ANW I DELHI I DEC 28, 2015 I 1st Published 1050
Chronicles of Silence (Khamoshi ki Daastan), recently
held exhibition in Vadehra Art Gallery, Delhi is an intermedia installation by
BV Suresh curated by Pushpamala N, a well-known artist herself. This is
Suresh’s second solo at the VAG, where he presented an array of multimedia
sculptures that have come to define his works.
In his second solo at the VAG, BV Suresh transforms the
gallery space into a spectacular if dystopian landscape of the contemporary,
creating a veritable ‘Animal Farm’ of grunting and snuffling pig noises, radio
speeches, kinetic machines, crashing weights, radars and laser beams. The
sculpture of an albino peacock presides over the whole thing, a blanched version
of the national bird: the picture of an ‘outsider’ whose body is washed by the
colors of hypnotically flickering video images while bits of cotton and
feathers fly around. The work reflects with anger upon the place of the
farmers, the minorities, the dispossessed and the outsiders in our world today.
Mechanized cotton gins, cotton beaters, torn garden nets,
and modified versions of agricultural grain separators filled with feathers
tumble, beat and rotate, casting great shadows on the walls. A hundred old
radios placed on a bed of cotton blare forth the talks of the Leader,
alternating with interviews of farmers. The old fashioned radio, famously close
to the farmer and known to broadcast agricultural programmes chatters on its
own - activated by sensors, oblivious of distress. Banks of scarecrow-like
figures fitted with speakers make obscene porcine noises. The white peacock is
overwhelmed again and again by brilliant landslides of cotton heaps, while
weights crash down with raucous shrieks. The installation pulsates like a
satirical ‘sound and light show’ about darkness.
For more than a decade B V Suresh has been intensely
engaged in reflecting on the place of the minorities, dispossessed and
marginalized in his paintings, videos and installations. In 2006, this resulted
in a major exhibition. Facilitating the Beast held at VAG in Delhi which was a
large installation around the metaphor of burnt bread, addressing the communal
violence of 2002 in Gujarat. In the present exhibition, some of the burnt bread
loaves made nine years ago in a local bakery are preserved in resin in little
glass houses, and hung up with other miniature houses containing landslides of
florescent saffron. Suresh as ‘artist-chronicler’ collects and distils these memories
of the unspeakable.
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