| THE INDO-AMERICAN ARTS COUNCIL  KICKS OFF THE FIFTH ANNUAL ERASING BORDERS 2008:
 EXHIBITION OF CONTEMPORARY INDIAN  ART OF THE DIASPORA
 * 40 Indian Diaspora  Artists come together to express their Indian Identity in the U.S. * From traditional  Indian fingernail art to photo installations – the show captures the diverse  artistic techniques and expressions
 Showing at: Hammond  Museum, 28  Deveau Road, North  Salem, NY 10560. www.hammondmuseum.orgOpening  Reception: Saturday, June 14th, 2008 from 1:00pm – 3:00pm, Marina Alam will sing ghazals at the opening.
 Exhibition  Dates: June 11th - September 5th, 2008
 
 June 5th, 2008, New York, NY - With Indian contemporary art at an all time high, the Indian Diaspora artists in the U.S. have steadily gained momentum and claimed their turf. Indian Diaspora Art is alive and gearing up for its Fifth Annual exhibition entitled 'Erasing Borders 2008: Exhibition of Contemporary Indian Art of the Diaspora' featuring works by 40 artists. The Indo-American Arts Council's show features an eclectic mix of diverse mediums employed by a group of 40 artists representing myriad styles, mediums and mind sets with one common bond - a shared Indian heritage that has been cultivated in the United States. Now in its fifth year, this traveling exhibition has had a successful showing in California, Brooklyn and Manhattan it is now opening at the Hammond Museum in North Salem, NY. The opening reception will be held on June 14th, 2008 from 1:00pm - 3:00pm and the exhibition runs through September 5th, 2008.
 
 Of  the 270 submissions, curator Vijay Kumar has selected 40 artists whose work  accurately reflects the diversity – religious, ethnic and intellectual  predilections – of the Indian Diaspora population in the U.S. Each distinctive piece in  the exhibition shares this unifying characteristic. Kumar sums it up by saying  they are “works trying to ‘find home’ within the psyche.” He adds, “We  are thrilled to be able to exhibit the diversity in the artists’ chosen medium  of expression, gender and generation. The overwhelming number of submissions reflects  the significance of the IAAC serving as a platform for showcasing Indian  Diaspora artists.”
 
 In diverse styles and from a variety of  perspectives, artists express the dynamic public and private character of being  Indian in the U.S. and their world, conveying personal, regional, national, and  universal themes. The  work of these artists is as diverse as the artists themselves, a reflection of  the theme – Erasing Borders. The artists express their ideas and visions  through conceptual artwork, sculpture, mixed media, abstract and figurative paintings,  photo installations, printmaking, photography, drawing and ‘nakhachitra’ - the  rare art of fingernail relief drawing.
 
 PARTICIPATING  ARTISTS INCLUDE:
 Amina Ahmed, Fariba Alam, Salma Arastu, Shelly Bahl, Siona Benjamin, Anna Bhushan, Bushra Chaudry, Bivas Chaudhuri, Nandini Chirimar, Mareena Waheeda Daredia, Delna Dastur, Vinod Dave, Anindita Dutta, Anujan Ezhikode, Indrani  Nayar-Gall, Asha Ganpat, Arvind Garg,  Mumtaz Hussain, Satish Joshi, Reeta Karmarkar, Swati Khurana,  Vijay Kumar, Srinivas Kuruganti, Samanta Batra Mehta, Alakananda Mukerji, Pratima Naithani, Veru Narula, Kuzana Ogg, Antonio Puri, Niema Khan Qureshi, Alka Raghuram, Sukanya Rahman, Chirag Rana, Tara Sabharwal, Ela Shah, Reuben Sinha, Anjali Srinivasan,  Suhas Tavkar, Prince Varughese Thomas, Yetish Yetish“In the  twenty first century, we have witnessed a giant embrace of Indian culture in  all its facets. Indian visual art has exploded on the contemporary art scene –  in galleries, auction houses, private and public places. The Indo-American Arts  Council is thrilled to be part of this regenerative energy by presenting forty  talented artists of the Indian Diaspora who live and work in the United States,”  says Aroon Shivdasani, Executive Director, IAAC. 
 Leveraging  the momentum for Indian art, this year’s exhibition is slated to travel all across  New York starting in Brooklyn in March and ending in Queens in the Fall. For  schedule details and dates, please see below. For more information on the  Hammond Museum please visit, www.hammondmuseum.org
 
 About  Erasing Borders: Erasing  Borders was conceptualized by Aroon Shivdasani, Executive Director, IAAC in  2004 as a platform for Indian Diaspora artists in the U.S.  to get visibility and have their voices  heard. Sundaram Tagore curated the  first Erasing Borders exhibition in 2004 and it broke many grounds as it was  the first exhibition of its kind to focus solely on Indian Diaspora artists.  Due to its large success, the IAAC made it an annual exhibition. Over the last  four year, Erasing Borders has grown by leap and bounds under the keen eye of  curator Vijay Kumar.
 
 About  the Curator:
 Vijay Kumar studied art at Triveni Kala Sangam  in New Delhi, and at Pratt Graphics Center in NYC. Kumar has worked extensively  in printmaking techniques and currently teaches etching at Manhattan Graphics  Center in NYC, where he was a founding member. His work is featured in many  permanent collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Brooklyn Museum  and the New York Public Library, the William Benton Museum of Art in Storrs,  Connecticut, the National Gallery of Art in New Delhi, and the Ashmolean Museum  in Oxford, UK.
 
 About  the Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC):
 The Indo-American Arts Council is a registered  501(c)3 not-for-profit, secular service and resource arts organization charged  with the mission of promoting and building the awareness, creation, production,  exhibition, publication and performance of Indian and cross-cultural art forms  in North America.
 
 The IAAC supports all artistic disciplines in  the classical, fusion, folk and innovative forms influenced by the arts of  India. They work with colleagues around the United States to broaden collective  audiences and to create a network for shared information, resources and  funding. The focus is to work with artists and arts organizations in North  America as well as to facilitate artists and arts organizations from India in  their endeavors to exhibit, perform and produce their works here.
 For further information, please visit
 
 PRESS  CONTACTS:
 Peepul  PR646.495.6224
 Gayatri  Hingorani / Sri Kaushal
 gayatri@mypeepul.com / sri@mypeepul.com
 High  resolution pictures are available upon request
 Exhibition Schedule  for Erasing Borders 2008February 23, 2008: South Asian American Art Festival, Santa Monica  Art Studios, 3026 Airport Avenue, Santa Monica, CA 90405
 T.  310 397 7449 F.  310 397 7459
 info@santamonicaartstudios.com
 www.santamonicaartstudios.com
 
 March 12-27, 2008: Tabla Rasa  Gallery
 224  48th Street, Brooklyn, NY, 11220
 T.  917 880 8337 F.  718 833 9118
 info@tablarasagallery.com
 www.tablarasagallery.com
 
 April 3-26, 2008: The Guild  Gallery, Manhattan
 45  West, 21st Street, 2nd Floor (Rear), Suite 39, New York, NY 10010
 T.  212 229 2110
 info@theguildny.com
 www.theguildny.com
 
 May 11- June11, 2008:  Brownson Art Gallery
 Manhattanville  College
 2900  Purchase Street
 Purchase  (Westchester), NY 10577
 T.  914 694 2200
 info@manhattanville.edu
 www.manhattanville.edu
 
 June 11-September 5, 2008:  Hammond Museum & Japanese Stroll Garden
 PO  Box 326, 28 Deveau Road
 North  Salem, NY 10560
 T.  914 669 5033
 gardenprogram@yahoo.com
 www.hammondmuseum.org
 
 October 2008: Queens Museum  of Art
 New  York City Building
 Flushing  Meadows Corona Park
 Queens,  NY 11368
 T.  718 592 9700
 info@queensmuseum.org
 www.queensmuseum.org
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