Madi Acharya-Baskerville
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 Wallpaper, digatal print derived from drawings of collected objects on silverbirch bark “/>
Silverbeach, intallation view, National Museum of Nairobi, Kenya Wallpaper, digatal print derived from drawings of collected objects on silverbirch bark
- Silverbeach, intallation view, National Museum of Nairobi, Kenya
Wallpaper, digatal print derived from drawings of collected objects on silverbirch bark
- Silverbeach, detail
Wallpaper, digital print
- Worship
Found shoes, metallic wire, wooden grid
- Bad things happened, good things were taken away
Found doll parts, wood, rubber
- Woven, Installation view, Frauenmuseum, Bonn, Germany
Found wood, oil paint
- When are we going home?
Found fishing nets, plastic, rubber and gold wire
- Entrapment, La Tour de Crest, Drome, France
Site-specific work constructed with discarded plastic rings and metallic wire.
- Temple, installation view, La Tour de Crest, Drome, France
Acrylic paint on found wood, a response to hundreds of years of graffiti on the surrounding walls
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My work explores the narrative behind found or discarded objects. These objects can be shards of wood, pieces of plastic, leather shoes, broken toys. What they have in common is a fragmented history. They were once part of a culture, one which has now discarded them, but they remain part of our environment. There is an analogy between discarded objects and the dislocation that individuals may feel when they are exiled from their place of origin. Working with a variety of cultural artefacts, the theme of identity provides the connection. Collecting can be a way of exploring identity as well as being a way of addressing past loss and future uncertainty. Collecting introduces meaning, order, boundaries, coherence and reason into what is essentially disparate, confused and threatening. The selection of partcular objects provides a key to exploring one’s inner world by mirroring and self evaluation, ‘you are what you keep’. I create alternative stories in relation to the artefacts I find. I want to understand their importance for me. In doing so I am often drawn to my own native Indian culture, trying to interpret my present surroundings with distant, yet significant childhood experiences in mind.
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Web Links
Madi Acharya-Baskerville Magdalen Road Studios Axisweb
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