2013年3月28日星期四

‘Zarina: Paper Like Skin,’ at the Guggenheim Museum



Zarina (professionallyshe goes by her first name onlyis one of those artists who seemupon the occasion of am id career retrospective like this one,to have been hiding in plain sight.Born in the northern Indian city of Aligarh in 1937, she has lived mainly in New York since the mid-1970s —attracted byamong other thingsthe Minimalism of artists like Carl Andre and Richard Serra and the feminism of Lucy LippardAlthough she is associated with both of those movementsher frequent references to Urdu poetry and other artistic and literary traditions of Southeast Asia have made it difficult for curators to fit her into any one box.
On the basis of works like “Homes I Made/A Life in Nine Lies,” you might consider her a citizen of the worldthis series of vaguely Mondrian-like etchings is based on blueprints from the artists periods of residence in Bangkok,New DelhiParisBonnTokyoLos AngelesSanta Cruz and New YorkAnother work, “Mapping the Dislocations,”connects the dots on her itinerary with black strips collage do not white Nepalese paper.
Her art speaks poignantlythough sometimes opaquelyoffer location and exileThe violent partition of India and Pakistan in 1947, which displaced MsHashmis Muslimfamilyis referred to in her 2001 woodcut “Dividing Line.”To represent the border between the countriesshe did not simply carve the snaking diagonal out of the wooden printing blockinstead she gouged out the surrounding spacemaking clear that adjusting national boundaries is never as simple as drawing line on a map.
The more cryptic “Home Is a Foreign Place” (1999), aportfolio of 36 woodcuts on handmade Japanese paper,might be seen as an attempt to translate Urdu words into black-and-white abstractions. “Dust” (the title also appears on the piece in Urdu script), somewhat mysteriouslyis represented by a black rectangle; “Despair,” unnervinglyfeatures two clusters of vertical lines that bring to mind fingernails clawing at a wall.
It helpshere and elsewhere in the showto know that the Urdu language is becoming extinct in India and that Urdu poetryas the scholar Aamir RMufti writes in the catalog,is “obsessively concerned with experiences of loss and disappointment.”
You might say the same of MsHashmiespecially in the ruminative second half of theexhibitionThe more stimulating first halfhoweverfinds her reveling in the material andmulticultural possibilities of paperThe works herefrom the late 1960s and early ’70s,coincide with a period spent on the road as a diplomats wife. (MsHashmi married in1958; her husband died in 1977.)
In Paris she read Sartre and Beauvoir and saw works by Brancusi, whose limestone carving “The Kiss” inspired her early relief print of the same title (made from two side-by-side blocks of lightly inked wood). Other prints made with the same collaged-wood technique, on Indian handmade paper, remind you that paper is wood — wood pulp, anyway — and that every drawing or print is therefore a kind of sculpture.
That idea is reinforced in wall reliefs from the early 1980s, raised grids and indented squares made from cast and pigmented paper (sometimes brushed with gold or aluminum powder).
It finds its most eloquent expressionhoweverin MsHashmis “Pin Drawings,” amesmerizing series of works made by piercing sheets of white paper with needles ofvarious sizes. (The 20 examples on view were recently acquired by the Guggenheim.)Dating from 1977, they are conversant with Postminimalism and Process art but feel,somehowmore privateThe closely spaced puncturesdisplayed raised-side upbring tomind braillehenna tattoos andmost relevant to the shows titleenlarged pores
ZarinaPaper Like Skin,” which comes to New York from the Hammer Museum in LosAngeleswas organized by Allegra PesentiCurator of the Grunwald Center for theGraphic ArtsIt has been supervised here by the Guggenheims former associate curatorof Asian artSandhini Poddarand the museums assistant curatorHelen Hsu.
It includes a retrospective within a retrospective: Ms. Hashmi’s “Ten Thousand Things” a set of small paper collages recreating works from her oeuvre. (It’s a work in progress, initiated in 2009, but it’s meant to be comprehensive.) It was inspired, Ms. Hashmi says in an interview with Ms. Poddar, by Duchamp’s “boite en valise” — a whole career packed into a suitcase, and an ideal point of reference for this itinerant artist.

“Zarina: Paper Like Skin” continues through April 21 at the Guggenheim Museum, 1071 Fifth Avenue, at 89th Street; (212) 423-3500, guggenheim.org.

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