(from Nishitha Jain's Laxmi and Me)
Sharp 6.00 pm I walk into Vadehra Gallery, D-53, Defence
Colony, New Delhi, where ‘Apna Ghar’ (Our Home), a group show of four young
artists namely Vicky Roy, Chandan Gomes, Samudra Kajal Saikia and Nishitha Jain
is about to start. Rubbing shoulders with the imaginary glitterati of the
cultural world of Delhi are the boys from Salam Balak Trust, an organization
that runs shelter homes for the run-away kids; the social marginality of the
obscure world of Delhi. A few of have cameras in their hands and are happy to
click away the images of the people like me who share the liminal space in the
cultural world of the city with them. A few enthusiastically identify themselves
in the images exhibited there on the immaculate walls of the gallery. Texts
narrating the lives of the young boys are vinyl cut and pasted here and there
adding design quality to the show; perhaps that is how obscure lives embroider the rich tapestry of urban life in general.
(work by Vicky Roy)
They celebrate the success of one of them; Vicky Roy and erstwhile
run-away child from Bengal who had chugged into Delhi’s filthiness and
callousness years back in order to explore the world. His father was despotic
and he was seeking liberation. Curiosity took him to Delhi and destiny overpowered
the enthusiasm of that seven year old forcing him to become a dish washer than
an explorer of the world. Vicky Roy was rescued by Salam Balak Trust and the
lore puts it, he was introduced to camera, got hooked because he thought camera
would him a distinct personality. It did give him. He got trained under experts
and mentors like Anay Mann and Pradeep Dasgupta and late Prabuddha Dasgupta. A
residency program took him to New York and he got a chance to work at the
Ground Zero. Vicky came back and ever since he has been under limelight.
(by Vicky Roy)
Vicky Roy, in a series titled, ‘Apna Ghar’ raises the issues
of identity, governance and life in institutions. Louis Althusser speaks of
Ideological State Apparatuses that are meant for making good citizens out of
savage ones. The run-away kids are primarily treated as savage beings that are
to be corrected through proper indoctrination of the ideologies of the state in
and by an agency that confirms to the state in all possible ways. Vicky does
not raise a staunch critique against the glorified penitentiaries like rescue
homes nor does he challenge the idea of state. Instead he documents with a
sense of empathy without losing the feeling that he had been once a member,
even when he is now having the authority of camera and the fame facilitated by
it. The critique however is subtle and intrinsic to the visual texts. For
example the constant attention that he pays to the boys doing various forms of
drills, studies and games inversely gives the idea of ‘correctional’ practices.
It is not punish but a sort of soft disciplining. The rebellion comes out of
his young mind when he trains his lens at the images like a sleeping boy
abandoning his body to the complete gaze of the state temporarily represented
by Vicky’s camera’s gaze or the glossy postures of semi-clad Bollywood heroines
and the washed under garments drying on the cots.
(work by Vicky Roy)
The idea of home, when it is representational and
replication of state ideologies, becomes a sort of correctional ideology governed
by the notions of good citizenship and aspirations to gain membership into a
society comprised of successful and desirous people. Good living and
controlling of savagery, disciplining through familial punish are the ways in
which a good citizen is produced within homes. Chandan Gomes addresses this
issue in a series of digital prints of his home interiors titled ‘There are
Things I Call Home’. Gomes’ enunciation of objects within the home through
visual registration creates and interface of identities; the formation of his
identity as a domestic(ated) child and the identity of the one who comes back
to the same home after receiving daily education from one of the ‘elite’
colleges in Delhi. The interface of these two identities becomes problematic in
Gomes’ works because the reality of home that he experiences is quite peculiar.
(There are things I call Home- by Chandan Gomes)
Hailing from one of the old parts of Delhi, Gomes’ family
has been living in that particular one room house for many decades. The one
room set has seen birth of Gomes and his siblings, besides the generation that
brought his parents to that small little abode of heavy human traffic. As the
four walls and the given space do not expand themselves to accommodate a
growing family, the objects find their own spaces right from the floor to the
ceiling. The expanding world of objects somehow has been fitting in like a
jigsaw mutating into ever accommodating amoebic forms, and been forming Gomes’ identity
as a citizen which has been in direct conflict with the limitless expanses of
rich life that he kept witnessing in the elite college from he got graduated.
Here Gomes does not document this conflict. On the contrary, he traces the
routes from where the perceived and experienced conflicts are generated as he
keeps the realm of the rich and spacious world out of his camera’s ken.
(There are things I call home by Chandan Gomes)
Problematizing home becomes a point of departure for Samudra
Kajal Saikia, a Delhi based young performance artist who originally belongs to
Assam. The constant debating of having a home and having no home manifests in
the quasi-spiritual and quasi-practical world that Saikia wants to capture in
the performances, textual renditions, illustrations and public art projects. He
creates his pet ‘Khankhowa’ (Ear Eater) project where brings forth a procession
of houses on wheels. They float around the roads in Assam bring the private and
public space into one point of discourse. He traces the history of migration
within the tea-plantations in Assam vis-a-vis the history of the sons of the
soil. He connects the history of migration in a given locality (accentuated by
the experiential history of his own self within the same context) with his own
migratory status in a city like Delhi. Saikia does his projects in
collaboration with like-minded artists and well wishers and together they
create the idea of ‘street’ and ‘carnival’ where polyphony is possible. His
quasi-spiritual inclination is palpable in the poetic renditions complete with
water colour illustrations which show their affinity to the sufi poets like
Kabir and Lalon. Kabir once said, burn your homes and come to the street;
Saikia seems to be clearly inspired by this.
(Work by Samudra Kajal Saikia)
If homes are battle zones portrayed in the beautiful colours
of docility, domesticity and love as they were taken directly out of an
advertisement, Nishitha Jain brings two different homes and their experiences
on to a single platform; a documentary titled, ‘Laxmi and Me’. This 59 minutes
long documentary traces the life of a maid servant in Mumbai. Nishitha had met
Laxmi when the latter was thirteen years old. Being a woman with liberal ideas
Nishitha had treated her like a sister and had made some footage of her life
and work, who hardly worked for an hour everyday at her home. By the time she
reached Laxmi had fallen in love, become pregnant and afflicted by
tuberculosis. Nishitha, affected by the sight of the frail body of Laxmi,
decided to follow her life, while helping her through her pregnancy and
delivery. Nishitha, however consciously keeps the two ‘homes’ (socially
demarcated realms of their woman-lives) separate and never shows a charity
attitude. The idea of beautiful and peaceful home is poignantly subverted here
in this documentary.
(from Laxmi and Me by Nishitha Jain)
Verdict: The show and the party must be still on when I post
it. The urgency of me writing this proves that ‘Apna Ghar’ is a meaningful
exhibition. Vicky Roy should now move beyond his Salam Balak days and conceptually expand the idea of home
and the world through different imageries. Gomes looks solid with his images
but I am more anxious about his next set of works. Some artists have the
tendency to become captive of their own making. Hope Gomes will not get into
that trap. Saikia could move in any direction. Provided he gets adequate
support from funding agencies his illustrated books could be strong
socio-cultural and political critique. But India has a problem of celebrating second and third rate graphic novels as world class stuff. Saikia needs more
attention from agencies. Nishitha Jain touches your inner self with her
documentary, Laxmi and Me. But then, each person in Mumbai is a story and an
interface of contesting ideologies. I appreciate Jain’s documentary.
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