TRASH
An exhibition of installation, photographs and video
22 April to 17 May 2008
Vivan Sundaram's exhibition, Trash, develops a theme
that has engaged him since 1997. Based on the economy and aesthetics
of second-hand goods and urban waste, Trash recalls Sundaram's
installation, Great Indian Bazaar, (1997), and carries
over parts of his large exhibition, living.it.out.in.delhi,(2005).
In Delhi he had involved waste-pickers in the production of
the last exhibition, working through Chintan, an NGO that enables
this unorganized work-force to gain rights. Constructing a huge
and fantastical cityscape with garbage in his own studio, Sundaram
mediated the visual outcome via the camera from several vantage
points. This continues to be explored in successive works included
in this exhibition: the social implications of waste at the
core of which is the frenzy of global consumption; a deconstruction
of the commodity form that recalls modernity's fascination with
recycled objects; and the changing aesthetic of a key modernist
procedure of bricolage.
The voluntary act of accumulating filth is a kind of indulgence,
an excess. The colour and texture of industrial waste, dirty
toothbrushes, plastic toys, tin cans and a sea of soiled milk
bags, all of this makes for optical pleasure such as what the
viewer might derive from a painterly palette. Among the photographs,
there is a grand Master Plan, a surveillance view of
a garbage-city; in Prospect, the same city is an urban
conglomerate that recedes into an unsettling perspective. A
set of photographs, titled Barricade, disorient the viewer
by their scale: there are jammed edifices both frail and monumental,
never-ending stretches of landfill, homes flattened by bulldozers
and risen again. These photographs propose the material consequences
of urban demolition, amounting at times to collateral damage
of citizens' lives.
This passes over into a deep melancholy when Sundaram stages
an allegory of bare life. The soles of old shoes and their shadows
make up 12 Bed Ward, a dark, dormitory-size installation
about life lived below ground zero.
In the two-channel video installation, Tracking (2004-04),
a camera focuses on a studio-set of another elaborately fabricated
city, and the viewers glimpse a man and a woman-predators, or
lovers-- traversing the city by night. If Tracking reveals
an archeology of spent artifacts, ghosts and the artist's dismantled
sculptures, another recent video, Turning, develops what
we may call a countering poetics. The rubbished fragments of
a day-time city rise and fall, collapse and swirl. Towers blow
over and topple in the wind and smoke one by one, structures
big and small sway and whistle and turn askew. A text speaks
of ascension, while yet another video, titled Brief Ascension
of Marian Hussain, demonstrates that the flight can only
be brief.
This year Trash will have a continuing journey of being shown
in the forthcoming Biennale of Sydney, (curated by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev)
titled, "Revolutions - Forms that turn". He will also
be showing at the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo in a show titled
"Theatre of Life: Contemporary Art from India Today",
(curated by Akiko Miki).