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Shahzia Sikander: Melting Boundaries | Art21 "Extended Play”

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    (peaceful music)
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    (gentle music)
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    As a female, my entire life,
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    I've been aware of patriarchal spaces
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    and how erasure is enacted
    on women in the civic space,
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    the space of law, the space of art.
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    You have to open up these
    spaces to represent all of us.
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    (gentle music)
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    For almost three decades, I have worked
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    in the Indian and Persian
    manuscript traditions.
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    Having grown up in Pakistan,
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    I didn't have access to a
    lot of the original artwork.
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    Because of colonial history,
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    the majority of this work has
    been torn and dismembered,
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    and ended up in Western institutions.
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    Erasure. Lack of visibility.
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    These things are at the core
    of my relationship with art.
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    (gentle music)
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    Moving between animation,
    murals, mosaic, and sculpture,
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    I often think of my practice
    as an anti-monument,
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    because it engages the past,
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    but it doesn't glorify the past.
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    (gentle music)
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    I was really inspired by public artwork
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    and what monuments could stand for.
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    The conflicts that are there
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    because people have
    competing visions of history.
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    When Madison Square Park
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    asked me to put a proposal together,
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    I thought I would love to explore the art
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    in the courthouse overlooking the park,
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    and then tie it into the
    project with the park.
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    (gentle music)
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    Works that are here,
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    which, of course, are part of a history,
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    it's a moment in time
    captured for what it is.
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    (gentle music)
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    On the roof of the courthouse
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    are nine statues of ancient
    male lawgivers or philosophers.
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    There's Manu, the author of Hindu laws,
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    and then there's King Louis IV of France.
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    However, the space of the women
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    is in this allegorical space,
    such as the Lady Justice.
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    (gentle music)
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    Why couldn't there be another
    iteration of the feminine,
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    standing on its own sort of
    truth as an equal participant?
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    - Like, if you were
    there, if you're walking,
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    you could see both.
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    I decided to make two sculptures.
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    One is inside the park.
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    One is on the roof of the courthouse.
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    (birds chirping)
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    So, this is one of the early sketches.
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    (gentle music)
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    A signature image in my work
    has been this feminine body,
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    kind of a quick gesture,
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    often emerging out of
    just gouache on paper.
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    So it's this sort of very
    fluid notion of the body,
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    and it has a multiplicity to it.
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    It felt very true to me to start there.
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    What is it? Is it the legs?
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    - Parts of it.
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    The legs.
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    When they're sort of looping back in,
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    for me, that suggests a
    form that is self-rooted.
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    (crew member indistinctly speaking)
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    - Okay.
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    The feminine can carry its
    roots wherever it goes.
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    It can choose to go wherever it wants.
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    You don't need to have roots
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    into one specific space or time,
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    nation or culture.
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    (gentle music)
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    The suggestion of horns
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    could be a unification through braids.
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    It has a very clear link to
    an older painting of mine,
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    talking more about the courage,
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    fluidity, and resilience of the feminine.
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    No one person on a plinth
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    can represent multiple perspectives,
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    so it had to be more allegorical,
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    like a feminine collective
    space that can keep growing.
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    (gentle music)
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    In the sculpture on the rooftop,
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    she has the seat of the lotus.
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    It is really symbolic of
    humility and clarity and wisdom.
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    My big concern was how to
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    go in the direction of sculpture,
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    but keep it as close to my animations
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    and have as much movement in the work.
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    You can see how light is
    coming through the ceiling.
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    It's very subtle, but it's changing.
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    Just that itself implies movement.
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    I wanted to play off of the
    ceiling in the courthouse,
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    so the skirt allows it to show
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    the glass ceiling that the
    feminine can break through.
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    Sort of floating here.
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    (Shahzia chuckles)
    (gentle music)
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    Then I can mimic this
    gorgeous stained glass
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    with actual glass mosaic on the sculpture.
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    - So, see, like this.
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    - Oh, that color is really-
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    - [Mosaic Artist] Yeah,
    I have a lot of this.
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    - [Shahzia] Clean and bright.
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    - [Mosaic Artist] Yes.
    It's really a nice color.
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    - [Shahzia] Yeah. This
    will work really well.
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    - [Mosaic Artist] It's beautiful.
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    - [Shahzia] This can
    be used in more amount.
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    - [Mosaic Artist] Yep.
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    When I was sketching the skirt,
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    I started to play with the word
    "havah" on the skirt itself.
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    In my spoken Urdu, "havah" would mean air,
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    the breath's relationship to life.
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    Also, "havah" can imply Eve.
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    (mosaic artist indistinctly murmurs)
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    - Let's break this.
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    - [Mosaic Artist] Okay.
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    [Shahzia] Eve could be
    considered the first lawbreaker.
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    (glass clatters)
    (gentle music)
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    Female are often the markers
    when boundaries are melting.
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    - The significant of it
    being just up there is huge!
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    - Symbolically-
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    - Yes!
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    - It's a big intervention.
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    - Yes.
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    (speakers indistinctly talking)
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    Since the work has been up,
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    there's been a lot of commentary
    on abortion and women.
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    The context in this particular project
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    is allowing the work to have meanings
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    that it would not carry otherwise.
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    It animates people's politics
    and fraught relationships.
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    I thrive on hearing what happens over time
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    to a project and to a dialogue.
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    - Women artists.
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    How else does an artist center
    their sense of creativity?
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    (gentle music)
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    Whenever we create art and
    put something in the world,
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    I believe it just pushes the envelope of
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    who gets to be represented
    a little further.
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    These things are really integral to
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    how art can then negotiate a
    space for a future generation.
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    (gentle music)
Title:
Shahzia Sikander: Melting Boundaries | Art21 "Extended Play”
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Extended Play" series
Duration:
09:35

English subtitles

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