21 episodes

Delve into the discourse around the aesthetics, politics, and infrastructure of visual art. Artalaap is a podcast on visual culture focusing on modern & contemporary art from the South Asian subcontinent. Art critic Kamayani Sharma interviews artists, curators, writers, researchers, arts organisation professionals, and culture workers. Come for the images, stay for the insights!

Artalaap Artalaap

    • Arts

Delve into the discourse around the aesthetics, politics, and infrastructure of visual art. Artalaap is a podcast on visual culture focusing on modern & contemporary art from the South Asian subcontinent. Art critic Kamayani Sharma interviews artists, curators, writers, researchers, arts organisation professionals, and culture workers. Come for the images, stay for the insights!

    Ep 19: Family Archives - 'Film Pictorial' (1941-1947)

    Ep 19: Family Archives - 'Film Pictorial' (1941-1947)

    On this Artalaap episode, I, Kamayani speak to Jayant Parashar about his family's legacy -- a pre-Independence film magazine called Film Pictorial, started in Lahore by his grandfather and great-uncle, RK Parashar and ML Parashar. A well-regarded periodical of the 1940s, Film Pictorial shut down once the brothers moved to Delhi after the 1947 Partition.

    We talk about how Jayant came across the magazine, its role -- similar to other high-profile film publications of that era -- as a snapshot of South Asia's urban cinema culture straddling India and Pakistan's Independence as well as the scattershot, digital preservation of lost archives through which we reconstruct and respond to that era.

    LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR GUEST HERE:

    Jayant Parashar is a Mumbai-based cinematographer and musician. Film Pictorial (1941-1947) was an English-language magazine on Hindustani cinema co-founded and edited by his grandfather and great-uncle in Lahore.

    Credits:

    Producer: Squarewave Studios, New Delhi

    Executive Producer: Kanishka Sharma

    Production Associate: Priya Thakur

    Images courtesy Jayant Parashar via Surjit Singh

    Design & artwork: Mohini Mukherjee

    Marketing: Dipalie Mehta

    Additional support: Raghav Sagar

    Patreon support: Shalmoli Halder

    Audio courtesy: Vernouillet by Blue Dot Sessions [CC BY-NC 4.0]



    CONTENTS



    0.00-02.30 – Introduction

    02.30- 07.40– Discovering a family legacy.

    07.40- 15.00 – Back issues of Film Pictorial on the internet.

    15.00 - 18.51 – The Parashar brothers and their engagement with the pre-Independence film industry.

    18.51 - 27.34 – The wide range of topics the magazine has explored, both serious and light-hearted versus the present day reporting on the film industry.

    27.34- 31.37 – Film Pictorial after the Partition, and the value of vintage film magazines in the present.

    31.37- 33.28 – How family legacies impact worldviews.

    • 34 min
    Ep 18: Remembering the Present - The 1947 Partition

    Ep 18: Remembering the Present - The 1947 Partition

    On this Artalaap episode, I, Kamayani Sharma, speak to artist Pritika Chowdhry, whose solo exhibition 'Unbearable Memories, Unspeakable Histories' featuring her anti-memorials to the Partition is currently on view at the South Asia Institute, Chicago.

    We talk about the politics of memorialising the 1947 South Asian Partition, the aesthetic challenge of representing collective trauma and the influence of feminist historiography on understanding the Partition.

    We also touch upon drawing parallels with other colonial divisions of territory as well as ongoing civil conflict in the global south, and the limits of testimony in the contemporary period.

    You can learn more about the exhibition here:

    https://www.saichicago.org/exhibition/pritika-chowdhry-unbearable-memories-unspeakable-histories or at the South Asia Institute, Chicago's Instagram page @southasiainstitute.

    Click here to access the Image+ Guide & view the material being discussed in the podcast: https://sites.google.com/view/artalaap-podcast-resources/episode-18.

    For a time-stamped list of Contents, click here: http:/bit.ly/3CeUTWz

    LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR GUEST HERE:

    Pritika Chowdhry is a feminist and postcolonial artist, curator, and writer whose work is in both public and private collections. Chowdhry has exhibited nationally and internationally in group and solo exhibitions in the Weisman Art Museum, Queens Museum, Hunterdon Museum, Islip Art Museum, Visual Arts Center of New Jersey, DoVA Temporary, Brodsky Center, and Cambridge Art Gallery. Her work has been written up in various scholarly publications, including the journals GeoHumanities, Social Transformations Journal of the Global South, and Progress in Human Geography, in addition to news outlets such as CBS, NBC, and Hindustan Times. She is the recipient of Vilas International Travel Fellowship, Edith and Sinaiko Frank Fellowship for a Woman in the Arts, Wisconsin Arts Board grant, and Minnesota State Arts Board grant. She has presented her studio research projects at various national conferences, such as International Arts Symposium at NYU, The Contested Terrains of Globalization at UC-Irvine, and the South Asian Conference at UW-Madison. Chowdhry holds an MFA in Studio Art and an MA in Visual Culture and Gender Studies from UW-Madison and has taught at Macalester College and the College of Visual Arts. Born and raised in India, Chowdhry is currently based in Chicago.

    Credits:

    Producer: Squarewave Studios, New Delhi

    Executive Producer: Kanishka Sharma

    Intern: Priya Thakur

    Images courtesy Pritika Chowdhry

    Design & artwork: Mohini Mukherjee

    Marketing: Dipalie Mehta

    Additional support: Raghav Sagar

    Patreon support: Shalmoli Halder

    Audio courtesy: Vernouillet by Blue Dot Sessions [CC BY-NC 4.0]

    • 58 min
    Summer break!

    Summer break!

    With two seasons behind us, ARTalaap is taking a hiatus over the summer. 

    We will be back soon with all-new programming -- stay tuned!

    Follow us for updates and information on Instagram at @art.alaap and on Twitter @rtalaap. 

    You can write to us with feedback, suggestions and requests for guests at: artalaap.podcast@gmail.com.

    Thank you for your support!

    • 3 min
    Ep 17: Tales of Silence

    Ep 17: Tales of Silence

    On this episode, I Kamayani speak to Arshi Irshad Ahmadzai whose solo exhibition 'Naguftaha-e-Havva' ('The Unspoken Words of Havva') is currently on view at Chatterjee & Lal, Mumbai as well as online on the In Touch platform. 

    https://www.artintouch.in/exhibitions/13-chatterjee-lal-arshi-irshad-ahmadzai-naguftaha-e-havva-the-unspoken-words-of-havva/ 

    We talk about journeying from a small town to a career in the visual arts, the evolution of a distinct figural language, the possibilities of abstraction as an aesthetic mode during a period of repression and Arshi's engagement with time and space in her process-based practice. We also touch upon the use of text as image, the spiritual aspect of art-making, the gendering of material and the abiding influence of Zarina and Nasreen Mohamedi. 

    Learn about our guest: 

    Arshi Irshad Ahmadzai born in Najibabad, graduated with a Bachelors of Fine Arts (2011) from Aligarh Muslim University and later pursued a Masters in Fine Arts from Jamia Millia Islamia (2013). She won the Inlaks Fine Art Award in 2019. Working with a range of mediums including painting, printmaking and photography, Ahmadzai’s artistic practice is centred around women. Her knowledge of Urdu, Persian and Arabic allows her to understand the nuances of language, which find their way into her work. She lives and works in Weimar, Germany. 

    Click here to access the Image+ Guide & view the material being discussed in the podcast: https://sites.google.com/view/artalaap-podcast-resources/episode-17 

    Click here for the time-stamped Contents page: bit.ly/3Ofjmyn

    Click here for the English-language transcript: bit.ly/37PeIGT

    Credits: 

    Producer: Varun Kapahi 

    Executive Producer: Kanishka Sharma 

    Intern: Priya Thakur 

    Images: Chatterjee & Lal, Mumbai; Blueprint 12, New Delhi; Shrine Empire, New Delhi. 

    Design & artwork: Mohini Mukherjee 

    Marketing: Dipalie Mehta 

    Additional support: Raghav Sagar, Shalmoli Halder, Arunima Nair, Jayant Parashar. 

    Audio courtesy: Vernouillet by Blue Dot Sessions [CC BY-NC 4.0]

    • 1 hr 1 min
    Ep 16: Indigenous Horizons - The 4th Kathmandu Triennale (2020)

    Ep 16: Indigenous Horizons - The 4th Kathmandu Triennale (2020)

    In this episode, I, Kamayani Sharma speak to the curators of the 4th Kathmandu Triennale titled "2077" -- Sheelasha Rajbhandari and Hit Man Gurung. They worked alongside Artistic Director Cosmin Costinas to mount the ongoing edition. (originally scheduled for 2020 but deferred due to the COVID-19 pandemic). The Triennale features hundreds of artists from around the world at five venues across Kathmandu. 

    We talk about the Himalayan cultural zone, modern and contemporary Nepali art, decolonial curatorial approaches and the idea of indigenous worlding through aesthetics. We also touch upon the logistics of organising the Triennale in a multilingual & stratified context, the matter of continued economic support from the West, the need for government funding and the place of South Asia as a "region" in a "global" art configuration.  

    You can learn more about the Triennale through their social media – @kathmandu.triennale on Instagram and Facebook. 

    Learn about our guests:  

    Hit Man Gurung’s works are concerned with some of the most pressing socio-political issues of Nepal, including internal and international mass migration, the legacy of the decade-long Maoist insurgency in the country, as well as the recent pervasive effects of global capitalism in Nepal. Deeply concerned with the impact of these larger forces on individuals, communities, and society at large, Gurung infuses his paintings, documentary photo collages, performance and installation works with political conviction and personal poetry. Gurung participated in major national and international art exhibitions. He is a co-founder of artist collective ArTree Nepal.  

    Sheelasha Rajbhandari is interested in exploring alternative and plural narratives by learning the value of folktales, folklore, oral histories, mythologies, material culture, performance, and rituals and placing them as evidence, along with references to mainstream history and narratives. Her long term research projects and artistic practice often juxtapose these contradictions and synthesise the knowledge and experiences that result from individual and collective discourses. Through her works, she frequently tries to encounter the simple yet socially forbidden and taboo subject matters, with a focus on women’s struggles, celebrating their resilience. Her works have been a part of major international exhibitions. She is a co-founder of artist collective ArTree Nepal.  

    Gurung and Rajbhandari have been working collaboratively on multiple projects, including “12 Bishakh - Camp.Hub'' Post Earthquake Community Art Project, in which they were Co-Artistic Directors. They are also co-contributors to several books including ‘Breaking Views’, ‘Absolute Humidity’, a.o.  

    Click here to access the Image+ Guide & view the material being discussed in the podcast: https://sites.google.com/view/artalaap-podcast-resources/episode-16.  

    Click here for the time-stamped contents.  

    Credits:  

    Producer: Varun Kapahi  

    Executive Producer: Kanishka Sharma  

    Intern: Priya Thakur  

    Images courtesy Kathmandu Triennale  

    Design & artwork: Mohini Mukherjee 

    Marketing: Dipalie Mehta  

    Additional support: Raghav Sagar  

    Audio courtesy: Vernouillet by Blue Dot Sessions [CC BY-NC 4.0]

    • 1 hr 7 min
    Ep 15: Sarkari Sci-Fi - FD & the films of Pramod Pati

    Ep 15: Sarkari Sci-Fi - FD & the films of Pramod Pati

    On this episode, it's gonna be just me, ARTalaap creator and your host, Kamayani Sharma.

    I talk about my work on the cinema of cult Films Division auteur Pramod Pati -- through archival audio footage, clips from Pati's films, original commentary (and joking into the void.)

    In light of the Indian government's recent widely-criticised move to merge public film units, I dive into an important moment in the history of the Film Division (FD) through the practice of one of its filmmakers.

    I discuss how the sound design of Pramod Pati's experimental shorts, produced by the Indian government at the end of the 1960s, have a science-fictional quality. This sonic sci-fi is indicative of the futuristic ambitions of the Indian state modernising the mediascape during this era, through the technologies of radio, TV and cinema.

    This episode is an adaptation of my essay "Archeology of an Experiment: The sci-fi cinema of Pramod Pati" from the Oct. 2015 issue of 'Studies in South Asian Film and Media' (citation below.)

    Learn about the host:

    Kamayani Sharma is an independent writer, researcher, podcaster and translator. Her writing has appeared in Artforum, Vox, Momus, Aperture, Frieze, The White Review, Art Monthly, ART India and The Caravan. She has contributed to edited volumes including 'South Asian Gothic: Haunted cultures, histories and media' (University of Wales Press, 2021). A Kalpalata Fellow in Visual Culture Writing 2022 for Scroll.in, she was a recipient of the Inlaks Shivdasani Foundation: TAKE On Writing Travel Grant 2015, critic-in-residence at Dharti Arts Residency 2018 and a finalist at the International Awards for Art Criticism 2020. Sharma runs South Asia’s first independent visual culture podcast ARTalaap.

    Click here to access the Image+ Guide & view the material being discussed in the podcast: https://sites.google.com/view/artalaap-podcast-resources/episode-15

    Credits:

    Producer: Varun Kapahi

    Executive Producer: Kanishka Sharma

    Intern: Priya Thakur

    Images: Films Division

    Special thanks: Amol Ranjan

    Design & artwork: Mohini Mukherjee

    Marketing: Dipalie Mehta

    Additional support: Raghav Sagar, Shalmoli Halder, Arunima Nair, Jayant Parashar.

    Audio courtesy: Vernouillet by Blue Dot Sessions [CC BY-NC 4.0]

    ORIGINAL ESSAY:

    Sharma, Kamayani, Archeology of an experiment: The science-fiction cinema of Pramod Pati, October 2015, Studies in South Asian Film and Media 6(2):147-164.

    DOI:10.1386/safm.6.2.147_1f

    • 34 min

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