Exhibition

Spandita Malik - Vadhu: The Embroidered Bride

13 Oct 2021 – 10 Nov 2021

Regular hours

Wednesday
12:00 – 18:00
Thursday
12:00 – 18:00
Friday
12:00 – 18:00
Saturday
12:00 – 18:00
Tuesday
12:00 – 18:00

Save Event: Spandita Malik - Vadhu: The Embroidered Bride

I've seen this

People who have saved this event:

close

A New York-based artist from Chandigarh, India, Malik often addresses women’s rights and gendered violence through her lens-based interdisciplinary practice.

About

The works in Vadhu: The Embroidered Bride use wedding portraits as a departure point for exploring the nuanced relationship between time, gender, and memory. On view from October 13 to November 10, 2021, the exhibition is composed of embroidered photographic portraits created in collaboration with women in India and drawn from the artist’s ongoing project, Nā́rī

“I’m thrilled to present Vadhu: The Embroidered Bride as a culmination of my residency at Baxter St,” said Spandita Malik. “I’ve long struggled with looking at photography from India through a colonized perspective, and with the idea of representation. This project is a way to bridge the gap between photographer and subject, to share the power of the image with one another.”

In Sanskrit, nā́rī refers to a woman, wife, female, or an object regarded as feminine, but can also mean “sacrifice.” Born out of Malik’s interest in small communities in India where women use fabric and embroidery as a way to gain financial freedom, the Nā́rī series features photographs embroidered by the women depicted in them. At the beginning of the series, the artist traveled to three places known for their distinct styles of embroidery: Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh (chikankari embroidery on mulmul or voile); Jaipur, Rajasthan (gota-patti or zardozi embroidery on khadi); and Chamkaur Sahib, Punjab (phulkari silk thread embroidery on khaddar or cotton fabric). Malik visited women confined to their homes by husbands, fathers, or their own concerns about their safety in the public sphere and interviewed them about harsh social and economic realities, including domestic and sexual violence. She photographed them in their homes, using the domestic settings as both “safe spaces” in which to share stories and intimate backdrops for the portraits. Malik then printed the photographs on traditional regional textiles and invited each woman to embroider them using their local, familial, and personal techniques; the artist provided no specific instructions or guidelines, instead giving her collaborators creative freedom and control over their images.

When the COVID-19 pandemic left Malik unable to travel to India, the artist continued working with her collaborators virtually, staying in close contact through WhatsApp and phone calls. In May 2021, as the pandemic was raging in India, Malik expanded her individual communications into a virtual community via a WhatsApp group, where women could share their stories and help one another cope with the political violence, nationalist agendas, institutional discrimination, and overwhelming grief of their ever-changing lives. This community inspired the work included in Vadhu: The Embroidered Bride. 

While they live in different regions of India, Malik’s collaborators came together around shared experiences: the cultural heritage and storytelling embedded in embroidery, the expectations and realities of marriage, the quest for financial independence. In their backyards, on WhatsApp, and via international mail, the collaborators shared personal photographs—including marriage portraits and images of younger versions of themselves—with Malik and each other. The photographs document both celebratory times and unhappy memories; often, they mark a moment when their subject’s life changed. As in the prior works in the series, Malik printed the images on fabric and returned them to the women to embellish. 

By embroidering portraits of the past, Malik’s collaborators recall, recollect, remember, and reclaim their narrative; the language of embroidery reshapes the memory of the photograph. At the same time, the project pushes the boundaries between what has historically been considered handicraft or fine art and re-contextualizes women’s work in India. Spandita Malik is grateful for the collaboration and friendship of the twenty-two participants in this project, whose embroidered portraits are on view in this exhibition.

What to expect? Toggle

Exhibiting artistsToggle

Spandita Malik

Comments

Have you been to this event? Share your insights and give it a review below.