KOCHI:
The third edition of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale (KMB), curated by eminent Indian artist Sudarshan Shetty, is set to be the largest event of its kind in South Asia. Titled ‘forming in the pupil of an eye’, the Biennale will run for 108 days from December 12, 2016 till March 29, 2017.
The Biennale’s main exhibition is supported by an ancillary programme of talks, seminars, the Students’ Biennale, the Art By Children exhibition, workshops, film screenings and music sessions across venues i
In keeping with its curatorial vision, this edition of the Biennale attempts to question and blur the boundaries that categorise the various disciplines of artistic expression. KMB 2016 will feature works by visual artists, poets, musicians and performance professionals from diverse cultural and artistic traditions.
Curatorial vision for Kochi-Muziris Biennale 2016
Curator Sudarshan Shetty’s vision for the 2016 Biennale draws from mythical accounts of India as the ‘land of seven rivers’. The idea of streams flowing, converging and diverging underlies the curatorial questions that KMB 2016 will raise and the knowledge explored through the display and performance of the selected artworks. Looking at motifs such as tradition and community, Shetty asks: ‘What does it mean to be together in time – to be contemporary?’
Shetty explains, “My curatorial approach started as a conversation between different forms and approaches to art practice. I see the Biennale as existing in process, something which flows, and I wanted to engage artists whose practices will create works that exist not only for the duration of the Biennale, but on into the time beyond.”
“My core curatorial question explores what tradition means, tradition being a motif I want to explore in this edition of the Biennale. We often talk about ‘tradition’ or ‘traditions’, and through my
curation, I have aimed to address it from a fresh perspective – not as a stagnant or historical thought, but as an active concept integrated within contemporary reality. Tradition cannot be pinned down to a single set of actions or ideas, and I have enjoyed the challenge of bringing this multiplicity of perspectives to light, developing a Biennale which will be engaging to its visitors without becoming simplistic or reductive.”
“Traditions develop over time within the context of a changing yet continuous community, and as KMB is first and foremost a ‘people’s biennale’, the idea of community and social engagement is also deeply embedded within the curation, with many of the participating artists presenting works motivated by political undertones.”
Kochi-Muziris Biennale 2016 Participating Artists (there may be further additions to this list of participants in the coming weeks)
Abhishek Hazra (India), Abir Karmakar (India), Achraf Touloub (Morocco/France), AES+F (Russia), Ahmet Ögüt (Turkey/Germany), Aki Sasamoto (Japan/USA), Aleksandra Ska (Poland), Aleš Šteger (Slovenia), Alex Seton (Australia), Alicja Kwade (Poland/Germany), Anamika Haksar (India), Anand (India), Avinash Veeraraghavan (India), Bara Bhaskaran (India), C. Bhagyanath (India), Camille Norment (USA/Norway), Carl Pruscha and Eva Schlegel (Austria), Caroline Duchatelet (France), Charles Avery (UK), Chittrovanu Mazumdar (India), Chris Mann (Australia/USA), Dai Xiang (China), Dana Awartani (Saudi Arabia), Daniele Galliano (Italy), Desmond Lazaro (UK/India), Dia Mehta Bhupal (India), E.P. Unny (India), Endri Dani (Albania), Erik van Lieshout (Netherlands), Éva Magyarósi (Hungary), Eva Schlegel (Austria), François Mazabraud (France), Gabriel Lester (Netherlands), Gary Hill (USA), Gauri Gill (India), Hanna Tuulikki (UK), Himmat Shah (India), István Csákány (Hungary), Javier Peréz (Spain), Jonathan Owen (UK), K. R. Sunil (India), Kabir Mohanty (India), Kalakshetra Manipur (India), Katarina Zdjelar (Netherlands), Katrina Neiburga and Andris Eglitis (Latvia), Lantian Xie (UAE), Leighton Pierce (USA), Lisa Reihana (New Zealand), Lundahl & Seitl (Sweden), Mansi Bhatt (India), Martin Walde (Austria), Mikhail Karikis (Greece/UK), Miller Puckette (USA), Naiza Khan (Pakistan/UK), Nicola Durvasula and John Tilbury (UK), Orijit Sen (India), Ouyang Jianghe (China), Padmini Chettur (India), Pawel Althamer (Poland), Pedro Gómez-Egaña (Colombia/Norway), P. K. Sadanandan (India), Prabhavathi Meppayil (India), Praneet Soi (India/Netherlands), Rachel Maclean (UK), Raúl Zurita (Chile), Ravi Agarwal (India), Remen Chopra (India), Salman Toor and Hasan Mujtaba (Pakistan/USA), Samooha (India), Sergio Chejfec (Argentina/USA), Sharmistha Mohanty (India), Shumona Goel and Shai Heredia (India), Sirous Namazi (Iran/Sweden), Sophie Dejode and Bertrand Lacombe (France), Stan Douglas (Canada), Subrat Behera (India), Sunil Padwal (India), T.V. Santhosh (India), Takayuki Yamamoto (Japan), Tom Burckhardt (USA), Tony Joseph (India), Valerie Mejer Caso (Mexico), Voldemars Johansons (Latvia), Wu Tien-Chang (Taiwan), Yael Efrati (Israel), Yang Hong Wei (China), Yardena Kurulkar (India), Yuko Mohri (Japan), Zuleikha Chaudhari (India).
Venues of KMB 2016
The Kochi-Muziris Biennale uses heritage properties, public spaces, and galleries in Fort Kochi and Ernakulam. KMB 2016 venues will include Aspinwall House, Pepper House, David Hall, and Durbar Hall.
The largest and primary setting in Fort Kochi is Aspinwall House, a sea-facing heritage property with warehouses, a residential bungalow, and an office building. Aspinwall House has been loaned to the KMB by DLF Limited in association with the Gujral Foundation.
Other venues include the historic Durbar Hall in Ernakulam, renovated by the KBF; David Hall, a restored Dutch bungalow in Fort Kochi; and Pepper House, a colonial-era spice warehouse that now serves as a venue for exhibitions, artist residency studios and art workshops.