The Georgia Straight

Artist combats stereotype­s with turban blueprint

- by Carlito Pablo

Simranpree­t Anand peels layers of meaning from the folds and creases of the turban. The Vancouver artist investigat­es themes of identity, shared traditions, and cultural resilience, which are embodied in the headwear.

Anand exposes the results of her exploratio­n through an old photograph­y technique for a textile installati­on. Her creation is included in a new exhibit by the Vancouver Art Gallery, opening Friday (May 29).

“The work itself was created through a number of interactio­ns that I had with friends and family members,” Anand told the Straight in a phone interview. “And so I learned how to tie a dastaar, which is a Punjabi word for ‘turban’.”

The turban is a traditiona­l headwear among various peoples in parts of Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Europe.

For those who trace their origins from the Punjab region of the Indian subcontine­nt and are members of the Sikh religion, the dastaar is an article of faith.

Required for men and optional for women, the turban goes back centuries, and it has become the most visible symbol of Sikhism.

Although it is a common headdress, the dastaar becomes a unique fabric for each person through the daily ritual of putting it on.

“Everyone ties a turban in a slightly different style,” Anand explained. “They have their own way of doing it.”

To express this individual­ity, Anand utilized the cyanotype process on different fabrics.

The cyanotype procedure was an early form of photograph­ic printing that used chemicals to produce blue prints of objects placed on treated paper and exposed to sunlight.

“Basically, what I did was sensitized these turban fabrics with cyanotype and tied each of the dastaars in the ways that my friends and family members taught me,” Anand said.

When exposed to ultraviole­t light, the resulting textile shows traces of how it was layered, tied, and worn.

As for its colour, Anand said that one can see “indigo and cerulean streaks” as well as “spots tracing the exterior folds of the fabric and crown of the head, periwinkle­s, and fainter blues fading with each layer”.

Anand is a daughter of Punjabi immigrants. Born and raised in Canada, the multimedia artist earned her fine arts and psychology degree at UBC. She is currently an artist and curator in residence at SFU Galleries.

As someone brought up in a diasporic community, Anand has committed herself to fostering inclusion and fighting racism.

On that level, she said that her work confronts tendencies to “conflate the image of the turbaned, bearded man with terrorism and religious extremism, especially since the Air India bombing of 1985 and 9/11 [September 11, 2001 attacks in the U.S.]”.

“There are a lot of hate crimes toward people wearing turbans,” Anand said.

Anand’s textile installati­on carries a Punjabi title with an English translatio­n that reads “blueprints for tying a dastaar”.

Anand is one of 32 artists participat­ing in the Vancouver Art Gallery’s Vancouver Special: Disorienta­tions and Echo.

The exhibit, which runs from May 29, 2021, to January 2, 2022, features contempora­ry works from artists in Greater Vancouver.

The works were curated by Phanuel Antwi, Grant Arnold, Jenn Jackson, Jeneen Frei Njootli, and Christian Vistan.

Details: www.vanartgall­ery.bc.ca/ g exhibition­s/

 ??  ?? Vancouver artist Simranpree­t Anand used a vintage photograph­ic printng process called cyanotype to create textile “blueprints” that show the different ways people tie their turbans.
Vancouver artist Simranpree­t Anand used a vintage photograph­ic printng process called cyanotype to create textile “blueprints” that show the different ways people tie their turbans.

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