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Works and Curations

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

analog express


a show proposed to two galleries last year...a show that did not take place.



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A new strand of underground cultural practice can be seen in the contemporary art movement, which stems from a boredom with the monotonous digital finish, the mundane cosmopolitanism of contemporary art and the visual language of neo liberal hegemony. For a long time, it seemed that contemporary Indian art had become so insulated that it would fail to respond to and evolve with the changing times.  The art of this emerging underground creates a tension in the realm of aesthetic consumption, causing discomforts  by hacking into the mainstream taste, which still carries the bias stemming from age, class, gender and sexuality.

For a post-1950s generation, such a ‘reconstruction’ of analogue art forms is not just an act of random cultural archaeology or ritual nostalgia and there has been a recognition of the contemporary, say painting practices which are contributing to new cultural directions. These new directions in taste and cultural archaeology position old media as a vanguard act, trading not only on the medium specificity of a post-conceptual re-visitation of Modernism (the ‘language of the mark, gesture and surface’), but that it should be equally receptive  to motifs taken  from contemporary culture and older narrative traditions of image-making. The artists selected for New Directions in Old Media have a deep understanding of the analogous art as experiential attempts to image emotion and observation in painterly form. In doing so, they suggest that old media can carry a new vocabulary, which is hybrid, grungy and visceral; often imprinting within their forms ‘narratives of the personal’.

Within the conventional Contemporary Indian Art production, the emphasis on manual/physical labour comes up as a kind of noise, a disturbance which takes away from the digital/conceptual art itself. This type of art, which has come to dictate the art market for a long time, emerged simultaneously with the global capitalism that swept the world two decades ago. Labour was sought to be omitted from the art and a clean, sterile, sophisticated, digitised practice, which only projected the concept, was developed. It is to the extent that analogue refers to and embodies forms of temporality, knowledge and subjectivity, which do not easily enter the concept of abstract labour of purely conceptual art digital aesthetics 
Contemporary art’s investment in labour, analogue and old media assumes various forms and it is symptomatic of changes in the economy rather than expressive of a broader left consciousness in the arts. In other words, the rise of labour as a sign-reference in recent art does not amount to a political project, even if it indicates a departure from the staples of postmodernism and, in some quarters, the desire to provide an alternative to capitalist economic relations.



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Aesthetics of nostalgia, loss, love and the popular

Blues has been defined in the dictionary as melancholic music of black American folk origin begun primarily in the ‘Deep South’ of the United States around the end of 19th century from  spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts and chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads, typically in a twelve-bar musical note sequence. In blues, a blue note is played or sung in a lower pitch (minor 3rd to major 3rd) than the major scale for expressive purposes.

Over the years, cultural historians have recognised Afro-American music as the primary source of chronicling black history. By the late 60s, blues genre had been thoroughly appropriated by the white elite and its circulation had become somewhat restricted in the face of rock music, which was again dominated by the white culture in its taste and sensibilities. By the '70s, the era of the Civil Rights Movement had definitely ended, but for African-Americans in many parts of the United States, the struggle for full civic and economic participation was not finished. Hip-hop culture emerged as a reaction to this and out of an atmosphere of disappointment and disillusionment in the cramped ghettos of America, which were a symbol of modern urban dystopia. Bronx, New York, where it all began, was burning with youthful angst of the Black community, but was also creating a cultural movement with the help of the newfound technology made available to them. Rapping and DJ-ing/sampling was central to the movement but it also was a lifestyle- it was a fashion, it was art- that aggressive and oppositional and openly challenged the norms set by the predominantly white male art fraternity. Jazz had refused to be on time, rock and roll had refused to be quiet, and hip-hop refused to be melodic.


Remixing the blues:         

The hip-hop culture and the trend of using samples and DJ-ing gave rise to the concept of creating remixes-alternate versions of the original song, generally with a faster beat/tempo. Remixes proved to be a success, especially in the Indian scenario. The older generation songs which had become out-of-fashion were revived and fine-tuned and a remix was born. This remix catered to the older generation (because of the nostalgia that the song induced in them) and the younger generation (which was happy to dance to a groovy beat). Thus, a song was repackaged to cater to the needs of the changing times.
Art in contemporary India also evolved in a similar fashion. New Trends in Remixing the Blues is an exhibition concept idea, which seeks to celebrate the stylistic reaction of a post digital aesthetics. There was a gradual move towards the digital during globalisation and the boom in the art market but with its collapse the post-digital aesthetics was initiated into contemporary Indian art and there was a return to the painterly. There was a growing rejection of the glossy, digitised surface in favour of a more unfinished/coarse texture of the artwork. The familiar (common) digital tropes of purity, pristine sound, images and perfect copies are abandoned in favour of errors, glitches, marks, fissures, and artefacts which have been inspired from the trend of the almost viral spread of remixes. The disturbance was welcomed as it broke the surface tension and rendered the artwork tactile.

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