Coverbild Reena Saini Kallat
A page from a publication featuring two columns of text on a white background. The left column is in German with the heading Vorwort und Dank. The right column is the English translation with the heading Foreword and Acknowledgments. Both texts discuss an exhibition at the Kunstmuseum Thun.
A two-page spread from a book displaying two mixed-media artworks from the series Leaking Lines (River Drawings). On the left, Jordan River features a colored drawing of the river in a landscape, juxtaposed with a white thread net tracing the river's path. On the right, Shatt al-Arab River shows a drawing of the river by a city, also juxtaposed with a thread net map. Both artworks include embroidered lines and handwritten text.
A page from a publication displays an artwork on the right side. The artwork is a textured drawing of dark blue, rippling water, divided into four rectangular panels like a windowpane. A small, stylized flag with light blue wavy lines is collaged onto the top two panels. The caption reads, Deep Rivers Run Quiet, 2020 (Detail).
A composite image titled Hyphenated Lives, showing five detailed artworks. Top left is a drawing of a coin with a poppy. Top right is a colored drawing of a deer, its front half an exposed skeleton, standing on barbed wire. Bottom left shows a tree, half with leaves and half bare, with barbed wire at its base. In the center is a deer's outline in white dots on a black background, labeled threatened/vulnerable. Bottom right is a drawing of a coin featuring a Crested Caracara bird.
A close-up of a mixed-media sculpture of human lungs and a trachea made from colorful coiled wires. The brown trachea and bronchi connect to a spiky, teal left lung and a teal right lung decorated with pink rosettes. The piece is adorned with small circuit boards and trailing wires, including strands of barbed wire, blending organic and technological elements against a plain white background.
A two-page spread from a publication with text in two columns. The left column is in German, and the right column is the English translation. The text is titled Bodies of Water in Motion: Rivers and Manmade Landscapes and discusses an art exhibition by Helen Hirsch, also featuring a poem by Rabindranath Tagore in both languages.
An installation view of a large world map made from colorful woven material on a white gallery wall. A person in a blue jacket stands looking at the map. Multicolored threads crisscross the globe, connecting various points, and then drop down to the parquet floor, ending in scattered balls of yarn.
A two-page spread from a publication with text in German and English. In the center are two black and white line drawings by artist Reena Saini Kallat, titled Siamese Trees. Each drawing shows a pair of human lungs where the internal bronchial structures are depicted as different types of trees and branches, symbolizing the connection between human respiration and the planet's forests.
A page from a book or catalog displaying German text on the left and two artworks on the right. The artworks, titled Ruled Paper (Red, Blue, White), 2014-2022, are on white paper made to look like notebook pages. The typical blue and red lines are created with actual electrical wires that follow the ruled pattern before diverging to form abstract, map-like shapes in the center. Within these shapes, the wires are twisted into small, sharp, barbed forms.
An installation view of two artworks on a white gallery wall. On the left, a large vertical frame contains an artwork resembling an eye chart, but with black silhouettes of different countries that decrease in size. On the right, many smaller framed artworks are arranged in a large triangular formation.
A four-page spread of the artwork Pattern Recognition, 2022. Each page is a mixed-media collage of photographs, line drawings, and handwritten notes documenting conflict and displacement in Palestine, Yemen, Syria, and Afghanistan. The images show a family fleeing in a truck, a woman facing soldiers, blurred passport photos, and border scenes.
A diptych showing the sculpture Chorus I, 2015-2019. The left image displays the full sculpture, which features several large, grey, horn-like funnels on a platform with thin metal legs. The right image shows a man standing inside the sculpture's frame, peering over the platform and giving a sense of scale.
A two-panel image of a textile art installation. The right side shows a gallery with several long, vertical banners of blue tie-dyed fabric hanging from the ceiling to the floor. The left side is a close-up of one banner, showing the Preamble to the Constitution of India rendered in white embroidered text and golden, Braille-like dots.
A two-page spread displaying several artworks from a series called Leaking Lines. On the left, four framed pieces are arranged in a grid. Two are graphite drawings of a border fence and soldiers in a trench. Below are two intricate, white papercut sculptures creating net-like maps of the Radcliffe Line and Curzon Line. On the right is a larger, unframed graphite drawing of soldiers in a trench on tan paper, next to a block of handwritten text.
Reena Saini Kallat
Deep Rivers Run Quiet
€ 30.00

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By (artist): Reena Saini Kallat
Edited by: Helen Hirsch
July 2023, 120 Pages, 100 Photos
Paperback Swiss Binding
234mm x 284mm
ISBN: 978-3-7757-5487-3

HATJE CANTZ VERLAG
Mommsenstr. 27
10629 Berlin
Germany
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| Transboundary - Exposing the Porosity of the Concept of National Borders
Reena Saini Kallat's practice evolves around the tension between the concept of barriers in a world fundamentally shaped by mobility and interaction. Exploring the divisive narratives around national and geopolitical borders and their impact on identity and self-image for people and their immediate environment, she is also concerned with social and psychological barriers. That barriers give way, and can be subverted, is an idea that is pronounced in Kallat's work using electric cables twisted to resemble barbed wire. She uses the paradox of the existence of technology for free flow of information and restriction on movement. In order to expose the ambiguity of national narratives, the figure of the hybrid has come to hold symbolic potential in her practice, as a truant against dividing lines: Kallat creates hybrids of animals and plants that are strongly associated with national identity, only to show that nature defies the violent cleaving through land and nature, and uses the motif of the river, which is often both, border and lifeline to both sides. Kallat's work reveals the idea of isolation as an illusion, and instead suggests to embrace a pluralism of cultures.

REENA SAINI KALLAT (*1973, Delhi) is one of the most acclaimed contemporary artists from India. Having studied painting in Mumbai, where she also lives today, her practice spans drawing, sculpture and installation, photography and video. Her interest in political and social borders resonates with the continuing aftershocks of the Partition in India, which her paternal family experienced. Her work is widely exhibited at international institutions including the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and Tate Modern, among many others.
EXHIBITION
Kunstmuseum Thun
June 10 - September 3, 2023
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