Vinita Agarwal
Mobile: +447957124181
Email: vinitaseye@gmail.com
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  • Deutsche Borse Photography Prize

    I have to say that this year, I was rather disappointed with the Deutsche Borse Prize final selection. Being one of the most prestigious prizes in photography, to me only one of the photographers presented left me with the feeling that the body work encompassed both visual beauty as well as being educational, which is what I believe photography should be about. Photographers are consistently trying to strive towards reflecting today’s culture/issues through their medium the best they can. It is ofcourse also used as a form of recording history; showing the way in which time passes and we as photographers record that history pausing it for a moment in time. Photography can also be aesthetically challenging, in that sometimes an image will show its value through the choice of light, colour and sometimes that is all that matters – the mood that is conveyed through that one image. All the photographers who were chosen have checked all these boxes, however the only one that stood out for me was Taryn Simon. Her work showed such a thorough body of research, material and was so current and unique – showing us glimpses of life in American culture, which remains hidden: thought about but unspoken. It really makes you question and rethink how much is it that we really know, and really don’t. It is worth looking through the series chosen for the show and here below is some information about the artist herself:

    Taryn Simon (b. 1975 in New York) assumes for her project “An American Index of the Hidden and Unfamiliar” the dual role of shrewd informant and collector of curiosities, compiling an inventory of what lies hidden and out-of-view within the borders of the United States. She examines a culture through careful documentation of diverse subjects from the realms of science, government, medicine, entertainment, nature, security and religion. Through text and image, the work underscores the complicated relationship between a photograph and its context. The visual is processed aesthetically and then re-defined by its text. Her sometimes ethereal, sometimes foreboding compositions, shot over a four year period, vary as much as her subject matter, which ranges from radioactive capsules at a nuclear waste storage facility to a black bear in hibernation. In examining that which is integral to America’s foundation, mythology and daily functioning, Simon creates a collection of works that reflect and reveal a national identity.

    Flyer for my Indian Art Forum group show

    flyer-iaf1

    The international exhibition “Indian Art Forum” shows current positions of young second generation Asians, living in Germany, Great Britain, Egypt, Austria and the USA. They grew up with the rich background of both cultures, now using their creative potential in various artistic fields.

    In 2006 Indian Vibes presented digital art created by British-Asians artists at Galerie station. 2007 Sandip Shah showed “Bombay Connection” at the b.k.i. So the idea came up to put together this show.

    With the participation of Vinita Agarwal, Chiraag Bhakta, Karan Islania, Manoj Kallupurackal, Ashok Kapur, Sabahat Nawaz, Sandip Shah, Ruby Sircar, Shihab Vaippipadath.

    German Artsite TV displays my work


    Click here to view a commentary about the show in Frankfurt and a close-up on my work

    Idris Khan – Lying in Wait 2009

     Idris Khan, production still from "Lying in Wait" (2009). Film installation.   Courtesy Victoria Miro Gallery, London

    Idris Khan, production still from "Lying in Wait" (2009). Film installation. Courtesy Victoria Miro Gallery, London

    I have long been a fan of Idris Khan, and this exhibition which took place recently as part of ‘The Collection’ at Victoria Miro Gallery, was my first encounter with the artist’s use of film, otherwise well-known for his photography. The three screen installation, is a record of the same contemporary dance performed in a library, with each screen showing the dance from a different dimension all black and white. The film takes the dance piece and displaces it – by firstly setting it in a library, instead of a stage, and then removing all aspect of colour by keeping it pure in its form through the usage of black and white. The dance piece then gets further displaced, with repeated footage of the dance layering the dancer’s movements, slowing it down in time, placing it in a new time sequence. This to me, allows for a different sense of appreciation, a new outlook on the dance’s movement, and furthermore the close-up’s of her hands, the sounds of the movement of the fabric as she brushes her fingers against her body with every movement – all bring dance into a realm of pure form over content. I found this also resonant in his photography of the Qu’ran and Beethoven’s symphonies  – and it is has been thoroughly exciting, for a lover of dance, to see dance in this way, especially directed by someone as talented, and discerning as Idris Khan.