Anonymous 19th Century Photographers
Felice Beato
Samuel Bourne
John Burke
Raja Deen Dayal
Nandan Ghiya
Alexander Gorlizki and Riyaz Uddin Studio
Sunil Gupta
Panchal Mansaram
Annu Palakunnathu Matthew
Adolf de Meyer
Nandini Valli Muthiah
Zinnia Naqvi
Pushpamala N. and Clare Arni
D. Nusserwanji
Raqs Media Collective
Ghasiram Haradev Sharma
Dayanita Singh
Pamela Singh
Vivan Sundaram
Linneaus Tripe

Central Gallery
January 19 to March 31, 2018

Curated by Adrienne Fast, Interim Curator, Kamloops Art Gallery

Re Present: Photography from South Asia is a landmark exhibition, the first of its kind in Western Canada to present a diverse range of the rich and varied histories of photographic media from the Indian subcontinent.

Photography was introduced to India almost immediately after it was invented in Europe. Louis Daguerre’s instructions for the new media were published in France in August 1839, and by 1840 professional photography studios were open in major cities like Calcutta and Bombay. Photography was soon adopted by the British colonial government to document the many different populations and communities they sought to control, and as a result the medium is deeply entangled with the colonial project as a tool of surveillance and policing. At the same time, photography was also enthusiastically embraced by Indians themselves as a means of personal expression and modern experimentation. The painted and embellished photographic practices that developed in nineteenth century South Asia are a unique contribution to the global history of the medium.

Re Present includes a historical section of nineteenth century photographs with examples of both colonial and vernacular forms of photography, including work by major artists including Samuel Bourne, Raja Deen Dayal and Linneaus Tripe, as well as work by many unknown or unnamed studio photographers. The second part of the exhibition features the work of several contemporary artists who use historical images or well-known compositions of visual iconography as the basis for their contemporary interventions. By re-presenting and subtly manipulating imagery that at first appears familiar, these artists insert the past into the present moment in a way that challenges long-held assumptions about photography’s capacity for accuracy and truth.

In addition to featuring the work of artists from South Asia, Re Present includes work by artists of South Asian heritage who live in the diaspora, including South Asian-Canadian artists, who use photography to reflect on themes of migration and relocation. The exhibition includes an interactive educational space highlighting the history of South Asian communities in British Columbia and the importance of photographic records in the immigrant experience.

This exhibition has an accompanying publication available here.

Generously sponsored by PACART, and Nandi's Flavours of India.


Re Present: Photography from South Asia

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As a supplement to the Kamloops Art Gallery’s exhibition Re Present: Photography from South Asia, the KAG has produced an epublication which includes a curatorial statement and essay by Adrienne Fast, Interim Curator, Kamloops Art Gallery and a list of works and artists included in the exhibition.


 
 
Alexander Gorlizki and Riyaz Uddin Studio Quorum, 2008 opaque watercolour and gold on inkjet digital print 31.5 x 27 cm On loan from the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada, this acquisition was made possible with the generous support of the South…

Alexander Gorlizki and Riyaz Uddin Studio
Quorum, 2008
opaque watercolour and gold on inkjet digital print
31.5 x 27 cm
On loan from the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada, this acquisition was made possible with the generous support of the South Asia Acquisition and Research Fund, 2009.11.2
Image used with permission of the Royal Ontario Museum © ROM



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