Showing posts with label Shahzia Sikander. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shahzia Sikander. Show all posts

29/06/25

Shahzia Sikander: The Last Post @ SAAM - Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Shahzia Sikander: The Last Post
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington
July 3, 2025 – July 12, 2026

Shahzia Sikander
Shahzia Sikander 
The Last Post, 2010
Single-channel HD digital animation, color,
5.1 surround sound; 10:00 minutes 
Music: Du Yun 
Smithsonian American Art Museum, 
Museum purchase through the 
Luisita L. and Franz H. Denghausen Endowment,
 in partnership with the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, 2025.11
© 2025, Shahzia Sikander. 
Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York/Los Angeles

Shahzia Sikander’s iconoclastic multimedia explorations encompass drawing and painting, mosaics, sculpture and video. She initially trained in an illustration tradition—classical Indo-Persian miniature painting—that was bounded by frames, borders and precise architecture. From this, she developed her unique, disruptive style.  

Through precisely inked and animated scenes, Sikander’s video animation “The Last Post” (2010) critically considers the legacy of British colonialism in Asia, using her signature approach of infusing Indo-Persian manuscript compositions with a contemporary perspective. “The Last Post” centers a European gentleman in a red waistcoat, a symbol of British imperial power, based on miniature paintings from the late 18th century depicting British East India Company officials. Indian court architecture, Chinese cut-paper silhouettes and a watercolor map of South Asia all dissolve and reconfigure around him as electronic beats by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Du Yun explode on the soundtrack.  

“The Last Post” was acquired in 2025 by the Smithsonian American Art Museum. The work is presented in a dedicated gallery for immersive media art installations that opened in 2023 on the museum’s third floor. The 10-minute film runs continuously and can be entered at any time. The presentation is organized by Saisha Grayson, curator of time-based media at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

SAAM - Smithsonian American Art Museum
8th and G Streets, NW, Washington, DC 20004

04/11/20

Shahzia Sikander @ Sean Kelly Gallery, New York - Weeping Willows, Liquid Tongues

Shahzia Sikander
Weeping Willows, Liquid Tongues
Sean Kelly Gallery, New York
November 5 – December 19, 2020


SHAHZIA SIKANDER
Arose, 2020, 
Glass mosaic with patinated brass frame
84 x 62 inches (213.4 x 157.5 cm), edition of 5 with 2 APs
© Shahzia Sikander
Photography: © Photo by Mayer of Munich
Courtesy: Sean Kelly, New York

Sean Kelly presents SHAHZIA SIKANDER’s inaugural exhibition with the gallery and her first exhibition in New York City in nine years. Weeping Willows, Liquid Tongues is an expansive, in-depth look into Sikander’s recent work, featuring the artist’s dynamic large-and-intimately-scaled drawings, a captivating new single channel video-animation, luminous, intricate mosaics and her first ever free-standing sculpture.

Shahzia Sikander takes classical Indo-Persian miniature painting as the point of departure for her work. From premodern beginnings to contemporary influences, it is precisely this historical continuum and its continuous capacity for reinvention that has sparked Sikander’s visually rich engagement in multiple media. The works in the exhibition explore tensions between power and powerlessness to present transformative ideas. Sikander's interest in sociology, psychoanalysis, and the examination of how culture and society shape the imagination is all fodder for her work. The ways in which violence, systemic racism, class and cultural fears are deeply entrenched in media and political representations, be it the fear of the unknown, the migrant, the immigrant, the Muslim, the LGBTQ community, the ‘other’ and the various fault lines of race, class and gender also intersect within her work. In this tangled web, the extractive nature of capitalism appears to promise liberty and happiness, but too often bestows debt and despair. These ideas are all explored in her new series of paintings The Shroud, 2020 and Oil and Poppies, 2020, which emerged whilst the artist was researching symbols of extraction.

Shahzia Sikander’s first major sculptural work, Promiscuous Intimacies, borrows its title from Gayatri Gopinath’s forthcoming essay on Sikander’s practice. This bronze sculpture, with its sinuous entanglement of a Greco-Roman Venus and an Indian Devata, explores in Gopinath’s words, “the promiscuous intimacies of multiple times, spaces, art historical traditions, bodies, desires, and subjectivities.” In their suggestive embrace, the intertwined female bodies bear the symbolic weight of communal identities from multiple geographic terrains. They evoke non-heteronormative desires that are often cast as foreign and inauthentic, and instead challenge the viewer to imagine a different present and future. The backward glance of the lower figure “demands that we understand ‘tradition,’ ‘culture,’ and ‘identity’ as impure, heterogenous, unstable, and always in process,” disrupting “taken-for-granted national, temporal, and art historical boundaries.”  

Presenting a comprehensive overview of Shahzia Sikander’s films, the exhibition features three animations: Parallax, 2013, Disruption as Rapture, 2016, and her most recent film, Reckoning, 2020. The new film, made from multiple drawings, reveals the cyclical theme of struggle through kinetic forms. In it, Sikander considers the relationships between migrant-citizen, conflict-erosion, memory-myth, warfare-fatality, father-son, and human - nature. The musical score accompanying Reckoning is written by the inimitable composer Du Yun, awarded the Pulitzer in Music in 2017, and features the Pakistani singer Zeb Bangash. Du Yun and Sikander’s decade-long collaborations (including Parallax and Disruption as Rapture) span Shanghai, New York, Sharjah, Istanbul, Hong Kong and Pakistan and speak to their ‘creative intimacy,’ female agency and shared passion for finding common ground through multiple languages.

While questioning the very concept of national culture, Shahzia Sikander provides deep aesthetic reflections on the history of colonialism, capitalism and the formation of racialized identities in the present. Our ecological condition is a mirror of social conditions: erosion of climate, borders, rising waters, rising heat, and displacement of bodies amongst others. All resources are gathered in the rubric of monetization: language, labor, human intelligence and human attention. Sikander reimagines the United States’ foundational claims of freedom and liberty, that were never applicable to all, by presenting overlapping diasporas and using art to imagine the possibilities of a more just and livable future. Sikander’s work is not about hybridity. It is not fusing cultures or aesthetics. The multiple juxtapositions reflecting gender, race, class, and language differences are arranged and rearranged to imagine visual forms that challenge fixed narratives and break binary thinking in all its forms. Sikander's work is the antithesis of the fictions of purity and authentic national culture.

SHAHZIA SIKANDER lives and works in New York City. Her innovative artistic practice led to her meteoric rise internationally in the mid-nineties with survey exhibitions at the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago, 1998, the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art 1998, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden 1999, and the Whitney Museum of American Art 2000. Sikander has had major solo exhibitions throughout the world, including most recently at the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco, 2017; the Aga Khan Museum, Toronto, 2017; MAXXI | Museo nazionale delle arti del XXI secolo, Rome 2016; the Asia Society Hong Kong Center, Hong Kong, 2016; the Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao 2015; the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C. 2012; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo, 2010; the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, 2007; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, 2007; the Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2005; and at the San Diego Museum of Art, California, 2004 amongst others. Sikander has been invited to participate in significant international biennials such as the Lahore Biennale 01, Pakistan; the Karachi Biennale 17, Pakistan; the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art, Manege, Russia; the 8th and 13th Istanbul Biennial, Turkey;  the 5th Auckland Triennial, New Zealand; the Sharjah Biennale 11, Sharjah Art Foundation, UAE; the 54th and 51st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, Italy; and The Whitney Biennial, New York amongst others. In addition, she has been included in notable group exhibitions at institutions such as the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul; Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin; the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Amongst the numerous awards, grants, and fellowships Sikander has received are the KB17 Karachi Biennale Shahneela and Farhan Faruqui Popular Choice Art Prize, 2017; the Religion and the Arts Award, 2016; the Asia Society Award for Significant Contribution to Contemporary Art, 2015; the National Medal of Arts Award presented by U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Rodham Clinton, 2012; the John D. and Catherine T MacArthur Foundation Achievement ‘Genius’ award, 2006; and Tamgha-e-Imtiaz, the National Pride of Honor Award presented by the Pakistani Government.

Shahzia Sikander will be the subject of a traveling exhibition titled Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary Realities. The exhibition will open at The Morgan Library, New York in June 2021 followed by the RISD Museum, Rhode Island in November 2021, and MFA Houston, Texas in Spring 2022. On the occasion of these exhibitions, there will be a major new monograph printed. Extraordinary Realities, is an exhaustive examination of Sikander’s work from 1987 to 2003, charting her early development as an artist in Lahore and the United States, and foregrounding her critical role in bringing miniature painting into dialogue with contemporary art. Edited by Jan Howard and Sadia Abbas, with contributions by Gayatri Gopinath, Faisal Devji, Kishwar Rizvi, Sadia Abbas, Jan Howard, Vasif Kortun, Dennis Congdon, Bashir Ahmed, Rick Lowe and Julie Mehretu.

SEAN KELLY GALLERY
475 Tenth Avenue, New York, NY 10018

22/02/04

Shahzia Sikander, Tang Museum, Saratoga Springs, NY - Nemesis

Shahzia Sikander: Nemesis
Tang Museum, Saratoga Springs, NY
January 31 – April 11, 2004

The ancient art of miniature painting boldly enters the 21st century in the work of Pakistani-American artist Shahzia Sikander.  The Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College presents her  innovative blend of Persian and contemporary themes, exquisitely rendered in small scale and opulent color in Shahzia Sikander: Nemesis.

Trained in miniature painting in Pakistan, Shahzia Sikander freely mingles Hindu and Muslim painting techniques with contemporary Western elements, from American painting and pop culture to war, supermodels, and fairy tales. Asian Art News described her work as “cultural weaving…fusing centuries-old techniques and images with provocative contemporary forms, without losing the rich possibilities of either approach.”

Sixth in the Tang’s series of “Openers” designed to introduce artists and new work to the region, Nemesis showcases the varied media and styles of Sikander’s most recent works. They range from jewel-like paintings as small as 6 by 8 inches to the large-scale wall installation Sikander makes in the Tang’s atrium. The exhibition also features two new works of animation, a medium whose elements of motion and time expand the narrative quality of Sikander’s works and invite the viewer to further engage her characters and environments. “The animations make more obvious the complex layering of imagery that the artist has always pursued in her paintings,” said exhibition co-curator Jessica Hough, associate curator of the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, Conn.

The exhibition’s title comes from Sikander’s animation Nemesis, in which an elephant is composed, piece by piece, of smaller animals both gentle and fierce. Ridden by a devil character, the composite creature can be described as a nemesis—an unconquerable foe. Nemesis was also the name of the ancient Greek goddess of divine retribution, and “Greek gods, like Indian gods—even those thought of as ‘good’—are capable of imposing severe punishments on their subjects,” said exhibition co-curator Ian Berry, curator of the Tang Museum. “Sikander’s works often highlight this dark side of fate.”

Many of the works at first glance resemble ancient miniatures—but only at first glance. For instance, the 8-by-11-inch SpiNN (2003) depicts a spacious Mughal throne room rich with delicate architectural details (carvings, columns, geometric tiles) and crammed with nearly sixty gopis, female attendants of the Hindu god Krishna. Here, however, the exotic ladies dance attendance on a classically Western figure of Justice, seated on a throne and holding her scales aloft. Sikander’s work is “hardly about adhering to a closed heritage,” said the New York Times. “Instead, it seems to invite previously unrelated pictorial strains to mingle with humor, irony, and often eroticism.”

Born in the multicultural city of Lahore, Pakistan, Shahzia Sikander grew up equally conversant with international pop culture and her country’s heritage of miniature painting. Highly detailed and stylized, the art form originated as a courtly embellishment for royal manuscripts and reached its height during the Mughal empire (1526-1857), when Muslim rulers of Persia reigned over predominantly Hindu India. By Sikander’s day, cliché miniature images were “abundant as gift items everywhere, saturating the tourist market,” she recalls. “My initial feeling …was that it was kitsch, but I saw the potential of subversion.”

Shahzia Sikander studied miniature painting at the National College of Arts in Lahore, where classmates concentrating in contemporary Western art warned her that pursuing so highly stylized an art form would surely stifle her creativity. Inspired by the dedication of the school’s one instructor of miniature painting (his students were assigned to catch baby squirrels to acquire hairs fine enough for their handmade brushes), Sikander fully embraced “the rigors required of a miniaturist,” as Pakistan Newsline wrote. These included “the ritualized fabrication of brushes, the preparation of paper and of pigment from vegetable dyes as well as the meticulous brushwork required to achieve both the sharpness and softness of miniature painting techniques.” To Shahzia Sikander, the rigorous apprenticeship “never seemed restrictive. I wanted to learn the technique and skills,” and, she adds, “I liked that tension, remaining free of being prescribed while using a very prescribed art form.”

During graduate and post-graduate study at the Rhode Island School of Design and Houston’s Glassell School of Art, Shahzia Sikander discovered Southeast Asian painting styles that, given the highly charged political relationship between Pakistan and India, had previously been unavailable to her. Into her own Pakistani-based Mughal style, she began to incorporate the sensual designs and vibrant colors of the Indian Rajput school and the woman-centered format that first emerged in India’s Kangra valley in the 18th century. 

Sikander’s debut onto the New York art scene in 1997 quickly won attention and acclaim. Her work has appeared at the Drawing Center, the 1997 Whitney Biennial, Deitch Projects in SoHo, and the Museum of Modern Art’s important 2002 exhibition Drawing Now: Eight Propositions, among other venues. Her honors and awards include the honorary artist award from the Pakistan Ministry of Culture and National Council of the Arts. Shahzia Sikander lives and works in New York City.

The exhibition is organized by Tang curator Ian Berry and Aldrich associate curator Jessica Hough in collaboration with the artist.

The Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College
815 North Broadway, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866