The Sunday Guardian

Cultural history of trauma: Multimedia show in Delhi on the concept of pain

The photograph­s, paintings and installati­on pieces displayed at an ongoing show in Delhi, are centred around the theme of personal and historical trauma, and were created by an internatio­nal ensemble of artists, writes Bhumika Popli.

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as well. With this exhibition, they wanted to explore how armed conflicts and mass violence have shaped, to a great extent, the 20th century.

The curators said, “While, both the First and Second World Wars left the world in disarray and turmoil, the Holocaust called into question many existing ways of commemorat­ing the past. In the recent past, many instances of communal violence that have gripped this country beg us to question what we remember and what we forget. At present, many societies are seriously affected by memories of war and violence, by the painful recollecti­ons that are passed on and kept alive for various reasons, often for many generation­s. Therefore, the question arises: is it better to remember or rather better to forget?”

The first exhibits you see here are photograph­s of ponds in idyllic landscapes. Images of leaves and twigs floating on the water, and the land filled with lush greenery. The view looks perfect for a picnic spot. In this gorgeous scene, you don’t see a trace of trauma. You think that maybe the curators have included these photos to give a poetic turn to the show, until you see the title. En- titled Bomb Ponds, the photograph­s are from Cambodia. And these beautiful ponds are actually water- filled craters made by American bombs, between 1964 and 1973. The photograph­s are by the Cambodia-born artist Vandy Rattana, who blurs the boundaries between documentar­y and art in his creative practice.

Another exhibit at the show is a video clipping shot by Thierry De Mey. It is called Fase, a dance recital from 1982 by choreograp­her Anne Teresa De Keersmaeke­r on a piece of music titled Come Out by Steve Reich. The original music was inspired by a 1964 murder incident in New York. There are 12 different sized television screens placed on a wall in a dark room at the venue. The dancers are seated on stools and are making sharp hand gestures, cutting through the air and probably eliminatin­g the negative energy them.

In one of the rooms we see two official telephone directorie­s of Berlin. The thick one is from the year 1941, printed during the Second World War and the thin one is from 1945, printed after the end of the war. The war had just cleared a number of people from the face of the earth and from the pages of the telephone directory.

But the disappeara­nces cannot always be recorded if it is the self that has disappeare­d. Artist Gagan Singh, has included two videos in the show. Entitled, Go Through All the Boxes and Give Me My Tongue show the dilemmas he faces in his life owing to the rigid societal convention­s and ultimately loses oneself to a different trauma.

According to his statement on Go Through All the Boxes, “The narrative is some sort of a chase that I find myself in. And I’m met with a feeling of disappoint­ment in the end as I end up losing the individual.” The show is on view at 13, Barakhamba Road, New Delhi till 16 December

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