Panel on Zarina: Dark Roads

Organizer: A/P/A Institute at NYU
Venue: Hemmerdinger Hall, Silver Center
Address:
100 Washington Square East (enter at 31 Washington Place)
New York, NY United States
Get Directions
Add to Calendar 11/01/2017 06:00 PM 11/01/2017 08:00 PM America/New_York Panel on Zarina: Dark Roads More detail: https://apa.nyu.edu/event/panel-on-zarina-dark-roads/ Hemmerdinger Hall, Silver Center, New York, NY

Presented by the Asian/Pacific/American Institute at NYU. Co-sponsored by the NYU Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies.

On the occasion of the exhibition Zarina: Dark Roads, we present a panel discussion on the life and work of the prolific Zarina Hashmi, the 2017-18 Artist-in-Residence at the Asian/Pacific/American Institute at NYU. Zarina: Dark Roads presents selected works of prints and sculpture across the expanse of three decades, and marks the 70th anniversary of the 1947 Partition of India, which resulted in one of the largest forced migrations in the history of the world. The grave and lasting impacts of war, colonialism, and division are at the center of Zarina’s work, which foregrounds the personal and the intimate.

Organized around the exhibition thematics, with special attention to the cities (including Aligarh, New York, Paris, and Delhi) that the artist has called home, this panel begin with a presentation of personal photographs and reflections from Zarina. Historian Vazira Zamindar (Brown University) will discuss the cartographic line in Zarina’s work, and its relation to histories of displacement, refuge and exile, as well as the very conditions of memory in a divided South Asia. Art historian and independent curator Sadia Shirazi (Cornell University) situates Zarina’s work within an art historical context. She considers Zarina’s work sculpturally, as a bridge between Delhi and the New York feminist art scene, and comments on the ways in which the events leading up to 9/11 influenced the artist and raised new questions around home, belonging, and citizenship. Award-winning investigative journalist, documentary filmmaker, and writer Anjali Kamat (Brooklyn College) examines Zarina’s explorations of global crises—including the war in Syria, the persecution of the Rohingya people, and the bombing of Afghanistan and Gaza—to think through questions of migration, statelessness, and struggles for justice.

Image:
Dividing Line, 2001
Woodcut printed in black on Nepalese handmade paper mounted on Arches cover white paper
Edition of 20
Image size: 16 x 13 inches (40.6 x 33 cm)
Sheet size: 25 3/4 x 19 3/4 inches (65.4 x 50.2 cm)
© Zarina; Courtesy of the artist and Luhring Augustine, New York.

Exit mobile version