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Gigi Scaria: Prisms of Perception

When

This exhibition has now ended.

Location

The Potter Museum of Art, Cnr of Swanston St and Masson Rd, Parkville

Born in Kerala, India, in 1973, Gigi Scaria is one of a new generation of Indian artists who has established a significant international exhibition profile with exhibitions in India, the United Kingdom, America, Europe, Asia and Africa. In 2011, Scaria was one of five artists (alongside Zarina Hashmi, Sonal Jain, Mriganka Madhukaillya and Praneet Soi) to represent India at the Venice Biennale. He has also produced large-scale public sculptures, including Wheel (2009), which was shown at the India Art Summit in 2011. In 2012, Scaria travelled to New Zealand to participate in the exhibition Topical Heat: New Art from South Asia, and to the village of Nees, Denmark, for the Banner Project. Through his paintings, sculptures, photography and videos, Scaria creates environments of the future and reinterprets the human relationship to modern progress. He constructs imaginary architectures, unfamiliar landscapes and humorous film scenarios where people are often trapped inside or excluded from built structures such as apartment buildings or lifts.

The exhibition at the Potter Museum of Art presented a selection of Gigi Scaria's videos for the 2012 Melbourne Festival, providing audiences with the opportunity to experience his work for the first time in this city. Since 2002, Scaria has made thirty independent films which explore a range of topics inspired by place and the people who inhabit particular locations that are imbued with different social and political conditions. The films include: A Day with Sohail and Maryan (2004), Home: in/out (2005), Raise Your Hands Those Who Have Touched Him (2007), and All about the Other Side (2008). Scaria is inspired by subjects such as the children who inhabit the streets of Delhi and the memories of people who have met or seen Mahatma Gandhi. His video work deals with the impact of the rapid growth of India's cities and the social conditions that have been affected by this change.

Scaria's experience of moving from his village in the southern state of Kerala to the sprawling national capital, Delhi, made clear to him the sense of alienation commonly experienced by migrants. His videos are informed by this experience and the change and constant flux of great cities. Scaria is interested in the effect of this change on newly arrived and long-established residents. The imaginative and visual richness of Indian literature has also had a strong influence on Scaria's creativity. His art, including the constructions and perceptions projected by the audience‚ evokes a complex web of individual and collective experiences relating to subcontinental migration, society and political activities that are embedded in artistic, cultural and literary traditions.

Curated by Bala Starr and Natalie King.

A collage of photographic images of train carriages from different eras forming a single train moving from the left side image to the right

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Utopia@Asialink
Melbourne Festival