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Chitra Ganesh

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Chitra Ganesh
Born1975 (age 48–49)
Brooklyn, New York
EducationBrown University
Columbia University
StyleMultimedia
PartnerMariam Ghani
Websitehttp://www.chitraganesh.com/

Chitra Ganesh (born 1975) is a visual artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Ganesh's work across media includes: charcoal drawings, digital collages, films, web projects, photographs, and wall murals. Ganesh draws from mythology, literature, and popular culture to reveal feminist and queer narratives from the past and to imagine new visions of the future.[1][2]

Early life and education

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Early life and influences

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Chitra Ganesh is the daughter of Indian immigrant parents, born and raised in Brooklyn, New York.[3] Growing up, she was indulged in the visual representation of Bollywood posters, comics, and literature. For the artist, 'visual languages in Bollywood's orbit became conduits for expressing an expanded sense of the real, heightening the fantastical and symbolic via a hybrid use of graphics and paint.'[4]

As a youngster from a diaspora community, she was exposed to Amar Chitra Katha (ACK), a famous Indian comic series based on religious and mythological narratives. It was one of her daily visual references, both in New York City at home and in India during summer trips. Children in India and the diaspora have been raised for decades with these comics, which are supposed to teach the South Asian population culturally.[5]

Ganesh's interest in ACK is crucial as many of her works reinterpret and redefine the comic. She was fascinated by the history of ACK and its portrayal of women. When she read the comic as an adult, she realized how often information was presented as timeless, trans-historical, and authentic. However, "the comic actually came with its own arguments, prescribed codes of conduct that maintain hierarchies of gender, skin color, and caste among others."[6] Hence, she had a range of experiences reading the comics again as she was interested in how reading with her adult eyes made her realize that comics that were just submerged in her memory banks.

Ganesh describes learning how to sew, embroider, and draw kolams from a young age- which she later realized were 'gendered forms of creativity.'[2] Her parents encouraged her to pursue art as a hobby, and enrolled her in art classes at a young age; however this was never seen as a viable career option, as the field was considered to be financially unstable.

Education

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Ganesh graduated from the prestigious Saint Ann's School, and magna cum laude from Brown University with a BA in Comparative Literature and Art-Semiotics. She attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in 2001 and received her MFA in Visual Arts from Columbia University, New York in 2002.[7] Ganesh's studies in literature, semiotics, and social theory paved a way for her to become steadily engaged with narrative and deconstruction that animates her work.

During her time at Brown University as an undergraduate student, she was passionate for semiotics, feminism, post-coloniality, poetry, and translation. At the time, she encountered artists like Jaishri Abichandani, DJ Rekha, and other women from the South Asian Women's Creative Collective (SAWCC), which is an organization for South Asians who are interested in the arts.[8] The late 1990s was an essential time for her because she was influenced by the interactions with South Asian female artists, and by her involvement in a number of progressive communities.[2]

After her mother's death in 1998, Chitra Ganesh was hesitant about becoming an artist. Having a profession as an artist was nearly non-existent in her community.[9] Also, she thought becoming an artist was "an option for the wealthy folks or people from a family of artists."[2]

At Columbia University, New York, she focused on finding images that reflected her subjectivity in mainstream art and culture that often meant "reckoning with the anthropological colonial lens that prevail in both the selection and contextualization of art objects, alongside disturbing mass mediated repetitions of South Asian subjects circulated in America."[2] As an artist and a scholar, she realized how important it was for her to articulate her own thoughts and approaches to object making and the cultural histories that informed them. She noticed a distinct absence in representation of South Asian culture, art history, and contemporary art in her curriculum, and took additional classes in anthropology and South Asian studies to "fill in some of these gaps."[2]

Career and inspirations

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After graduating from Brown University, she decided to get a job teaching junior high school in Washington Heights and continued to work in education (notably teaching English, and Social Studies). However, when her mother died, her life took a drastic turn. After the incident, she began teaching at junior high and kept painting in her apartment; she declared her career as an artist and realized the life is indeed very short.[10][2]

Inspirations

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Ganesh is inspired by non-canonical narratives and figures, botched love stories, present-day imperialism, lesser-known Hindu/Buddhist icons, nineteenth-century European fairytales, girl rock, and contemporary visual culture, such as Bollywood posters, anime, and comic books.[11] Her early 24-page comic book, Tales of Amnesia (2002–2007), appropriates scenes from Amar Chitra Katha; the original work's male warrior heroes were replaced with women, through whom Ganesh offer new female subjectivities.[12]

The Unknowns

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Ganesh's series, The Unknowns—a series of mixed-media works on canvas—explore “the relationship between anonymity, mass-mediated images, and the monumental, in the construction of a feminine iconography.”[13] The series brings to mind large subway advertisements and posters and utilize various techniques including painting, collage, and commercial printing processes.

In “Knowing ‘The Unknowns’: The Artwork of Chitra Ganesh,” Svati P. Shah encourages viewers to consider the formal elements of Ganesh’s work instead of simply viewing them as existing in opposition to the art history canon. Shah describes the origins of the subjects’ of The Unknowns as coming from the “margins of a mythic history” and Ganesh's ability to interrogate "the gaze" through this series.[14]

Other works and publications

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Another project by Ganesh that sheds light on the construction of feminine iconography is Eyes of Time, a 4.5-by-12 ft multimedia mural conceived for the Brooklyn Museum in New York. There are three figures in the mural that shows "the iteration of feminine power and the cyclical relationship of time." The artist explores the South Asian traditions of Saki, a divine female empowerment, and sacred Indian portrayals of the Greatest Goddess Kali. She not only paints the mural but also associates her work with the collection objects of Brooklyn Museum, which are accompanied with her wall mural.[15][16]

Ganesh has also contributed to publications such as the anthology Juicy Mother 2, which was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards and was edited by Jennifer Camper. She has held residencies at the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, New York University, Headlands Center for the Arts, Smack Mellon Studios, and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, among others.

In 2020, Ganesh created a large-scale installation on the facade of the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art in New York.[17] Titled “A city will share her secrets if you know how to ask”, the artist's massive installation covers many of the museum's windows in vinyl prints of the artist's iconic humanoid hybridizations.[18]

In 2024, Ganesh designed Coherence, a series of animated works in Penn Station's Moynihan Train Hall in New York, which further explores "femininity, sexuality, and power" through the emphasis on breathing practices.[19] Later that year, Ganesh's Regeneration was unveiled under the Art at Amtrak program. This work illustrates numerous flora such as the Rose of Jericho and Welwitschia from Southwest Africa, among others, to draw viewers into the vibrancy of nature.[20]

Awards and honors

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Ganesh is the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships that include:[7]

Selected exhibitions

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  • Charlie, 2002, MoMA PS1, New York
  • Her Secret Missions, 2003, Momenta Art, Brooklyn, NY (catalog)[7]
  • East of the Sun West of the Moon, 2004, White Columns, New York
  • 739 feet running wall, 2005, Gwangju Contemporary Art Museum, Gwangju, Korea
  • 1 x 1, 2005, Jersey City Museum, New Jersey
  • The Gift: Building a Collection, 2005, Queens Museum of Art, New York
  • Chitra Ganesh, 2007, Haas & Fischer, Zurich, Switzerland [7]
  • Upon Her Precipice, 2007, Thomas Erben, NY
  • Contradictions and Complexities, 2008, d.e.n. contemporary art, Culver City, California[23]
  • On Site 2: Her Silhouette Returns, 2009, MoMA PS1, organized by Klaus Biesenbach[7]
  • Word of God(ess):Chitra Ganesh, 2011, The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh
  • The Strangling Power of Dust and Stars, 2011, Gallery Nature Morte, Berlin
  • She, the Question, 2012, Gothenburg Kunsthalle, Sweden
  • The Ghost Effect in Real Time, 2012, Jack Tilton Gallery, NY
  • Flickering Myths, 2012, Gallery Wendi Norris, San Francisco (catalog)
  • A Zebra Among Horses, 2013, Gallery Espace, New Delhi, India
  • Chitra Ganesh, 2013, Twelve Gates Gallery, Philadelphia
  • Her Nuclear Waters…., 2013, Socrates Sculpture Park Billboard Series, NY
  • Drawing from the present…, 2014, Lakereen Gallery, Mumbai, India
  • Secrets Told: Index of the Disappeared, 2014, New York University, NY
  • Chitra: Ganesh: Eyes of Time[1], 2014–15, Brooklyn Museum, New York[24]
  • Protest Fantasies, 2015, Gallery Wendi Norris, San Francisco, California[25]
  • The Scorpion Gesture, 2018, Rubin Museum of Art, New York, NY[26]
  • Coherence, 2024, Moynihan Train Hall, Penn Station, New York, NY[19]
  • Regeneration, 2024, Penn Station, New York, NY[20]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Brooklyn Museum". www.brooklynmuseum.org. Retrieved 2018-03-21.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Vadera, Jaret (2017-04-04). "Between, Beneath, and Beyond". South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA). Retrieved 2018-03-21.
  3. ^ Ken Pratt (May 2008). "Chitra Ganesh - Breathing between the lines". Wound Magazine. 1 (3). London: 278. ISSN 1755-800X. Archived from the original on 2008-04-18. Retrieved 2018-11-30.
  4. ^ "Chitra Ganesh on Utopia, Futurity, and Dissent". ocula.com. 2020-11-25. Retrieved 2020-11-25.
  5. ^ Landrus, Mallica (2011). Tradition Trauma Transformation. David Winton Bell Gallery, Brown University: Brown University. pp. 13, 14, 15, 16. ISBN 978-0-933519-52-7.
  6. ^ Das, Kavita (May 26, 2015). "Drawing Inspiration: A conversation with Visual Artist Chitra Ganesh". Gallery Wendi Norris.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Chitra Ganesh > About > About Chitra Ganesh". www.chitraganesh.com. Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 2015-11-07.
  8. ^ "About – South Asian Women's Creative Collective". Retrieved 2019-03-20.
  9. ^ Memories, New York Desi Artist Shares; says, Inspiration-Voices of NY (2015-05-26). "Drawing Inspiration: A Conversation With Visual Artist Chitra Ganesh". The Aerogram. Retrieved 2019-03-20.
  10. ^ Zafiris, Alex (2014-12-15). "Chitra Ganesh: Of This Time". Guernica. Retrieved 2019-03-20.
  11. ^ Gopinath, Gayatri (2009). "Chitra Ganesh's Queer Re-visions" (PDF). GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 15 (3): 469–480. doi:10.1215/10642684-2008-032. S2CID 143689037. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-12-17.
  12. ^ "Chitra Ganesh". Ocula. 5 September 2022.
  13. ^ "The Unknowns – Chitra Ganesh". www.chitraganesh.com. Retrieved 2018-09-05.
  14. ^ Shah, Svati P. (2011). "Knowing "The Unknowns": The Artwork of Chitra Ganesh". Feminist Studies. 37 (1): 111–126. doi:10.1353/fem.2011.0001. JSTOR 23069886. S2CID 146712467.
  15. ^ "Chitra Ganesh: Eyes of Time". www.caareviews.org. Retrieved 2019-03-20.
  16. ^ "Brooklyn Museum: Chitra Ganesh: Eyes of Time". www.brooklynmuseum.org. Retrieved 2019-03-20.
  17. ^ Musser, Amber Jamilla (2021-04-06). "Chitra Ganesh: A City Will Share Her Secrets If You Know How to Ask". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 2021-05-12.
  18. ^ "Chitra Ganesh on Utopia, Futurity, and Dissent". ocula.com. 2020-12-09. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  19. ^ a b "Chitra Ganesh | Moynihan Train Hall at Penn Station". Hales Gallery. 26 July 2024. Retrieved 23 October 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  20. ^ a b "NEW ART AT AMTRAK INSTALLATION AT NEW YORK PENN STATION". Amtrak Media. 6 September 2024. Retrieved 23 October 2024.
  21. ^ "Virtual Residency With Chitra Ganesh | University of Michigan Museum of Art". umma.umich.edu. Retrieved 2021-04-02.
  22. ^ "Sultana's Dream - Chitra Ganesh | University of Michigan Museum of Art". umma.umich.edu. Retrieved 2021-04-02.
  23. ^ Shana Ting Lipton (19 June 2008). "'Contradictions and Complexities: Contemporary Art From India' at d.e.n. and Western Project". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-07-23.
  24. ^ Yoshimura, As told to Courtney. "Chitra Ganesh discusses her installation at the Brooklyn Museum". artforum.com. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
  25. ^ "Gallery Wendi Norris | Chitra Ganesh: Protest Fantasies". www.gallerywendinorris.com. Archived from the original on 2015-10-31. Retrieved 2015-11-07.
  26. ^ "Chitra Ganesh". rubinmuseum.org. Retrieved 2018-03-21.
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