Shilpa Gupta’s Will we ever be able to mark enough? at Darling Foundry

Shilpa Gupta’s Will we ever be able to mark enough? at Darling Foundry

Darling Foundry

Shilpa Gupta, Half Widows, 2006. 
Architectural single channel video projection with sound on floor and installation, 8 min loop.

October 3, 2011


Shilpa Gupta
Will we ever be able to mark enough?

Guest curator: Renee Baert

October 5–November 27 2011,

Opening:
Wednesday, October 5 at 8:30 pm

Darling Foundry, visual arts centre

745 Ottawa street

Montreal, QC
H3C 1R8


514.392.1554
info [​at​] fonderiedarling.org

Opening hours:
Wednesday–Sunday 12–7 pm
Thursday until 10 pm

www.fonderiedarling.org

The Darling Foundry is proud to present Will we ever be able to mark enough? Indian artist Shilpa Gupta’s first solo exhibition in Canada.

The work of Shilpa Gupta stems from an alertness to global politics and economics as they shape everyday aspects and experiences of life. The transcultural relevance of her work reflects the reach of her exploration of issues that are points of anxiety or contest in our globalized world. At the same time, her work has an almost conversational character, personal and even intimate. 
Gupta’s works take form according to the conceptual foundation and concerns of each piece. This exhibition, primarily of new work commissioned for the exhibit, includes a video projection, mixed media installations, book works, large-scale photography, and more. Her works often have a strong base in process or interactivity and many address charged situations in the lives of marginalized persons and groups.  

In recent years, Gupta’s work has probed the polarities of anxiety and security as they manifest in a kind of formalized cultural mundanity of threat and defense. Amongst these is a new installation in which she reworks objects of everyday life—scissors, tweezers, plastic knives, cigarette lighters—confiscated from travelers as devices of potential danger by security services at Trudeau International Airport.

A related concern in her work has been the intersecting issues of nations, borders, militarism and identity. These issues take on a distinct emphasis in a book of maps hand-drawn by Montreal residents, who were randomly approached in different parts of the city and asked, in French or English according to the language spoken by the participant, to “please draw a map of your country.” The ensuing maps delineate imprecise landmass and borders, even as they display diverse, discordant national identifications.

Shilpa Gupta lives in Mumbai (India) and this is her first solo exhibition in Canada. Renee Baert is an independent curator based in Montreal.

The exhibition is a co-production of Darling Foundry and Cargo Curatorial Group.

The Darling Foundry is an avant-garde visual arts centre that supports the creation, production and promotion of emerging artists’ work. The Darling Foundry presents original exhibitions and offers creation studios, international artistic residencies, in situ projects, and more.

This exhibition is generously supported by the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ministère des Relations Internationales du Québec. All programs and activities of the Darling Foundry are supported by the Conseil des Arts et des Lettres de Québec, the Montreal Art Council, individual membership and private donations. 

 

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