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Events List

Events List


Stand Up Comedy at Bustan feat. Zarna Garg (Tuesdays)
Jun
29
7:00 PM19:00

Stand Up Comedy at Bustan feat. Zarna Garg (Tuesdays)

Stand Up Comedy at Bustan feat. Zarna Garg

Phaze 11 Presents Stand Up Comedy at Bustan (Tuesdays). Enjoy delicious food in outdoor seating while comedians entertain you!

Zarna Garg is one of a kind. She’s an Indian immigrant, mom, and lawyer turned award-winning screenwriter and stand-up comedian who proudly represents brown women everywhere.

While everyone was baking banana bread during the global pandemic, Zarna was doing what she does best – COMEDY. She joined TikTok and garnered 30+ million views within her first year on the platform. She kept audiences laughing with online comedy shows (profiled in the New York Times), IGTV appearances, interviews with the cast of Netflix’s summer smash “Indian Matchmaking” (covered by Screen Rant), and even outdoor impromptu sets at major landmarks across New York City including Central Park and the MET, and when security chased her away, she continued her set on the New York City subway.

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Stand Up Comedy at Bustan feat. Zarna Garg
Jun
27
7:00 PM19:00

Stand Up Comedy at Bustan feat. Zarna Garg

Stand Up Comedy at Bustan feat. Zarna Garg

Phaze 11 Presents Stand Up Comedy at Bustan. Enjoy delicious food in outdoor seating while comedians entertain you!

Zarna Garg is one of a kind. She’s an Indian immigrant, mom, and lawyer turned award-winning screenwriter and stand-up comedian who proudly represents brown women everywhere.

While everyone was baking banana bread during the global pandemic, Zarna was doing what she does best – COMEDY. She joined TikTok and garnered 30+ million views within her first year on the platform. She kept audiences laughing with online comedy shows (profiled in the New York Times), IGTV appearances, interviews with the cast of Netflix’s summer smash “Indian Matchmaking” (covered by Screen Rant), and even outdoor impromptu sets at major landmarks across New York City including Central Park and the MET, and when security chased her away, she continued her set on the New York City subway.

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Poetry Sangam
Jun
6
11:00 AM11:00

Poetry Sangam

Celebrate the intersection of words, sound, movement, and visual art inspired by Indian poets and poetic movements. In this panel of authors and artists from India and the US, we will witness their individual works and their connected inspirations from Indian culture.

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NYIFF - New York Indian Film Festival
Jun
4
to Jun 13

NYIFF - New York Indian Film Festival

NYIFF is the oldest, most prestigious film festival screening premieres of feature, documentary and short films made from, of, and about India in the independent, arthouse, alternate and diaspora genres. Seven days of screenings, post-screening discussions, industry panels, award ceremonies, special events, nightly networking parties, red carpet galas, media attention and packed audiences build an awareness of Indian cinema, entertain and educate North Americans about the real India, and add to the amazing cultural diversity of New York City. For more information, please visit the website at nyiff.us and at nyiff.moviesaints.com.

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Dancing The Gods: Aditi Mangaldas
Apr
18
6:30 PM18:30

Dancing The Gods: Aditi Mangaldas

Dancing The Gods: Aditi Mangaldas

Aditi Mangaldas is a leading dancer and choreographer in the classical Indian dance form of Kathak. With extensive training under the leading gurus of Kathak, Shrimati Kumudini Lakhia and Pandit Birju Maharaj, Aditi is today recognised for her artistry, technique, eloquence and characteristic energy that mark every performance. Besides dancing and choreographing classical productions, both solo and group, she has broken new ground by using her knowledge and experience of Kathak as a springboard to evolve a contemporary dance vocabulary, infused with the spirit of the classical. Considered a maverick in India, she has consistently broken ground, unafraid to confront social and present day concerns. Celebrated around the world for the startling richness and intricacy of her dance and choreography, she was recently nominated in the category of outstanding performance (classical) by the National Dance Critics Circle awards 2017 in the UK.

She was awarded the Gujarat Sangeet Natak Academi Award, India 2007 as well as the National Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, India 2013, that due to compelling reasons, she declined. She heads the Aditi Mangaldas Dance Company – The Drishtikon Dance Foundation.

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Sitar Concert -Abhishek Mallick And Dibyarka Chatterjee
Apr
11
7:30 PM19:30

Sitar Concert -Abhishek Mallick And Dibyarka Chatterjee

  • Chhandayan Center for Indian Music (map)
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Sitar Concert -Abhishek Mallick And Dibyarka Chatterjee

Abhishek Mallick

The Sitar is a world in itself….. a world of not just strings, but of transcending heights and unfathomable depths. Exploring this realm of infinity is something that Abhisek has made the mission of his life. Initiated into tabla at the tender age of four years, Abhisek stepped into the domain of sitar when he was seven. Under the strict tutelage of Pandit Shyamal Chattopadhyay, who is the disciple of the Late Ustad Md. Dabir Khan (the last descendant of Mian Tansen) and the legendary maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar, his musical skills blossomed, helping him evolve as one of the most promising sitarists of this generation. Abhisek has also been fortunate to have received taalim from another maestro, Pandit Manilal Nag of Bishnupur Gharana. At present he is continuing his taalim under Pandit Shyamal Chattopadhyay. He gave his first public performance at the age of 8 and has been a regular artiste of All India Radio since he was ten.

Abhisek has proved his musical acumen by receiving the prestigious “President’s Award” from the Government of India, after achieving the first position in All India Radio (Hindustani Classical Instrumental) Music Competition in Sitar in 2003. The Ministry of Tourism and Culture , Govt. of India , has conferred upon him the senior National Scholarship of 2003, in the field of Hindustani Classical Music (Instrumental). He is also the recipient of the Award in the year 2003 from I.T.C. Sangeet Research Academy organised by the “International Foundation for Fine Arts”, Mumbai. His musical career is etched with numerous other awards — “The Rajya Sangeet Academy Award”, “Pandit Ravi Kichloo Award”, “Salt Lake Cultural Association Award”, being some of them. His musical recitals have been widely acclaimed by critics and he has received many positive press reviews from notable dailies and magazines like —“Anandabazaar Patrika”, “The Hindustan Times”, “The Telegraph”, “The Statesman”, “ Pratidin”, “ Sananda” and the like.

He has accompanied his Guruji at many reputed classical conferences in and around Kolkata. He has also performed at various concerts of eminence across India.

Abhisek is presently a graded artist of All India Radio, and Doordarshan and other media channels. Through his recitals, he has moved audiences not only at home, but also at several venues across Europe and America. For the last two years, he has been residing in USA and touring extensively on account of his concerts. Academically, he is also a B. Tech ( Electrical).

Dibyarka Chatterjee

Dibyarka Chatterjee is a young Tabla player from the Farrukhabad Gharana, and is the son and disciple of Pt. Samir Chatterjee. Having grown up in a musical environment, his natural inclination towards Tabla became apparent early in his childhood. At the age of five he was initiated by his father into the ancient system of pedagogy called the guru-shishya parampara (master-disciple tradition).

Dibyarka was born in Kolkata, where even in his childhood he was already performing in concerts as well as on Akaashbani Kolkata’s Children’s Section (National Radio – Kolkata Station). At the age of ten he moved to New York City with his family; since then he has continued to perform regularly with both Indian and Western music. Dibyarka has had the honor and privilege of performing with renowned musicians like Pandit Jasraj, Pdt. Budhhadev DasGupta, Pta. Lakshmi Shankar, Utd. Shujaat Khan, Pta. Joya Biswas, Utd. Mashkoor Ali Khan, Pdt. Ramesh Mishra, Pta. Shubhra Guha, Pta. Tripti Mukherjee, Pdt. Suman Ghosh to name only a few.

He has collaborated in world music projects with groups like the Dance Theater of Harlem (in ‘South African Suite’), the Battery Dance Co. (in “Songs of Tagore”), and with fusion musician/composers like Salman Ahmad (Junoon), Douglas Cuomo, John McDowell (on the award-winning documentary “A Son’s Sacrifice”), Gary Lucas & Najma Akhtar (on their collaborative album “Rishte”) etc. He has composed music for, and performed in, two off-Broadway theatrical productions (Nuraldeen’s Lifetime & Lee/gendary). He has also performed in many prestigious venues like Carnegie Hall, the United Nations General Assembly, Lincoln Center & Asia Society in NYC, Place des Arts (Montreal), the Google Amphitheater (Palo Alto), Salt Lake Music Conference (Kolkata, India), Pratishruti Festival (Bhopal, India) etc. He has also appeared on numerous radio shows such as The Leonard Lopate Show and New Sounds on NPR, Raag Aur Taal on WKCR etc.

Dibyarka has a Masters in Fine Arts from Goddard College (VT). His academic pursuits are mainly focused on the history, theory, and philosophy of Indian Music. As a guest lecturer, Dibyarka has conducted classes and lecture demonstrations at numerous institutions such as Columbia University, Dartmouth College, New York University, Manhattan School of Music etc. He also teaches Tabla classes regularly at various institutions and locations in NY & NJ.

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Sarode Concert – Ranajit Sengupta And Samir Chatterjee
Apr
4
7:30 PM19:30

Sarode Concert – Ranajit Sengupta And Samir Chatterjee

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Sarode Concert – Ranajit Sengupta And Samir Chatterjee

Ranajit Sengupta

Pandit Ranajit Sengupta is one of the best Sarode Players and Music Composers inn India. He has performed for the last 25 years in more than 45 countries around the world. He is a student of late Ustad Dhyanesh Khan and Ustad Aashish Khan of Maihar Senia and he attended several workshops by Late Dr. Ustad Ali Akbar Khan in India and California. He is one of the youngest TOP Grade Sarode Player from All India Radio and Television and was the winner of the Presidents’ award for securing First position in All India Radio Competition, Acharya Baba Allauddin Memorial Award, Pandit Nikhil Bannerjee Memorial Award and “Best talent of the Year” award by HMV to name a few. He scored top marks in both Graduation and the Master’s Exam from Rabindra Bharati University, Kolkata and is a Guest Lecturer in Universities in USA, Canada, Germany, Switzerland, England, and India. He has performed in Major Music Festivals and Venues around the globe including USA, Canada, Switzerland, France, Germany, Italy, Denmark, The Netherlands, Greece, England, Scotland, Estonia, Russia, Africa, United Arab Emirates, Syria & Caribbean Islands to name a few. He has over 30 CD and DVD releases.

Ranajit has composed Music for the Dutch Feature Film “Dark Amsterdam”, the Title Music for the International Film Festival, Kolkata, in 1994 and the music for the Road Movie “Lost and Found Tour” filmed about himself and 3 other Austrian Musicians. He got 4 World-Fusion Music Bands in Europe with Musicians from around the globe. Ranajit has been the Principal Composer, guest conductor and Guru for the National Youth Orchestra for Indian Music in England from 2011 to 2015.

Ranajit has taught students from around the world. PANDIT is a title given to Ranajit Sengupta by the Ministry of Broadcasting, Government of India as one of the youngest Musician ever, which is equivalent to “MAESTRO” title in Europe

Samir Chatterjee

Samir Chatterjee is a virtuoso Tabla player from India. He travels widely across the world throughout the year performing in numerous festivals as a soloist or with other outstanding musicians from both Indian and non-Indian musical traditions. Samir performed at the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo, Norway in 2007. He also performed a few times at the United Nations General Assembly. His compositions are widely acclaimed as well as his writings. Samir is a firm believer in the transforming effect of music on the society and all aspects of his work reflects this conviction.

Samir began his studies early with Pandit Bankim Ghosh, Pt. Balaram Mukherjee, Pt. Rathin Dhar and Mohammad Salim. His later formation as a musician occurred under the guidance of Pt. Amalesh Chatterjee (since 1966) and Pt. Shyamal Bose (since 1984). All of Samir’s teachers have been from the Farrukhabad Gharana (school) of Tabla-playing, which he now represents.

Samir is rated ‘A’ as an artiste of Indian national radio and television. He can be heard on numerous recordings featuring as soloist, accompanying many of India’s greatest musicians and in collaboration with western musicians of outstanding caliber. In concert Samir has accompanied many of India’s greatest musicians including Pt. Ravi Shankar, Ud. Vilayat Khan, Pt. Bhimsen Joshi, Pt. Jasraj, Pt. Nikhil Banerjee, Pt. V.G. Jog, Pt. Shivkumar Sharma, Pt. Hariprasad Chaurasia, M. S. Gopalakrishnan, Ud. Amjad Ali Khan, Ud. Salamat Ali Khan, Smt. Lakshmi Shankar, Pt. Manilal Nag, Ud. Ali Ahmed Hussain, Ud. Aashis Khan, Dr. L. Subramanium, U Srinivas, Ud. Naseeruddin Sami, Smt. Veena Sahashrabuddhe, Ud. Shujat Khan, Ud. Saheed Parvez, Pt. Ajoy Chakraborty, Ud. Nishat Khan, Ud. Rashid Khan, Pt. Tejendra N. Mazumdar, Pt. Debashish Bhattacharya, Smt. Arti Anklekar, Smt. Kaushiki Chakraborty, to name only a few.

Samir Chatterjee lives in the New York-New Jersey area, and has been a catalyst in the fusion of Indian and Non-Indian music, in his own creations and others as well. He performs with Pauline Oliveros, William Parker, Branford Marsalis, Ravi Coltrane, Joshua Bell, Yoko Ono Lenon, David Liebman, Oliver Lake, Dave Douglas, Ned Rothenberg, Mark Dresser, Mark Feldman, Jerome Harris, Eric Friedlander, Steve Gorn, Glen Velez, Boby Sanabria, Jin Hi Kim, Min Xiao-Fen, Dance Theater of Harlem, Boston Philharmonic, Minnesota Orchestra, Ethos Percussion group, Da Capo Chamber Orchestra, Boston Musica Viva and other jazz, classical and avant guard musicians and ensembles. He also collaborates with Sufi-Rock singer Salman Ahmad of Junoon from Pakistan. He is the composer and director of Indo-Flame – a blend of Indian and Flamenco dance and music, Chhand-Anand – a world percussion ensemble, RabiThakur – a ballet on the life of Tagore, Meghadootam – a feature program of music and dance on an ancient Indian poem, and Dawn to Dusk and Beyond – on the effect of music on humans and nature. He performs with Sanjay Mishra on his CD “Blue Incantation” featuring Jerry Garcia as guest artist.

Samir Chatterjee has been teaching for the last 35 years and many of his students are established performers. He is the Founder-Director of CHHANDAYAN, an organization dedicated to promoting and preserving Indian music and culture. He has authored a comprehensive 654-page book entitled A Study of Tabla, a guide book to Indian music titled Music of India and Those Forty Days, a journal of an austere practice regimen. He is on the faculty at Manhattan School of Music, University of Pittsburgh and New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music. He also taught at the Yale University, Columbia University, New York University and Princeton University, among many other major institutions in the USA, Europe and India. He also contributes to several newspapers and periodicals. He won gold medal for his proficiency in a musical examination and has two Master degrees, in English and History.

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Shaam-E-Ghazal With Radhika Chopra
Mar
27
6:00 PM18:00

Shaam-E-Ghazal With Radhika Chopra

Sivaana presents an experiential evening of ghazals with an amazing backdrop of Angel Orensanz Center in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, New York. It was originally built as a synagogue and now would enchant us with culturally unique music and singing from various times of the last century.

It would be an evening presenting soulful array of sufism, poetry and music including some of the most famous Mirza Ghalib verses.

Dr. Radhika Chopra (Phd in Indian Classical Music) accompanied by distinguished musicians are coming to perform a culturally unique concert tour titled, “Shaam-e-Ghazal”

Tickets: https://www.hungamacity.com/event/25098/shaam-e-ghazal-with-radhika-chopra-ny

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PANCHAKSHARA: VIKKU VINAYAKRAM & 3 GENERATIONS
Mar
21
8:00 PM20:00

PANCHAKSHARA: VIKKU VINAYAKRAM & 3 GENERATIONS

PANCHAKSHARA: VIKKU VINAYAKRAM & 3 GENERATIONS

Three generations of virtuosic musicians come together to provide rhythmic fireworks in this celebration of South Indian percussion.  The group is led by the legendary Vikku Vinayakram, who has popularized the ghatam (clay pot) over his long career, was a founding member of the acclaimed Shakti ensemble with John McLaughlin and Zakir Hussain, and received India’s most prestigious titles and honors. He is joined by his two sons, V. Selvaganesh (hybrid drum kit), a leading musician in the world of rhythm who was a member of Remember Shakti, and Umashankar (ghatam), who is known for his meteoric rise in the classical Carnatic music field; his grandson, the dynamic Swaminathan Selvaganesh (kanjira – small frame drum, konakkol  vocal percussion), who has been lauded as one of the top kanjira players of his generation; and A Ganesan (morsing – jaw harp), who has performed in ensembles with Zakir Hussain and toured with Vikku throughout the world. 

Tickets: $30; students, seniors $26

Tickets: https://roulette.secure.force.com/ticket#sections_a0F1R00000YBRiqUAH

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Salman Toor: How Will I Know?
Mar
20
to Jul 5

Salman Toor: How Will I Know?

  • Whitney Museum of American Art (map)
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Salman Toor: How Will I Know?

For his first museum solo exhibition, Salman Toor (b. 1983) presents new and recent oil paintings. Known for his small-scale figurative works that combine academic technique and a quick, sketch-like style, Toor offers intimate views into the imagined lives of young, queer Brown men residing between New York City and South Asia. Recurring color palettes and references to art history heighten the emotional impact of Toor’s paintings and add a fantastical element to his narratives drawn from lived experience.

Lush interior scenes depict friends dancing, binge-watching television shows, playing with puppies, and gazing into their smartphones. In these idealistic settings, Toor’s figures are freed from the impositions placed upon them by the outside world. In contrast, his more muted tableaus highlight moments of passivity to convey nostalgia or alienation. One painting features a forlorn man whose possessions are on display for the scrutiny of airport security officers; another renders unspoken tensions around a family dinner table palpable. Taken as a whole, Toor’s paintings consider vulnerability within contemporary public and private life and the notion of community in the context of queer, diasporic identity.

Salman Toor: How Will I Know is organized by Christopher Y. Lew, Nancy and Fred Poses Curator, and Ambika Trasi, curatorial assistant.

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SURFACE RHYTHM – SOHAN QADRI AND NEHA VEDPATHAK
Feb
27
to Mar 28

SURFACE RHYTHM – SOHAN QADRI AND NEHA VEDPATHAK

  • Sundaram Tagore Gallery (map)
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Sundaram Tagore is pleased to present an exhibition that brings together work by Sohan Qadri (1931 – 2011) and Neha Vedpathak (b. 1982), two Indian-born artists who push the boundaries of traditional media, transforming sheets of paper into richly colorful three-dimensional mediums.

The work in this exhibition highlights the intention behind Qadri and Vedpathak’s unique choice of material and their process-driven approaches. Both artists spent the early years of their careers experimenting with different media before turning to paper, which, while agile and responsive, can also be unforgiving and requires intense focus and skilled hands.

Qadri has been represented by the gallery since its inception in 2000. At the time, he was part of a select group of master artists who were outside the accepted Western cannon but were so obviously groundbreaking and working with a universal language, that it was critical to share with a wider audience. Since then, Qadri’s work has been acquired by museums and private collectors across the globe and in 2011, he was the subject of the monograph Sohan Qadri: The Seer, published by Skira Editore.

Though he spent much of his working life in Copenhagen, Denmark, Qadri grew up in northern India, where he was exposed to Sufism, Hinduism, and Sikhism. He was particularly inspired by Vajryana or Tantric Buddhism, which emphasizes the notion of sunyata or emptiness. In search of a process that would enable art-making while in a meditative state, Qadri found his spiritual medium in inks and dyes on paper, employing a distinctive technique of painting and carving that he would use for the rest of his life.

To begin his process, Qadri would bathe thick intaglio paper in acid-free water. Once it was swollen with liquid, he would score the surface with various gouging and cutting tools, carving in stages while applying inks and dyes. The serrated surfaces convey a sense of energy and rhythm. In the artist’s hands, the very nature of paper was transformed from a flat, two-dimensional surface into a vibrantly hued textile-like medium.

Neha Vedpathak is a Detroit-based artist who creates sculptural installations and wall reliefs made from paper. She was introduced to the Chelsea gallery in 2019, when she was selected by curator Betty Seid for the exhibition Alterations Activation Abstraction. Although she has only been exhibiting since 2006, Vedpathak has already received critical recognition from institutions such as the Detroit Institute of Arts, which acquired and exhibits her work across from celebrated artist Anish Kapoor.

Vedpathak began her career as a painter, creating minimalist abstract works on canvas, but like Qadri, she became restless and sought to move beyond the two-dimensional plane. After experimenting with different materials for a period of time, in 2009, she came across handmade Japanese paper, which eventually became the focus of her artistic investigations.

Using a rigorous self-developed technique, which she refers to as “plucking”, Vedpathak spends hours separating the paper’s fibers with a tiny pushpin. Similar to Qadri’s meditative state, there is a spiritual aspect to her slow and disciplined process, which she likens to meditative chanting tuned to a slower pace.

The resulting works resemble swaths of lace fabric, which she paints and sews into striking abstract compositions. Part painting, part collage, Vedpathak’s sensuous, tactile constructions seemingly float while casting intricate shadows on the wall. She creates depth with nuanced shifts of color and by leaving small areas of the composition unplucked, which plays off the subtle transparency of the lace-effect.

Having lived in multiple locations, including Pune, India, where she was born, Chicago, Phoenix, and now Detroit, Vedpathak’s practice is deeply inspired by her physical environment and she often draws from the natural world. Recently, however, she has started to incorporate architectural elements of the cityscape that surrounds her, referencing the abandoned structures and peeling paint of a city in constant flux, where widespread urban decay is undergoing a slow renewal.

Through her work, Vedpathak addresses contemporary social themes, including politics, cultural identity and economic disparity, yet, like Sohan Qadri, she also considers larger spiritual themes, exploring ideas of transformation and the cyclical nature of life.

ABOUT THE ARTISTS 

The late poet, painter and Tantric yogi Sohan Qadri was born in Chachoki, Punjab, India. In 1965, he left India and began a series of travels that took him to East Africa, North America and Europe. After settling in Copenhagen in the 1970s, Qadri participated in more than forty solo shows, in Mumbai, Vienna, Brussels, London, Oslo, Stockholm, Montreal, Toronto, Los Angeles and New York.

Qadri’s works are included in the British Museum, London; the Peabody Essex Museum, Massachusetts; the Rubin Museum of Art, New York; the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto; as well as the private collections of Cirque du Soleil, Heinrich Böll and Dr. Robert Thurman. In 2011, Skira Editore published the monograph Sohan Qadri: The Seer.

Neha Vedpathak was born in Pune, India, 1982. Her works have been shown at Arizona State University Art Museum, Tempe; Weatherspoon Museum, Greensboro North Carolina; Detroit Institute of Arts, Michigan; and Centre d’Art Marnay Art Centre, France.

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THE TIDE TURNS | RUBY CHISHTI
Feb
27
to Mar 28

THE TIDE TURNS | RUBY CHISHTI

Ruby Chishti: The Tide Turns

Aicon Contemporary is proud to present The Tide Turns, a debut solo exhibition of Brooklyn-based artist Ruby Chishti. The following excerpt is part of an essay written by Timothy Murray, director of the Cornell Council of the Arts.

This exquisite and compelling collection of fabric sculptures explores the artist’s lifelong experimentation in melding the materials of found garments and social memory.  Chishti’s haunting and enigmatic works, created between 2012 and 2020, perform the passage of fabric from discarded mass-produced and ceremonial clothing to the reconstructed filaments of artistic imagination.  For this exhibition, Chishti has carefully dissembled the fabrics of found clothing to produce recycled materials for her creative reweaving of memory and time.  As the artist systematically dissembles the clothing of unknown wearers, she passes the bodily traces and cultural spirit of those already touched by these filaments into vibrant sculptures that bear witness to the passage of custom and costume.  The material transformation of these fiberous specters of the unknown into architectonics of exquisite shape and haunting color bear the corporeal residue of the garments’ prior carriers, not to mention the artist’s creative manipulation and cultural memory. 

Bearing social and personal consequence, the exhibition provides an urgent template for conversation with the passage, persistence, and survival of time.  Much like the recycled fibers comprising them, these works accrue additive import across time.  They bear witness to the memory of the artist’s complex history of trauma, from unexpected family loss and the wanton destruction of her Pakistani home to the survival of migration and her persistence through transitional impediments.  Haunting the exhibition are the markings of the artist’s affection for the marble jaalis of home contrasted by the complex challenges faced by the artist in Pakistan, when the comforting material of family household was violently rendered into perilous rubble and ghostly dust. Now colorful stitchery and transcendent pattern transcend the darkness of trauma to bear the vibrant touch of artistic craft and the carriage of amassed imaginaries as these works pass from culture to culture, decade to decade.  From the trauma of displacement to the joys of resettlement and artistic creation, these spectral forms remain fraught as history now attests to the angst of ongoing struggles of migration and identity.

This provocative exhibition thus summons the participant to think both large and small, global and local.  Chishti’s refigured garments of passage directly challenge the heroics of colossal masculinity, from the confidence of patriarchy to the burden of war and the weight of exodus. In contrast, her huddled female figures, enveloped in the luxury of fabric, embody the touch of proximity and togetherness, the enfolding of internalization, and even the paradox of pensive affect.  The profusion of these miniaturized forms solicits something of the creativity of the feminist spirit and group endurance.  Similarly, when combined with the architectural shapes of her fabric hangings, the uncanny figures signal both a coming and a going via the distorted window frames hanging so gracefully in their precarity. The promising delicacy of life and presence sit vibrantly on the thresholds of Chishti’s artistic environments.

As evinced from the sound field emanating from “A Ruin Without a People,” Chishti’s stunning exhibition testifies to the cross-cultural spirit of her fabric art as well as to the transformative interface of artistic duration.

Over the last 20 years, Ruby Chishti has produced a series of lyrical sculptures and installations that touch on tenacity and fragility of human existence, migration, Islamic myths, gender politics, memory, universal theme of love, loss and of being human.

Born in 1963 in Jhang, Pakistan, Chishti is primarily a representational sculptor, she was formally educated at the National College of Art in Lahore, Pakistan. Ruby has held residencies internationally, she has received fellowships and awards including recent VSC/Pollock-Krasner Foundation Fellowship. Her installations, sculptures, and sitespecific works have been exhibited at Asia Society Museum NY, Queens Museum, rossi & rossi Hong Kong, Aicon Gallery (London & New York), Vadehra Art Gallery, New Delhi, India, Arco Madrid, Art Hong Kong, India Art fair and The Armory Show NYC to name a few. Chishti’s work has been published in numerous magazines and newspapers and books including Unveiling the visible by Salima Hashmi, Memory-Metaphor-Mutations by Salima Hashmi and Yashodhra Dalmia and The eye still seeks: Pakistani Contemporary Art by Salima Hashmi & Matand Khosla.

The artist lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

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Desi New Years Gala – 15th Annual & NYC’s Biggest Bollywood New Years Celebration
Dec
9
9:00 PM21:00

Desi New Years Gala – 15th Annual & NYC’s Biggest Bollywood New Years Celebration

Revel in the lap of Ibiza-style luxury this New Year’s Eve at New York City’s nightlife luminary, STAGE48 Nightclub. With its famed, cutting-edge dance floor and trendsetting nightlife standards, STAGE48 is a mainstay of NYC’s club scene. This New Year’s Eve, STAGE48 ups the ante with deluxe amenities for a bash brimming with festivity, energy, and style.

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Arts Of Asia
Oct
25
to Dec 31

Arts Of Asia

Brooklyn Museum houses one of America’s foremost collections of Asian art, with the Asian galleries currently including more than 350 works from China, Korea, and Japan. These sections are newly re-imagined, the result of a multiyear reinstallation, with additional galleries planned for the arts of South and Southeast Asia and the Himalayas.

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