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INTERACTIVE

Protest Art & the Corporate Art World

“Partly because of the lockdown, things were suddenly more visible. It was like a veil was lifted. There was a heightening of cases of domestic violence, for instance, which we knew about but had to deal with it. We know about power structures, but I wondered what I could do to help... Art, at a certain point, felt pointless, but I did begin to wonder what role I wanted to play. What service do I want to provide the world?”
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Live
Kathmandu
5th
Jun
2021
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Live
Kathmandu
Lahore
Dharamshala
Panel
Art Activism
Art Practice
Protest Art
Mass Protests
Feminist Art Practice
Feminist
In Grief In Solidarity
Internationalist Perspective
Aurat March
Farmers' Movement
People's Movement II
Jana Andolan II
Performance Art
Monarchy
2006 Nepalese Revolution
Art Institutions
Museums
Galleries
Corporate Power
Observance
Grounding
Corporate Interests in the Art World
The Artist as Product
COVID-19

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As part of In Grief, In Solidarity, artist-activists Ikroop Sandhu, Isma Gul Hasan, and Hit Man Gurung discussed the various contexts in which their visual and performance artistic practice evolved with their activism in India, Pakistan, and Nepal, respectively. Working as part of collective communities and in solidarity with movements was formative for each of them.


With editor Kartika Budhwar, they also discussed the “moments” (or lack thereof) that made them turn to art, and how they feel about the institutional and other problematic aspects of the rarefied art world. How does their "art" feel different from journalism and other forms of expression? How has COVID-19 affected their lives and, in turn, their practice? Each of them discussed their complex feelings about the necessity of their work—and how it felt frivolous during lockdown.


At the core of the discussion was an ambivalence about the centrality of visual and performance art to activism, but also the idea that art does indeed have a specific power that other ways of engaging with the world don't.

More Fiction & Poetry:

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