"and when she roared the universe quaked"
paintings & video installations
by
Shakuntala Kulkarni
12 - 30 Oct, 2007
In "
and when she roared the universe quaked",
Shakuntala Kulkarni examines gendered, female, creative/creating
bodies as a site of both "otherness" and empowerment.
By adopting a vocabulary of defamiliarised bodies, eerie juxtapositions
and sculptural signifiers, she playfully confronts, angrily
shatters or slyly subverts the limitations of epic, "timeless"
narratives and their cultural representations, particularly
with regard to the embodied identities of women.
Kulkarni's work attempts a fluid movement between "authenticity"
and dreams, between split selves and fragmented subjectivities,
between the individual and the archetypal, between playfulness
and polemic, and interrogates what representations make it possible
for the voices and bodies of "Indian women" to not
be completely anchored to spaces dictated by predominantly patriarchal,
epic tropes.
What Kulkarni resists strenuously, is the fiction of an "eternal",
"natural" order, often employed monolithically to
maintain the status quo. She also rejects the reductionism of
speaking from one position (all men are perpetrators, all women
are victims), just as she deliberately moves away from representing
"acceptable" female bodies. So the women in Kulkarni's
work have aborted foetuses trailing from them and can inflict
gaping wounds on others; they roar and quake; are grotesquely
(sometimes comically) "excessive" and are severe,
disciplined, messianic warriors-never just one thing.
In the end, an ultimate horizon of understanding; a political
and representational strategy materialises in the work. I suggest
that Kulkarni explicitly acknowledges the ethical directions
any explorations of gender, power/powerlessness and representation
must take. Thus the work is not just about an active re-membering/re-gendering
of the epic or heroic, but also about the ethics of seeing or
listening.
Shalmalee Palekar
Sydney, September 2007