KOCHI:
Amidst the scramble to experience the variety of artistic production on display at the third edition of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale (KMB), chances are Latifa Echakhch’s works have fallen by the wayside. The Moroccan-born artist would have it no other way.
Tracing a breadcrumb trail of her movements around Fort Kochi thorough pieces of coloured satin str
“When I was a kid in Morocco, I saw in some poor neighbourhoods colour threads attached to the fences and window grills of homes. I had always wondered about them. Then one day I saw kids working with 10 metre satin sheets stretched from these windows. The lengths they cut were sold at embroidery shops, while the remaining pieces were left behind,” Echakhch said.
Likening these forgotten strings to an architectural embellishment, she went around tying them to gates, doors, windows and other design elements – “anywhere it was possible” – at Biennale venues. The installation, titled ‘Kmiss’ – a play on the Arabic name for a “beautifully embroidered dress”, was not intended to be a performance, but it quickly became one.
“I was not supposed to perform it and I was mostly discreet, but some people saw me doing it. There were a lot of questions, but it was quite nice. Most people thought that I had a spiritual practice with this work like making wishes. That made me wonder if there could be as much of a mystical element to the work as there is a social message,” she said.
Echakhch envisioned the installation as a work that dealt with tradition and also highlighted the “heaviness” of poverty, its effect on society and the need for money. “The embroidery in a Kmiss is so beautiful and precious. I like thinking that the dress came from the streets. It draws a balance between this beauty and poverty,” she said.
But beyond the drive to make money, Kmiss is also about the child-like joy of finding something new. “It has to be discovered, but it is not a map or treasure hunt. I imagine a group of kids following my path. I like having this strangeness and mystery about the artwork,” she said.
That was part of the reason for the attempt to keep the act of tying of the threads hidden from public view. Echakhch’s practice involves “leaving objects or installations like a still life with no indication to people that it is separate from the rest of the surroundings”.
“I like that I can leave people in the same situation I was when I saw this for the first time and didn’t understand the why. It’s fine if people take the threads or throw them away. I did my job and the rest is not my concern. I am a control freak, but I also embrace spontaneity,” she said.
Which is why Echakhch tried to make her installation looked “hurriedly done, not perfect” and not easily, if at all, identifiable as an artwork. The rushed feel is in keeping with its back story: “Whenever the kids in Morocco have an hour to spend, they make something with satin to sell.” For me, the work has to be simple, easy and light just like I saw in the street,” she said
A more physical connect comes from the strings themselves, which were brought in from Morocco. “When I was buying the strings, I was like a kid choosing colours. I wanted this yellow or that pink. I am not used to working with colours. So it was very, very pleasing to have this orgy of colours in my little bag as I walked around the venues,” Echakhch said.
“Every location I worked on, I looked to see if there were any grids I could use. I was looking at the architecture and spaces in a different way. I had this goal in my mind,” she added.