
FEATURES

Beyond the Lull
Bangalore-based Reliable Copy is an intentionally designed independent publishing collective reshaping the landscape of contemporary art distribution and curation in South Asia. Rooted in friendship, knowledge-building, and a redefinition of what sustainability in art book publishing looks and feels like, their practice bridges transnational modernisms to turn the ‘lull’ in visual art into a space of possibility, where language, community, and curiosity meet at their respective limits to sketch new worlds.
VOL. 2
ESSAY
AUTHOR
AUTHOR
AUTHOR
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%20Acrylic%20on%20raw%20linen%20-%20Untitled-2025.jpg)
Mukhtar Kazi
Untitled (2025).
Part of The Sea and the Sahel series.
Acrylic on raw linen.
ALSO IN THIS ISSUE:
AUTHOR
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AUTHOR
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Mukhtar Kazi
Untitled (2025).
Part of The Sea and the Sahel series.
Acrylic on raw linen.
%20Acrylic%20on%20raw%20linen%20-%20Untitled-2025.jpg)
%20Acrylic%20on%20raw%20linen%20-%20Untitled-2025.jpg)
Essay
Bangalore
2nd
May
2025
Essay
Bangalore
Reliable Copy
Art History
Art Institutions
Contemporary Art
Publishing
Design
Visual Art
Installation
Book Publishing
Curiosity
Language
Community
Nilima Sheikh
Fine Arts
Modernist
Painting
India
Mughal
British
South Asia
Nihaal Faizal
Sarasija Subramanian
Lull
Sri Lanka
Colombo
Curation
Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art
Sharmini Pereira
Publishing House
Raking Leaves
Independent Publishing
Zines
DIY
Dissertation
Education
Knowledge
Pedagogy
Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda
Art practice
Suresh Jayaram
Pushpamala N. Nihaal
Ravikumar Kashi
Kannada
Mochu
Color Theory
Jason Hirata
David Robbins
Marcel Duchamp
Aesthetics
Production
Friendship
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In The Significance and Relevance of Early Modern Indian Painters to the Contemporary Indian Art (1971) by Nilima Sheikh, a Fine Arts dissertation published by Reliable Copy, the artist speaks of a “lull” in terms of Modernist painting in India. She reflects on how the Modernist movement emerged out of a reckoning with Mughal artistic traditions, as well as influences from British art. In the conclusion of the dissertation, Sheikh writes:
“The task of the individual painter in India is perhaps more difficult because he has to start from scratch and question the basic premises; there is no concerted movement to whose ideologies he can subscribe or even reject as the reference for his own work.”

This ‘lull’ still continues to push artistic practices in South Asia to innovate and find unique solutions in order to create meaningful and thought-provoking works. Reliable Copy, a publishing house founded and led by artist duo Nihaal Faizal and Sarasija Subramanian in 2018, is an example of an initiative that has embraced this ‘lull’ as a challenge.
In 2021, while helping plan an online conference for emerging arts professionals in South Asia, I kept hearing about Nihaal and Sarasija’s work—my colleagues based in India loved them. At the time, I was working at the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art Sri Lanka in Colombo, under the guidance of art historian and curator Sharmini Pereira, aiming to start my own writing and publishing practice. At the museum, I was exposed to her immense experience in publishing and the peripheral work of building the publishing house Raking Leaves, with a predominant focus on South Asian artistic practices. When I finally met Nihaal and Sarasija, it was both a revelation and a relief to know that people of my own generation were passionate about independent publishing just like I was and were excited to share more with me.
Independent publishing, such as Reliable Copy’s practice, transcends one-off zines and DIY publication models, as well as the nefarious art-world entity of the biographical coffee-table book that is merely aesthetically pleasing. Reliable Copy’s practice prioritises substance, critical thinking, knowledge-building, deliberation, and intentional decision-making. They are currently engaged in two main publication series. The Fine Art(s) Dissertation Series highlights (un)published dissertations from the prominent Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda as a pedagogical tool. The Wiggle Room is a playful take on contemporary art from an international standpoint, bringing together artistic practices that aim for freedom or seek to “wiggle” out of conventionalities. A common thread emerges in how they have positioned one book after another since 2018.
“As the publishing practice has evolved, we have been attempting more and more to play the role of positioning the artist, the book, and their contexts,” says Sarasija. This essay unveils different ways in which I have encountered this common thread in Reliable Copy’s work during my years as a fellow dreamer of an independent publishing practice.
The Surroundings of the Practice
At my first meeting with Nihaal and Sarasija, I was surrounded by a host of books on a busy, traffic-filled day in Bangalore. Our meeting exposed me to the extensive labour that goes into the publication of a book. Each book’s design identity, layout, paper, fonts, and printing technology had been well thought through. I was gifted several books published by them, including Mochu’s Nervous Fossils – Syndromes of the Synthetic Nether, The 1Shanthiroad Cookbook, edited by Suresh Jayaram, and Sculptor’s Notebook by Pushpamala N. Nihaal; Sarasija said they wanted the books to travel far.