
Glass Eye: A Podcast on Visual Culture from South Asia (Adira Thekkuveettil, Akshay Mahajan, Kaamna Patel)
Explore every episode of Glass Eye: A Podcast on Visual Culture from South Asia
Pub. Date | Title | Duration | |
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30 Aug 2023 | Glass Eye Episode 1: Kodak Women | 00:29:17 | |
In Episode 1, Sabeena Gadihoke shines a light on forgotten women amateur photographers from 20th century in India - ‘the Kodak women in striped sarees’ whose contributions to the field of photography in the region have been remarkable. Featuring Nony Singh, Manobina Roy & Debalina Mazumder, Homai Vyarawala and many other inspiring women ! Source: https://mapacademy.io/article/sabeena-gadihoke/
Hosted by Supported by PhotoSouthAsia and Art South Asia Project This podcast is meant to serve as an educational resource and all the recordings used in the episodes are for the purpose of supporting the research. | |||
04 Dec 2023 | Episode 2: Family to Nation | 00:25:28 | |
For Episode 2 we travel to Indonesia and revisit a conversation between Arif Furquan and Akshay Mahajan which was recorded during the 3rd edition of the Jakarta International Photo Festival(JIPFEST). Arif takes us through his exhibition ‘Family to Nation’ and his collaborative project with Reza Kutjh titled ‘Unhistoried’ which aims to activate the Indonesian family archive, as a means to re-examine, challenge, and decenter history writing. About Arif Furqan Arif Furqan, educator and researcher working with photography and visual art. He has been experimenting various approaches utilizing photography and other mediums exploring the issue of family, memory, history, and mobility. He is also a part of Flock Project, a collective exploring the possibilities of photographic works through printed matters. In 2021, he received the Prince Claus Seed Award on the project Unhistoried—an archive-based project on Indonesian family photograph and archive during the New Order Regime (1960-1990s). Now, he is currently doing research and artistic project on the vernacular memory and memory landscape on Indonesian New Order era. 2:05 Dori and People of Clay 3:52 4:04 4:49
President Sukarno's speech at the Bandung Conference (1955) 13:18 Indonesian Massacre and Coup of 1965 15:44 Abri Masuk Desa - Endang S Taurina (1982) 22:09 22:20 22.36 23:12 Indonesian Embassy's video letter to the United States (1955) Hosted by Supported by PhotoSouthAsia and Art South Asia Project This podcast is meant to serve as an educational resource and all the recordings used in the episodes are for the purpose of supporting the research. | |||
04 Mar 2024 | Glass Eye Episode 3: Active Listening with Gauri Gill | 01:07:40 | |
In Episode 3, we meet the eminent photographer Gauri Gill, recent winner of the prestigious Prix Pictet. We also meet Rajesh Chaitya Vangad, renowned Warli artist & Gauri's collaborator on the body of work Fields of Sight , which is shortlisted for the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize prize 2024. Touching upon two recent publications with Patrick Frey, Gauri opens up to Adira about her life's work and process, thinking through collaboration, representation and what she calls active listening. Before anyone else, my parents were like gurus to me; you might say even beyond that. Later on, I learned from Jivya Somha Mashe, a Padma Shri award winning local artist who has done a lot of work for the Warli artfrom and presented it across the world. So I joined him. We had no money in those days, I couldn’t afford to go to school. My parents were poor and I had to abandon the traditional Warli way of life to go work for a company outside, which was a very difficult decision for me to make. I depict some of those experiences in my paintings and in this way connect our communal life with my lived experiences. My paintings feature traditional motifs as well as new ones like the company, trains, planes, the city and pollution; this is how we have evolved the art form. We want to say that we are not against education or progress but given the world’s present condition, humans need to understand the issues we are grappling with and seek out the right solutions. We try to address this through our artform. Excerpt 03: 17:15 - 17:39 (referring to one of his paintings) You can see the fire god, the flies and the butterflies which are all very important to the Warli way of life. Without the animals we share our spaces with, our way of life is impossible. Here you see the peacock and Hirva, one of our gods that lives in the Kuldev (shrine). In this painting that depicts our communal life, it’s written that there is no distinction between us and them - all the animals are sacred. Excerpt 04: 18:27 - 18:55 We (Gauri and I) traced my personal stories, the stories of my parents, the stories of the village school, stories of moneylenders here, stories of battles, stories from the company I worked for. We went and saw the temple here, the jungle here - the deforestation that’s taking place. We revisited all of these relevant locations in the village, took pictures and did many tests before I started to paint over them. Excerpt 05: 23:40 - 24:25 It was very difficult to paint over the photographs - If I drew a line with ink, it would sometimes create a tear. I had to be very careful when creating the works - each line was final, we did not redraw or modify a line. Each line had to be painted directly with a stick (I didn’t have a brush). It was hard to manage all these aspects in the beginning - drawing the line, thinking about it & keeping my patience - but with time, it started to feel more natural. Hosted by Supported by PhotoSouthAsia and Art South Asia Project This podcast is meant to serve as an educational resource and all the recordings used in the episodes are for the purpose of supporting the research. |