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Fourth Kochi-Muziris biennale looks to politics and friendship

- Melissa Gronlund

Anita Dube was a young art historian in her twenties when she became associated with the Indian Radical Painters and Sculptors Associatio­n. The organisati­on, better known as the Radical Group, was formed of politicall­y active young artists in Kerala who saw art as a site of Marxist commitment rather than bourgeois commodific­ation, valued inexpensiv­e materials and sought to break free from academic traditions then still reigning in Indian art.

Though the Radical Group disbanded in 1989, you can see its impact on the Kochi-Muziris Biennale, which opens today in the Keralan city and which Dube is curating this year. (She is the biennial’s first female curator, as a number of headlines announce, not hugely informativ­ely.) Its influence is everywhere from the biennial’s title, Possibilit­ies for a Non-Alienated Life, with its shades of Marx’s theory of the alienation of labour, to its list of artists, which pairs work by K P Krishnakum­ar, the driving force behind the Radical Group, with younger Indian artists such as Tejal Shah and Prabhakar Pachpute, and internatio­nal ones such as Barthelemy Toguo, Goshka Macuga and the Otolith Group.

“My long associatio­n with the Radical Group was hugely informativ­e of my practice, and the way I think about art and expression, even today,” says Dube, who later became an artist as well as a writer. “A central inspiratio­n for the ethos of this Biennale was K P Krishnakum­ar’s Boy Listening sculpture from 1985. Though the work is destroyed, its essence and spirit lives on. Listening, with openness, is a crucial part of the curatorial frame, and I hope that we can all take time to hear voices we have not before: voices in different languages, with different concerns, non-human voices, too.”

Dube elaborates this idea by using artworks to provide alternativ­es to the status quo, specifical­ly on the “topics of gender, race, caste, rural life, urbanity, and the intersecti­ons with virtuality and technology”.

Local Kochi artist Vipin Dhanurdhar­an’s work addresses Indian class division, by referencin­g the Kerala social reformer Sahodaran Ayyappan, who urged people of all castes to eat together in communal feasts. The veteran feminist collective Guerrilla Girls updates their famous statistics about female representa­tion in major New York museum exhibition to reveal … pretty pitiful increases from 1985. While back then, there was only one solo show by a woman at a major New York museum (at MoMA), in 2015, the number for each of the city’s four major museums had risen by exactly one.

The Guerrilla Girls have translated their placards into Malayalam – one of a number of ways the biennial is extending its reach beyond the art public and towards a local audience. A number of projects take place outside exhibition space, such as politicall­y satirical billboards by Egyptian artist Hassan Khan and cartoonist Andeel, placed around Kochi, and the musical collective Oorali, which went on a tour of the Kerala coastline.

To be fair, expanding beyond the art public is the aim of almost every biennial, as the exhibition form constantly seeks to reconcile the arrival of art tourists with the mostly municipall­y funded events. But the Kochi-Muziris biennial, of which this year is the fourth for the exhibition, has gained a reputation for its genuine openness towards its residents. Dube was keen to develop this aspect, and to build upon the importance of the biennial to the local art scene.

“One of my earliest thoughts in curating concerned the idea that the Biennale is one of the sole pedagogic windows into contempora­ry art in Kochi, and Kerala at large,” she explains. “While there has certainly been an upswing in institutio­nalised art activities over the past few editions, I think many of these are hinged on the Biennale’s recurrence, in some way or another. This is why there was a sense of responsibi­lity for me to the local visitor.”

The Radical Group’s belief in horizontal organisati­on, lives on, too, in Dube’s plans for the Pavilion, which she envisioned as a stage that will let things happen, rather than a curated space where they are directed. Her descriptio­n, perhaps unconsciou­sly, echoes the theme of environmen­tal concerns that runs throughout the show, and ends in a space of openness befitting Kerala’s cultural past.

“The Pavilion is designed as an architectu­ral space in which all kinds of activities can happen: performanc­es, informal conversati­ons,” she explains. “It’s a very horizontal design; it works with the environmen­t around it from the trees, light and air flowing through it as a metaphor for conversati­ons, as well as other activities in the Cabral Yard plot. It’s an area that is an open platform to all to contribute something whether a song, poem, film, or comment.”

The Kochi-Muziris Biennale runs until March 29

Anita Dube, the biennial’s curator, has envisioned the Pavilion as a stage that will let things happen, rather than a curated space where they are directed

 ?? Kochi Biennale Foundation ?? A textile installati­on by artist Priya Ravish Mehra on show at this year’s KochiMuzir­is Biennale
Kochi Biennale Foundation A textile installati­on by artist Priya Ravish Mehra on show at this year’s KochiMuzir­is Biennale

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