1 00:00:07,748 --> 00:00:12,498 [Shahzia Sikander: "The Last Post"] 2 00:00:12,798 --> 00:00:16,815 [layered sounds of music samples, static, and distortion] 3 00:00:31,748 --> 00:00:39,031 I tend to look into cultural and political boundaries 4 00:00:39,547 --> 00:00:43,832 and explore, you know, ideas in those boundaries. 5 00:00:43,832 --> 00:00:47,398 Sometimes it's more obvious, sometimes it's less. 6 00:00:47,398 --> 00:00:55,782 Sometimes it's more abstract, and sometimes it's far more illustrative of a political idea or thought. 7 00:00:59,215 --> 00:01:06,315 "The Last Post" plays on the sort of oscillating colonial trade relations 8 00:01:06,315 --> 00:01:12,581 between China and the East India Company at that time, over opium. 9 00:01:14,348 --> 00:01:21,732 I started looking at the East India Company and at the company man, 10 00:01:21,732 --> 00:01:25,999 became like the protagonist who travels throughout India, 11 00:01:25,999 --> 00:01:29,664 and then ventures into China. 12 00:01:30,315 --> 00:01:39,498 In this work, it is also referring to the end of the Anglo-Saxon hegemony over China, 13 00:01:39,514 --> 00:01:42,515 and there is a moment in the animation 14 00:01:42,515 --> 00:01:50,264 where the symbolic figure of the East India Company man sort of explodes. 15 00:01:50,515 --> 00:01:53,382 [distorted explosion sound plays] 16 00:02:02,832 --> 00:02:09,163 There are moments, I think, in the animation that embody some of these concepts, 17 00:02:09,332 --> 00:02:16,347 but it's not necessarily a linear narrative about this whole opium trade. 18 00:02:23,547 --> 00:02:28,265 Animations were quite a natural outcome to my process 19 00:02:28,265 --> 00:02:33,481 because I work in drawing primarily, and a lot of the drawings 20 00:02:33,481 --> 00:02:41,715 play with the idea of narrative, and movement was just a natural outcome. 21 00:02:41,715 --> 00:02:49,232 A lot of the murals that I did, a lot of the wall installations, were fairly large, and built in layers, 22 00:02:49,448 --> 00:02:55,265 and that also was very similar to how a lot of the animation work was constructed, 23 00:02:55,348 --> 00:02:58,665 which was in Photoshop, in layers. 24 00:03:03,869 --> 00:03:07,443 [woman singing softly] 25 00:03:19,715 --> 00:03:25,181 So I'm interested in taking a form, breaking it apart, and then rebuilding it. 26 00:03:28,232 --> 00:03:30,832 It is about transformation for me, 27 00:03:30,832 --> 00:03:38,098 whether it is the transformation of the image or a mark or a symbol. 28 00:03:38,682 --> 00:03:43,248 Or if it's the transformation of a genre or transformation of a medium. 29 00:03:43,648 --> 00:03:52,965 But it is a very core notion that I think stabilizes my practice.