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Exhibition Of The Paintings Of Nalini Malani At PEM
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Press Release 08/01/2005
The Peabody Essex Museum is pleased to present Exposing the Source: The
Paintings of Nalini Malani, approximately 40 works in oil, acrylic,
watercolor, and mixed media, as well as video installations. Nalini
Malani is one of India’s leading contemporary artists, known for her
politically charged work. The paintings in this show are drawn
principally from the Peabody Essex Museum’s Chester and Davida Herwitz
Collection, considered one of the most important collections of
contemporary Indian art outside of Asia. Malani’s powerful,
dream-like imagery straddles issues of individual, social, and
political identity. Malani’s city of Mumbai (formerly known as Bombay)
is now the second largest in the world and an ongoing subject of her
paintings. The lives of women, the predicaments of gender, and the
struggle for voice and power feature prominently in these works.
Ancient Greek and Hindu epics, and modern European drama, give
additional subtext to Malani’s complex, layered surfaces.
“Nalini Malani probes beneath surface appearances to locate essential
truths of the human condition. She draws from within herself to expose
the depths of human emotion—love, hate, fear, lust, pleasure,
aggression, pain,†writes Susan Bean, curator of South Asian and Korean
Art, in the introduction to the exhibition.
Exposing the Source is organized along several themes, including
Woman’s Room, a potent body of work that interprets women’s experiences
and roles as an allegory for our time; Undercurrents, paintings that
look at the underlying realities of urban life and the consequences of
man-made ecological disasters; and Stories Retold, in which Malani
reinterprets classic epic narratives and modern drama to reveal
universal, yet elusive, aspects of the human experience. As in much of
Malani’s work, she presents these stories from the viewpoint of
powerful women, for example, Radha, Sita, and Medea–major figures in
Indian and European cultural history. Malani is also known
internationally for her media- and performance-based installations. Two
of her videos are included in this exhibition: Stains (animation,
video–DVD, with audio, 2002), in which the artist’s partially
transparent, unsettled shapes take on new meaning through the immediacy
of film; and Unity in Diversity (video–DVD, with audio, 2003), based on
the 2002 attacks against Muslims in Gujarat, India. Born in
Karachi, Pakistan in 1946 and currently residing in Mumbai, Malani was
the first Indian artist with a solo exhibition in the United States.
Her work has since been shown at important exhibitions around the
world, including the 2005 Venice Biennale; the 2005 show Edge of
Desire: Recent Art in India at the Asia Society and the Queens Museum
in New York; the 2003 Istanbul Biennale; and a solo show at The New
Museum in New York in 2002. In 2007, Malani will have an
international traveling solo show starting at the Museum of Modern Art
in Dublin. Exposing the Source: The Paintings of Nalini
Malani opens Aug. 27, 2005, at the Peabody Essex Museum and will remain
on view as an ongoing exhibition from the museum’s permanent
collection. The Chester and Davida Herwitz Collection
The Chester and Davida Herwitz Collection of contemporary Indian art at
the Peabody Essex Museum comprises 1,200 works by more than 70 of
India’s leading artists of the second half of the 20th century,
including M. F. Husain, S. H. Raza, Manjit Bawa, Tyeb Mehta, Ganesh
Pyne, Laxma Goud, Jogen Chowdhury, Nalini Malani, Bhupen Khakhar, Gieve
Patel, and Arpita Singh. This groundbreaking collection also includes a
major international art library and an archive of letters, papers, and
other documents. In 2003, the Peabody Essex Museum opened the Chester
and Davida Herwitz Gallery of Contemporary Indian Art, the first
gallery dedicated to India’s modern and contemporary art by an American
museum and featuring changing installations from the collection.
The Peabody Essex Museum has been a pioneer in the study and
presentation of Indian art in the United States. Shortly after its
founding in 1799, the museum began collecting contemporary art and
culture from India. Today, its holdings include thousands of works from
India, from the 18th through the 20th centuries, including paintings
and drawings; works in clay, wood, and metal; embroideries; furniture;
and a large collection of 19th- century photographs. The collection
also contains important logs, journals, and letters recounting 18th-
and 19th-century voyages to India. About the Peabody Essex Museum
The recently transformed Peabody Essex Museum presents art and culture
from New England and around the world. The museum's collections are
among the finest of their kind, showcasing an unrivaled spectrum of
American art and architecture (including four National Historic
Landmark buildings) and outstanding Asian, Asian Export, Native
American, African, Oceanic, Maritime, and Photography collections. In
addition to its vast collections, the museum offers a vibrant schedule
of changing exhibitions and a hands-on education center. The museum
campus features numerous parks, period gardens, and 24 historic
properties, including Yin Yu Tang, a 200-year old house that is the
only example of Chinese domestic architecture on display in the United
States. The Peabody Essex Museum is open daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The
museum is closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day. General
museum admission: Adults $13; seniors $11; students $9. Additional
admission to Yin Yu Tang: $4. Members, youth 16 and under, and
residents of Salem enjoy free general admission and free admission to
Yin Yu Tang. Location: East India Square, Salem, MA 01970. Call
866-745-1876 or visit our Web site at www.pem.org.
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