2023 Annual Student Art Exhibition Images

 

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Student Exhibition Year

2023

Description

"Chatti chor is a one-pot meal from the South Indian state of Kerala. Traditionally, it includes a large portion of rice, protein, and various vegetarian curries. In contemporary Kerala, the consumption of Western fast food as a symbol of status and modernization complicates the social value of this home-grown dish, still coveted by Kerala's aging population. The oversized chatti chor calls upon my paternal grandmother's relationship with cooking, as both her handiwork and her daily challenge as she confronts changes to her physical health."

Presented as part of the 2023 Annual Student Exhibit in the Berman Museum of Art at Ursinus College.

Artist Statement

A Language I Understand

I’ve often felt languageless. It’s funny because I grew up in a household that spoke two—English and the south Indian language, Malayalam. And yet, when asked, ‘tell me about yourself or “what’s on your mind,” neither language seems to suffice. Returning to my family’s ancestral home in Kerala, India, after nearly five years, I finally found my “language”; it has no words at all. The language I feel ownership of is a sensory one—the soupy, gooey curries my grandmother makes, five yards of artisan-crafted saree[1]fabric, and the colorful traditions of South India.

The exhibited body of work adopts this visual language to narrate the story of three generations of women in my family: my paternal grandmother, my mother, and myself. My alphabet is a collection of sarees from my late (maternal) grandmother, which I hesitantly “borrowed” from a suitcase full of her untouched belongings. I transform these garments through folding, ripping, and shredding techniques, reformatting the resulting fragments to create multi-dimensional works drawing on the iconic cuisine, fashion, and traditions of the coastal state of Kerala. These works become, therefore, “cut from the same cloth.” Their subject matter—a gluttonous dish called chatti (pot) chor (rice), the pursuit of a perfectly pleated saree, and an “onam pookalam[2]”—reveal the unfulfilled desires of the three women. The work featured in this exhibition depicts an imagined set of circumstances—my grandmother feels her family is well-fed, my mom achieves perfect saree pleats, I create community around my mixed cultural upbringing. The culmination of my studio practice at Ursinus is a singular, simple truth—despite temporal and geographic distance, I’m not so different from the maternal figures in my life after all.

[1] A saree is a traditional garment worn South Asian women, created from a long, rectangular fabric draped across the body.

[2] A ‘floral carpet’ or mural typically created in a circular form to celebrate a local, multi-day harvest festival, Onam.

Comments

Winner of the Richard Goldberg Award. Endowed by the late Dr. Richard Goldberg '58, his family, friends and colleagues, and awarded to the student exhibiting a sensitive interpretation of an artistic vision in the Annual Student Exhibition.

View the related short film: Kakka Kulichal Kokkakumo (Can a crow take a bath and become a crane?)

Rights Statement

Copyright of the underlying work is held by the artist. The digital image presented here is for educational purposes only and is not for commercial use.

Keywords

student art exhibit, 2023, packing peanuts, saree fabric, chicken wire, chatti chor, rice

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