When Does Infrastructure “Qualify for [Artistic] Attention”? The “ABCs” of Contemporary Art in Post-Liberalization India

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Material Culture Pub Date : 2022-01-18 DOI:10.1177/13591835211069613
Karin Zitzewitz
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Abstract

The period between “liberalization,” or the 1991 opening of India's economy to foreign direct investment, and the 2008 onset of the Great Recession was one of unprecedented change in the forms of Indian art and the infrastructures that supported its understanding, presentation, and circulation. This period of efflorescence—of multiplying growth in and transformation of a set of interlocking artistic and social forms—poses methodological challenges similar to those identified by George E. Marcus and Fred R. Myers in their 1995 volume, The Traffic in Culture: Refiguring Art and Anthropology. Marcus and Myers’ call to focus on appropriation, boundary-making, and circulation, though meant to submit the Western art world to critique, coincides quite clearly with three particularly salient changes seen in Indian contemporary art in the period: the turn to unconventional material as artistic media (appropriation); the deliberate integration of artistic work with the materialities of everyday life (boundary); and the development of entirely new curatorial infrastructures and frameworks (circulation). The present essay examines these changes through Mumbai-based artist Navjot Altaf's post-1996, ongoing collaborative work with adivasi (indigenous) artists in the Central Indian region of Bastar. Eventually registered as the NGO Dialogue Interactive Artists Association (DIAA), the collective's activities have ranged from parallel exhibitions of “art” and “craft” to site-specific, cross-disciplinary engagements with play structures (Pilla Gudi) and water taps (Nalpar) built upon collective practices meant to bridge the considerable social distance between urban upper-class and adivasi artists. DIAA's work with water, like other artistic engagements with infrastructure, highlights the social, aesthetic, material, and political aspects of the built networks that sustain everyday life. Their critique leveraged Marcus and Myers’ ABCs, incorporating critical acts of appropriation, the active violation of social and geographical boundaries, and, above all, demonstration of a concern with circulation.
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基础设施何时“符合[艺术]关注的条件”?后自由化印度当代艺术的“ABC”
从“自由化”(1991年印度经济向外国直接投资开放)到2008年经济大衰退的这段时间,印度艺术的形式和支持其理解、展示和流通的基础设施发生了前所未有的变化。这一繁荣期——一系列相互关联的艺术和社会形式的成倍增长和转变——提出了方法论上的挑战,类似于乔治·e·马库斯和弗雷德·r·迈尔斯在1995年出版的《文化的交通:重新定义艺术和人类学》一书中提出的挑战。马库斯和迈尔斯呼吁关注挪用、边界制造和流通,虽然意在将西方艺术界置于批判之下,但与此期间印度当代艺术中出现的三个特别显著的变化非常吻合:转向非传统材料作为艺术媒介(挪用);艺术作品与日常生活物质的刻意融合(边界);以及全新的策展基础设施和框架(流通)的发展。本文通过孟买艺术家Navjot Altaf在1996年后与印度中部Bastar地区原住民艺术家的合作来审视这些变化。最终注册为非政府组织对话互动艺术家协会(DIAA),集体的活动范围从“艺术”和“工艺”的平行展览到特定地点,跨学科的游戏结构(Pilla Gudi)和水龙头(Nalpar)建立在集体实践的基础上,旨在弥合城市上层阶级和土著艺术家之间相当大的社会距离。DIAA与水有关的作品,就像其他与基础设施有关的艺术活动一样,突出了维持日常生活的建筑网络的社会、美学、材料和政治方面。他们的批判利用了马库斯和迈尔斯的abc,包括对挪用的批判行为,对社会和地理边界的积极侵犯,以及最重要的,对流通的关注。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: The Journal of Material Culture is an interdisciplinary journal designed to cater for the increasing interest in material culture studies. It is concerned with the relationship between artefacts and social relations irrespective of time and place and aims to systematically explore the linkage between the construction of social identities and the production and use of culture. The Journal of Material Culture transcends traditional disciplinary and cultural boundaries drawing on a wide range of disciplines including anthropology, archaeology, design studies, history, human geography, museology and ethnography.
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