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4th Issue

editor's note

Art interpreted as value

If geography is considered to be 'Earth Writing', as its Greek etymology suggests, how then would we perceive artistic productions where the map of the cultural past, present and future   Read

writes MUSTAFA ZAMAN
newsscape

Art, crop-fields and formal beauty

Setsu Suzuki is a Japanese artist with an inclination to infiltrate the public space with his retina-pleasing conceptual pieces. His recent visit to Bangladesh – an agro-based, riverine topography – has been an occasion to introduce the tenth edition of his 'True  Read

Naeem Mohaiemen at Frieze Art Fair

Frieze is one of the many art fairs that have proliferated in an era of hype in the art market. Perhaps in reaction to excess commerce, Frieze has, for the Read

Arts galore at the 4th Beijing Biennale

Ancient Chinese philosophers used to pursue 'unity of heaven and man,' as is described in the preface of the catalogue from the 4rth Beijing International Art Biennale, furnished jointly by Read

'The arcade of the arts'

hilper Aulinde' or 'The Arcade of the Arts' is a parallel exhibition planned by Bengal gallery of Fine Arts to coincide with the 14th Asian Biennale, organized by Shilpakala Academy, Dhaka. Inaugurated on October 6, 2010, the exhibition included 45 art works by 31 renowned painters.  Read

Examining Dhaka and its environmental make-up

Goethe-Institut Bangladesh, the cultural wing of the Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany, marked down 2010 for programmes centred on ecology under the rubric 'Culture and Environment'. Within this framework local as well as international artists and professionals from various fields were  Read

features

The visual representation of developing countries by developmental agencies and the western media

I was staying with friends in Newry in Northern Ireland. Paddy and Deborah had kindly made their five year old daughter's room available for me. Corrina was friendly and curious  Read

writes SHAHIDUL ALAM

Memories of the underdeveloped : Dispatch from the 14th Asian Arts Biennale, Dhaka

The vector of Kapital leading to the materialization of  transnational Kapital-driven consumer states – sundered between and organized around leisure and labour endeavours to colonize and/or purchase structured  leisure, ephemeral pleasure  Read

writes EBADUR RAHMAN

14th Asian Art Biennale: Coursing through identity and image

Fundamentalism, Religionism, Nationality, Nationalism – the different veins of identity politics progressively inflict the politics of representation. As ill-fate befalls us, we land on the shallow grave which, in turn, becomes  Read

Africa: the many-faced ancestor of Modern European Art

Few years back in London my wife Patricia told me she had two tickets for an international poetry reading session in the South Bank Centre. It was a pleasant summer  Read

writes CHOYON KHAIRUL HABIB

The art that thrived through the mediation of the Kumbhakars

The most renowned genre of traditional painting in Bangladesh once thrived in the hands of the Acharya community, a people now extinct. Apart from the Acharyas, who earned their living  Read

writes NISAR HOSSAIN
core-relations

Redo Pakistan: An ongoing art project by Other Asias collective

The REDO PAKISTAN project started early in 2009 as an open submission travelling project, looking for artists and writers to reform the nation geographically, politically, and intellectually. It received an overwhelming Read

writes HAMJA AHSAN
depart file

11 theses on representation plus a few more reflections

Art overburdened with the task of recording the real, or committed to presenting it as realistically as possible to be considered as true reflection of the received sense-data is often    Read

writes GOLAM MORTUJA
artist writes

Unknown aesthetics and noncommunication from within an indeterminate space

This performance brings forth a sense of the absurd by excavating the otherworldly terrain of the consciousness, which is manifested through dramatic movements and the act of pushing the body    Read

writes RONNI AHMMED
text-returns

Smells like India: Pablo Bartholomew's sepia moments in the history photography

Think Pablo Bartholomew, and the first image that springs up is that of the hollow empty eyes of a dead child staring into nothingness from amid layers of rubble, with  Read

cross-section

Eyes on representation: disaster, the laws of attraction and other incidental phenomena

In this image-saturated world the act of looking at pictures or photographic representation is mostly bogged down in the process or perversion of savouring the spectacle. Any catastrophe – be that Read

writes MUSTAFA ZAMAN

Independence/interpolations

Nisar Hossain's 'Portrait of the Killer' was an ambitious art project that brings out in the open the murderous mindset of killers linking his theme to the atrocities committed by  Read

writes SHAHMAN MOISHAN and DEPART DESK
exposure

Disambiguating the language of subversion: Shuvo's manifold Intervention

Md Rafiqul Islam Shuvo (born 1982) is a sculptor turned painter and multimedia artist. As in the new millennium, the postmodern as well as postconceptual genres of the West began to  Read

encounter

Native Land Of birthplace, landscape and processes of recalling

The project Janmasthaan was completed in four phases – the first being held at the Cosmos Atelier71 with practicing Bangladeshi printmakers as participants.. It was a five-day workshop (October 10-14) under the  Read

imprint

Of painting and erasing: Samir Aich's socio-esoteric Proposition

We often mask our actual concerns about this world to pose a picture of serenity, wellness and happiness, yet there comes a point when we are inadvertently thrown into the  Read

writes MITHUN PRAMANIK with DEPART DESK

Turn me on

This is not a celebration of poor images. Nor is it a defense propped up in favour of one who is unable to adjust the 'idiot box' to ensure clear,  Read

navigator

Clinical coolness of an abstractionist: Kazi Ghyasuddin's recent solo exhibition in Tokyo

Wassily Kandinsky, the inventor and theorist of abstract art, is also credited with creating one of the first completely abstract paintings exactly a hundred years ago. It was in 1910 that  Read

writes MONZURUL HUQ

A beauty of abstract understanding: Murtaja Baseer's empirical method

The paintings featured in Murtaja Baseer's recent exhibition entitled The Wings' enters the realm of vision through the dialectics of nature vs nurture. The conceptual framework of this series of  Read

writes SHAHMAN MOISHAN

Open books and the contiguity of reading: Wakilur Rahman's readable and tangible books

The exhibition entitled 'Books, You can Read!,' by expatriate artist Wakilur Rahman, was a play on written words and the architecture of book which contains them. And the intention of  Read

writes GOLAM MORTUJA

Finding one's foothold in the universe : Aminul Islam Soyel's utopian vision

As painting in Bangladesh is often defined as a self-conscious means, and that too for one to explore primarily the tactile factors (the physical qualities achieved through the application of paint), what gets sacrificed are issues that cast and even recast the  Read

writes MUSTAFA ZAMAN

Process as painting: Ayesha Siddiqui's subjective seeing

Ayesha Siddiqui, a Pakistani painter given to abstract tendency, delves deep into our collective psyche where lies our thirst for translating the visual world in patterns unfamiliar and forms spontaneous.  Read

writes TAKIR HOSSAIN with GOLAM KIBRIA

The theatre of the non-theatrical: Jamal Ahmed's take on the mundane

Jamal Ahmed is a 'naturalist' by choice; though his art has little to do with the paradigms that the movement by that name brought to the fore in the nineteenth century. An upshot of the French novelist Emile Zola's aesthetic more, Naturalism  Read

foreshortened

Art and truth in the discourse of photography: From Barthes to Baudelaire

A paradox seems to insist, indeed overwhelm, the discourse of photography in our times. There used to be a time, not too long ago, when a photograph used to be  Read

writes SALIMULLAH KHAN
panorama

The whys and why nots of a residency

An artist residency is like a construction of utopia, as in these in-between-times, to summon Miro Zahra, 'dreams can change into spaces which it is worthwhile to occupy and then  Read

writes ROMAIN MAITRA
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