skip navigation links JCCC Home
Future Students Current Students Faculty & Staff Continuing Education Friends & Visitors Tracks
Image of sky, and shadowed tree limbs and leaves with two heads in silhouette and the text Learning Comes First at JCCC.
‘Distant Nearness’ Opens at Nerman Museum
Divider

    

Johnson County Community College
Press Release

College Information and Publications
913-469-8500
Julie Haas, Director, ext. 3120
Peggy Graham, Writer, ext. 3425
Tyler Cundith, Sports Information Director, ext. 3122


3/07/08
Story by Bruce Hartman

‘Distant Nearness’ Opens at Nerman Museum

Banerjee_Rina.jpg
Banerjee_Rina.jpg (423 KB)
Rina Banerjee

Rina Banerjee, With Moonshine and Money She Whistled Her Siren's Plea (detail), 2007 acrylic, ink and collage on paper, 27.75 x 19.75", courtesy the artist, NY

Gupta_Subodh.jpg
Gupta_Subodh.jpg (514 KB)
Subodh Gupta

Subodh Gupta, Curry (detail), 2003, stainless steel, 96 x 330 x 26", collection Larry Warsh, NY
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. – The Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art at Johnson County Community College opens a new exhibition – Distant Nearness – featuring the work of Rina Banerjee, Subodh Gupta and Bharti Kher, three contemporary artists from India. The exhibit will open from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday, March 14, and will be on view through May 25. A lecture by Banerjee will begin at 7 p.m. in the museum’s
Hudson Auditorium. Both reception and lecture are free and open to the public.

An immense and populous land, India’s cultural impact is being felt globally, through film, music, literature and visual arts that reach far outside the country’s borders, and, more directly, through a long and successful emigration policy to Great Britain, Canada, Australia, South Africa and the United States.

Banerjee’s A World at a Loss, 2007, is a fantastical floor-to-ceiling accumulation that brings together diverse objects like a glass lantern, a globe, black sand, wooden altar, artificial grass, 24 pink fans and an ostrich egg. The range of materials Banerjee uses to create her absurd forms mixes antique and modern, organic and artificial, native and foreign.

Born (1963) in Calcutta, India, yet living most of her life in London and New York, her works express a symbiosis of several cultures and articulate conflicts associated with migration. Beneath her exuberant colors and flowing, organic forms, Banerjee creates a sinister and entangled web of images, addressing themes of colonialization, exploitation, commercialization and modern globalization. As an artist split between two worlds, she questions both Anglo-Saxon and Indian ways of life.  Banerjee’s work was included in the prestigious Whitney Biennial in 2000 at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

Gupta, who was born (1964) in Khagaul (Bihar), India, and currently lives in Gurgaon (New Delhi), India, focuses upon the frisson between traditional rural life in India and the transformative pressures of globalization. Gupta renders baggage carriers (ubiquitous to airports) in bronze, as monuments to the migratory global economy in which thousands of Indian workers participate every day. Traveling abroad, often to the Gulf States, where they live in cramped quarters, these workers return home after months of labor, their possessions bound in satchels or cardboard boxes.

In contrast to these symbols of India’s presence in the world economy, Gupta employs common stainless steel tableware in many of his sculptures – an ode to kitchen utensils fundamental to most of India’s population.  As Gupta states:
    I am particularly fond of kitchens. When I was a child, I considered it a place of worship, a kind of temple. For me, it is a place full of spirituality. But of course, it is also a symbol of daily life, as 90 percent of Indians use kitchen utensils made of stainless steel.

Gupta has been included in a growing number of international exhibitions from the Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art to the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago.

Kher, born (1969) in London and living in Gurgaon (New Delhi), India, since the early 1990s, frequently employs bindi as a central motif in her work. Derived from bindu, the Sanskrit word for a dot or a point, the bindi is a forehead decoration.  Conceptually, Kher was struck by the synchronized, pan-Indian choreography by which millions of women prepare for their day with the same gesture, that of applying the bindi to their foreheads. She also saw, through eyes attuned to Op-Art, Pop Art, and Minimalism, that differential arrays of bindis could imbue abstraction with social content.

Animals, a recurring theme in Kher’s sculpture, serve as a metaphor for transformation and as warnings of our growing disconnect with nature. Solarium Series, 2007, is a tree of hallucinations, its branches bearing 500 fruits – and each fruit is a head, either human, gnomish, angelic, animal or that of a chimera.

Distant Nearness will be the first American museum exhibition for Kher.

The Nerman Museum is open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Friday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday noon to 5 p.m. The museum is closed Mondays and all JCCC holidays. Admission and parking are always free at the Nerman Museum. For more information, contact the Nerman Museum at 913-469-3000.

###