Opening reception: Thursday, April 5th -6:30 to 8:30pm, at The Guild
Exhibition dates: Thursday, April 5th – Thursday, April 19th, 2007
Gallery Hours: Tues-Sat 11am – 6pm
March 23, 2007, New York, NY - The Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC) is proud to showcase the traveling art exhibition titled ‘Erasing Borders: Indian Artists in the American Diaspora’ at The Guild in New York. This is the second stop for the exhibition and it will run from Thursday, April 5th – Thursday, April 19th, 2007. Curated by Vijay Kumar, the show presents a diverse collection of work produced by 16 artists who are of Indian origin. The exhibition first opened at the Queen’s Museum of Art on February 4th, 2007 and received a positive response during its month long run.
20 million people of Indian origin shifted countries in 20th and 21st centuries. Implicit in the term Diaspora are the concepts of change and adaptation. Cultural dislocation often produces unexpected and powerful results. Subject matter is often drawn from the country of origin, while many of the aesthetic values and political concerns come from the artists' newfound situations.
Many Indian artists went abroad after India's independence from British rule. These artists grappled with dual aesthetic concerns (modernity versus tradition), and with the complex issue of identity. The Diaspora artists had to create an authentic artistic language possessing Indian aesthetic components in order to be taken seriously by critics, as well as reconcile the issues associated with being minorities. Today's Diaspora artists are scattered across the country and more socio-economically and religiously diverse than their predecessors. These artists are working to make themselves heard in an art world that is at once more competitive and more receptive to non-Western art than ever before. Reeta Karmarkar, a California-based artist, says, “The IAAC recognizes and allows Indian artists to showcase their individual works to a mainstream audience. Indian art does not need to be folkloric and through the IAAC works such as mine are taken seriously even if they don’t fit the stereotypical image of what Indian art is perceived to be.”
The artists in this exhibition will meld Indian and Western colors and forms in many media, namely painting, sculpture, and photography. They will also grapple with diverse subject matter, including: AIDS, poverty, identity as a South Asian living in the post-9/11 world, in addition to their religious, sexual, and ethnic identities. Aroon Shivdasani, Executive Director and Founding Member of IAAC, says, “This is the fourth annual exhibition of its kind organized by the Indo-American Arts Council, ‘Erasing Borders’ articulates the interests and concerns of Diaspora artists living in contemporary society. Not unlike their predecessors, they have also drawn on subject matter from India while referencing the socio-political conditions of their current environment.”
The IAAC has a long history of building awareness of Indian artistic disciplines in North America. IAAC has helped promote Indian culture through art, books, dance, fashion, film, music, and theatre. Since 1998, the IAAC has organized several successful collaborative art shows and events showcasing works of some of India’s premiere artists as well as the Diaspora artists with partner organizations such as Christie’s, American Folk Art Museum and The Queens Museum of Art. It is the fourth time the Indo-American Arts Council has showcased Indian Diaspora visual artists: the first was a passport to New York artists’ studios; the second and third exhibitions titled Erasing Borders were held at a Gallery space in Chelsea and the Consulate General of India, New York.
PARTICIPATING ARTISTS : Reeta Karmarkar, Vijay Kumar, Bivas Chaudhuri, Satish Joshi, Siona Benjamin, Tara Sabharwal, Nitin Mukul, Ela Shah, Vinod Dave, Nandini Chirimar, Antonio Puri, Anna Bhushan, Delna Dastur, Niyeti Chadha, Alka Mukerji, Yamini Nayar,
Opening reception :6:30 to 8:30pm,
Thursday, April 5th, at THE GUILD ART USA
Exhibition dates: Thursday, April 5th – Thursday, April 19th, 2007
Gallery Hours: Tues-Sat 11am – 6pm
The Guild Art USA,
45 West 21st Street,
Suite #39, 2nd Floor,
NYC 10010. (212) 229 2110
info@theguildny.com
www.theguildny.com
The IAAC began operations in 1998 when Indian artists were unrecognized and invisible on the American scene.Executive Director and founding member of the Indo-American Arts Council, Aroon Shivdasani is passionate about its mission to facilitate artists and arts organizations of Indian descent to exhibit, perform and produce their works in the US.
The IAAC supports all the artistic disciplines in classical, fusion, folk and innovative forms influenced by the arts of India. The organization works cooperatively with colleagues around the United States to broaden their collective audiences and to create a network for shared information, resources and funding.
For more information, please visit or call (212) 594-3685
About The Guild:
The Guild Art USA is located at 45 West 21st Street, 2nd Floor Rear, Suite 39 and is open from 11 – 6 pm Tuesday-Saturday. For further information please call the gallery at 212-229-2110, e-mail info@theguildny.com or visit www.theguildny.com