Article related to Shahzia's exhibition - 'Weeping Willows, Liquid Tongues' at Sean Kelly Gallery.
Source: Hyperallergic
Shahzia Sikander Urges a Rethinking of Art History
Nine years have passed since Sikander’s last New York solo show, Sift, Rift, Drip, Shift at Sikkema Jenkins & Co., making Weeping Willows an event of particular interest. Viewers looking for more of Sikander’s work following the show, will be able to peruse her forthcoming monograph Extraordinary Realties, out in February 2021. Edited by Sadia Abbas and Jan Howard, the book will examine the artist’s earlier works from their inception in Pakistan in 1987 to her continued practice in the United States, up until 2003.
These days, Sikander’s art practice contemplates global feminisms, climate change, institutional racism, and religious perspectives. Her inimitable paintings and portraits, captivating video animations, meticulous drawings, glass mosaics, and now, for the first time, a sculpture, are rooted in the genre now known as “contemporary Indo-Persian miniature.”
In her forthcoming show, Sikander urges audiences to rethink global histories and shared experiences, by re-examining the canon of Eastern and Western art history through her work. In 2000, she created the drawing “Much Maligned Monsters II,” borrowing its title from Partha Mitter’s 1977 book about European reactions to Indian art history. In the drawing, Sikander entangled a partially clad Eastern Hindu Devata (deity) with a nude Greco-Roman Venus appropriated from Angolo Bronzino’s “An Allegory with Venus and Cupid” (c. 1540–1546). “Promiscuous Intimacies” (2020), the artist’s sculptural debut, elevates this composition into a patinated bronze. Much like in her earlier drawing, Venus sits on the floor of the gallery space, raising a delicate finger that grasps the Devata’s necklace while the latter deity rests one leg on Venus’s shoulder. The pair lock gazes, oblivious to outside gazes. While the drawing alluded to female identity and hierarchies of power in global politics, the entangled bronze figures suggest queer relationships that are not always visible to the observing eye.
Weeping Willows will also include recent paintings that address capitalist modes of production, along with another standout glass mosaic — “The Perennial Gaze” (2018) — and numerous other drawings and paintings. As the exhibition makes plain, Sikander is dexterous in any medium she dabbles.
Weeping Willows, Liquid Tongues opens November 5 at Sean Kelly Gallery (475 10th avenue, Chelsea, Manhattan) and will continue through December 19.
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