo-fkB0aodkGtPQT0dZR+AlfA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (NOT saligaonet-fkB0aodkGtPQT0dZR+AlfA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) * Leave SUBJECT blank <--- Commom Mistake !! * On first line of the BODY of your message, type: subscribe saligaonet YOUR.EMAIL OR unsubscribe saligaonet YOUR.EMAIL Questions/Problems? Contact: delaneyashley-s8PdfxpoPdHk1uMJSBkQmQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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