Nilima Sheikh
Vong Phaophanit
Yong Soon Min
Navin Rawanchaikul
Nilima Sheikh
Shahzia Sikander
Artists Nilima Sheikh, Vong Phaophanit, Yong Soon Min, and Navin Rawanchaikul, whose commissioned work is installed in the Asia Society and Museum, discuss the global reach of contemporary Asian art. This program is the second in a three-part series New Asian Voices. 'Conversations with Traditions: Nilima Sheikh and Shahzia Sikander' is a series of exhibitions that will explore the dialogue between contemporary issues and indigenous artistic languages expressed in the work of Asian and Asian American artists.
Panel Discussion
Artists Nilima Sheikh, Vong Phaophanit, Yong Soon Min, and Navin
Rawanchaikul, whose commissioned work is installed in the Asia
Society and Museum, discuss the global reach of contemporary Asian
art with Melissa Chiu, Asia Society's newly appointed curator of
contemporary Asian art. The discussion is introduced by Vishakha
Desai.
This program is the second in a three-part series New Asian Voices
presented by Asia Society and Museum, The Museum of Modern Art, and
P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center.
For information call (212) 327-9276
Saturday, November 17, 2:00 p.m.
Free with museum admission
Conversations with Traditions:
Nilima Sheikh and Shahzia Sikander
November 17, 2001 - March 3, 2002
Conversations with Traditions is a series of exhibitions that will explore the dialogue between contemporary issues and
indigenous artistic languages expressed in the work of Asian and Asian American artists.
The series will focus on
artists who are developing new expressions out of traditional visual idioms or who create new ways to connect with or
challenge centuries-old cultural norms.
Shahzia Sikander and Nilima Sheikh are both of South Asian origin,
but of different generations - Shahzia Sikander, in her 30s and
Nilima Sheikh in her 50s.
Sikander was born in Pakistan, which was
carved out of India at the time India achieved its independence from
Great Britain in 1947.
Sheikh was born in an undivided,
court (miniature) painting as their artistic lineage.
At first glance,
some of their works share this starting point in terms of scale,
composition, and even the use of color. However, the two artists
articulate differing relationships with both the pre-modern court
painting traditions and contemporary art practices.
Sikander's training was traditional-she graduated from the
National College of Art in Lahore, where students study in an
Islamic context and court painting is taught as a formal course.
However, much of her recent career has been spent in the
United States. She is thus acutely aware of the reception of her
work in the context of "mainstream" contemporary Western art
and is concerned to deny simplistic readings of her work as
"exotic." Sheikh, on the other hand, claims a lineage born of
pre-independence Indian nationalism fostered in the climate of
progressive internationalism of the 1940s and 1950s.
Trained
initially in Western-style oil painting (she has spent all of her
student and professional life in Baroda in India), Sheikh turned
her attention to miniature painting mid-career. Her relationship
to pre-modern painting has been thus more geared toward its
visual forms than its technical aspects. Yet both artists talk
passionately about the materiality of their work and the
meditative quality of working slowly and patiently in the intimate
format of small-scale painting.
The exhibition presents approximately 30 individual works by each
artist, including work from their early encounters with miniature
painting as well as recent work that suggests the changing nature of
such relationships.
Additionally, the artists have created a specially
commissioned collaborative work to be installed on the wall behind
the main staircase of the Asia Society's renovated headquarters in
New York.
Support for this project was provided by The Rockefeller Foundation,
The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, and the Booth
Ferris Foundation. Support for the Asia Society's Cultural Programs
is also provided by the Friends of Asian Arts, Wallace-Reader's
Digest Funds, The Starr Foundation, Booth Ferris Foundation, Doris
Duke Charitable Foundation, Hazen Polsky Foundation, The Armand
G. Erpf Fund, the Arthur Ross Foundation, and the Ruth and Harold
Newman, and the New York State Council on the Arts.
Asia Society and Museum
725 Park Avenue at East 70 Street
New York, NY 10021
Tel: (212) 288-6400
Fax: (212) 517-8315