‘Ranu Mukherjee: Telling Fortunes’ is presented by SJMA in conjunction with the 2012 ZERO1 Biennial: Seeking Silicon Valley. Here’s a quick look at the artist and the show as elaborated in a press release:
- “We tend to think of nomads as age-old tribes who wandered the worlds’ deserts and plains in search of food, water, resources, or trade. But who are the nomads of the 21st century—e.g. migrant laborers, expatriates, transnationals, global high-tech virtuosos, international students, refugees, those who commute and relocate for work?
- Ranu Mukherjee is fascinated by the idea of the contemporary nomad and the experience of repeated relocation that is common for so many of us today. What better place than Silicon Valley—with its rich history of immigration, itinerant workers, dot-com booms and busts, and outsourcing—to explore this updated notion of the nomad.
- Memory, places, and possessions all contribute to our mutable sense of a “home” as something that you can take with you. For the ongoing project that she calls the “nomadic archive,” she collects images that represent people’s very personal experiences of moving or up-rootedness. The artist then elegantly renders the images in ink and paint on paper. The images contributed range from an airplane cabin to Rajasthani shoes (traditional Indian shoes).
- For ‘Telling Fortunes’, a new show at San Jose Museum of Art, she has gathered diverse examples of contemporary nomadism in Silicon Valley – for example the bees at Happy Hollow Park and Zoo, San Jose; immigrants from Bangladesh and Pakistan; and the Buddhist temples followers in the area. Ranu Mukherjee wants her art to reflect the idea that ‘images are collectively made’.
- For her, such creativity—a coming-together of the experiences of a community—generates positive energy and auspiciousness. Via painting, digital animation, and photography, Mukherjee transforms this crowd-sourced material into brilliantly colorful films. The result is a dazzling mix of fact and fantasy; digital and analog; and the spiritual and material.
- Visitors can be a part of the exhibition (the third installment of SJMA’s experimental series, “Beta Space”) by contributing material to Mukherjee’s “nomadic archive.” They can send their reflections, experiences, or ideas of the nomadic (in image or story-form) to ranu.nomad@gmail.com or visit www.ranumukherjee.com.
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