Edition: International
Tuesday 30 December, 2025
BREAKING NEWS

Indian American Group Seeks Action Against Online Threats Amid H1-B Visa Debate

  • News
    • Kochi
    • Trivandrum
    • Kozhikode
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Health
  • Entertainment
    • E24hrs
    • Cinema
    • Directors
    • Actors
  • Education
    • Career
  • Automobile
  • Personalities
    • Political Leaders
  • Religion
    • Christian
      • Catholic
      • Latin Catholic
      • Syro Malabar
    • Hindu
    • Islam
  • Environment
  • More
    • Food
    • Wellness
    • Lifestyle
    • Beauty & Fashion
    • Fitness
    • Mental Health
    • Yoga
    • Video
  • മലയാളം
BREAKING NEWS
100Days: Thirike, Neestream and Gopi Make their Way into the India Book of Records
SBI Onboards 541 Probationary Officers to Strengthen its Future-ready Leadership
Global Spice Routes Conclave to Unveil Heritage Network
KSUM Launches Workspace Demand Survey
Vietjet Chairwoman Dr. Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao Awarded Vietnam’s Labor Hero Title
KBF Let’s Talk- Vivan Sundaram Memorial Lecture
    • News
      • Kochi
      • Trivandrum
      • Kozhikode
    • Sports
    • Business
    • Health
    • Entertainment
      • E24hrs
      • Cinema
      • Directors
      • Actors
    • Education
      • Career
    • Automobile
    • Personalities
      • Political Leaders
    • Religion
      • Christian
        • Catholic
        • Latin Catholic
        • Syro Malabar
      • Hindu
      • Islam
    • Environment
    • More
      • Food
      • Wellness
      • Lifestyle
      • Beauty & Fashion
      • Fitness
      • Mental Health
      • Yoga
      • Video
    • മലയാളം
  • Arts
  • KMB6: Biraaj Dodiya’s DOOM ORGAN: Where Memory, Violence, and Silence Collide

    By NE Reporter on December 27, 2025

    KOCHI:
    At the newest edition of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale (KMB), Mumbai-based artist Biraaj Dodiya’s installation DOOM ORGAN unfolds as a charged, unsettling meditation on how contemporary life processes violence, loss, and remembrance.

    Situated at the intersection of painting, sculpture, and photographic image-making, the work resists easy categorisation; instead, it draws the viewer into a fictionalised yet deeply recognisable landscape of the present.

    Dodiya constructs DOOM ORGAN through an assemblage of painted steel sculptures, intimate linen paintings, and photographs. The installation oscillates between two contrasting atmospheres: the heightened drama of a sports arena and the hushed stillness of a mortuary. This tension, between spectacle and silence, becomes the conceptual spine of the work, mirroring the dualities that shape our current moment.

    Anchoring the space are painted metal forms that allude to medical stretchers and autopsy tables, their cold geometries evoking both care and finality. Interspersed among them are solitary basketball posts, symbols of competition, triumph, and defeat. Together, these elements suggest bodies that are carried, held, measured, and ultimately erased, raising questions about who is seen, who is remembered, and who disappears without trace.

    As Dodiya explains, the work began with a historical rupture: “Reading about the 1341 Kerala deluge was an important beginning point for the project because I started thinking about the collapse of Muziris and the emergence of Kochi, the cycle of life and death and how opposing forces charge our reality. The medical stretcher and basketball backboards, two opposing motifs that evoke very different relationships to our physicality, anchor the installation. Together they make a fictional space, one symbolizing stillness and loss, the other winning, movement, power.”

    The accompanying paintings and photographs hover ambiguously between body and landscape. Earthy pigments accumulate, crack, and erode, bearing visible marks of their own making and unmaking. These surfaces feel excavated rather than composed, as though the images are being unearthed from beneath layers of time and trauma. References to burial and archaeology recur, reinforcing the sense that memory here is fragile, incomplete, and perpetually at risk of being overwritten.

    Dodiya draws deeply from Kochi’s layered geography and history, the long horizon of the ocean, the textured walls of the Kappiri (Black African) shrine, and the violent floods that have shaped Muziris and the city that followed. The shrine, in particular, holds a charged resonance for the artist. “The Kappiri shrine, its history of violence, and ultimately the idea that spirits surround us, they are in the walls and in the trees, they guide us, we don’t forget them, resonated with me. The way the surfaces of my work are painted, as if there are buried histories there, voices that stay with us, despite the speed at which we are now consuming images of death and violence in our current moment,” she says.

    These local references are entwined with a more global visual language: the endless circulation of bruised and broken bodies across phone screens, consumed and discarded in the relentless churn of digital media.

    The “doom organ” of the title emerges as a poetic and haunting metaphor, an ancient, imagined instrument that absorbs and releases collective grief. It remembers names, faces, and silenced voices, refusing the amnesia encouraged by spectacle and speed. The installation asks difficult questions: What does it mean to win or lose? How do we go on? And what responsibility do we bear as witnesses?

    DOOM ORGAN offers no resolution. “Elocution over absent bodies is evidence,” the work seems to insist. Speech, gesture, and art become acts of resistance against erasure. The doom organ beats on as a reminder that memory, however fractured, still demands to be heard.

    NE Reporter

    biraaj dodiyacontemporary lifedoom organkochi muziris biennalemeditationphotographic image making

    more recommended stories

    • KBF Let’s Talk- Vivan Sundaram Memorial Lecture

      KOCHI:Algerian artist Kader Attia has opined.

    • KMB 2025 an Enriching and Inspiring Experience: Envoys from Britain and Canada

      KOCHI:Paul Thoppil, Canada’s High Commissioner to.

    • Discerning the Nuances of Gaze in Art, Films

      KOCHI:It’s all in the gaze in.

    • Christmas Crowds Throng Kochi-Muziris Biennale as Art Becomes the Season’s Quiet Celebration

      KOCHI:While much of the city lingered.

    • Memories that Fit in Your Palm; Meenu’s ‘Topography’ Stands Out at the Kochi-Muziris Biennale

      KOCHI:Meenu James’ paintings transcend the confines.

    • Power, Surveillance, and Silence: Dhiraj Rabha’s The Quiet Weight of Shadows at Kochi-Muziris Biennale-6

      KOCHI:At the Kochi-Muziris Biennale (KMB), artist.

    • KMB Pavilion Inaugurated as Cultural Hub of Kochi-Muziris Biennale

      KOCHI:The KMB Pavilion, described as the.

    • Only the Earth Knows their Labour: Biennale Artist Birender Yadav’s Silent Kiln of Memory

      KOCHI:Moulds without a name are discarded.

    • KBM6: Biennale Opens its Residency Exhibitions

      KOCHI:Seeking to kindle the interest of.

    • KMB6: Kochi Becomes a Canvas: Avid Visitors Capture the Mood as Biennale Opens for Public

      KOCHI:As the 6th edition of Kochi-Muziris.

    Live Updates

    • SBI Onboards 541 Probationary Officers to Strengthen its Future-ready Leadership
    • Global Spice Routes Conclave to Unveil Heritage Network
    • KSUM Launches Workspace Demand Survey
    • Vietjet Chairwoman Dr. Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao Awarded Vietnam’s Labor Hero Title
    • KBF Let’s Talk- Vivan Sundaram Memorial Lecture

    NewsExperts.in

    • മലയാളം
    • മലയാളം

    What’s New ?

    • SBI Onboards 541 Probationary Officers to Strengthen its Future-ready Leadership
    • Global Spice Routes Conclave to Unveil Heritage Network
    • KSUM Launches Workspace Demand Survey
    • Vietjet Chairwoman Dr. Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao Awarded Vietnam’s Labor Hero Title
    • KBF Let’s Talk- Vivan Sundaram Memorial Lecture

    Newsexperts.in - powered by Klickevents Infosolutions (P) LTD