Gowda

Sheela Gowda

This, deathless, 2014

a photograph of a sculptural collage–an Anthropocene portrait. Gowda is interested in the power that objects and forms carry in capturing aspects of reality, with its social and cultural narratives, that are otherwise unseen and unspeakable through other languages of representation and analysis. Materials for Gowda can be at the same time complex metaphors and ends in themselves, forgetful of their many cultural and spiritual investments attributed by human practice, but charged with a potential spiritual tension of their own, serving as relics of worlds unravelled and building blocks for other, new ones. These worlds are complex, often conflicted and equivocal. Her vocabulary is constantly discovered and invented in the things that surround her and that she respells into her works.

Artist Bio


Sheela Gowda (born 1957 in Bhadravati, India) is a contemporary artist based in Bangalore. She studied painting in Bangalore, Santiniketan, and London. Initially trained as a painter, she expanded into sculpture and installation using diverse materials like human hair, cow dung, incense, and kumkuma powder. Her work, known for its ‘process-oriented’ nature, often reflects the labor experiences of marginalized people in India and is associated with postminimalism and ritualistic themes. Influenced by K. G. Subramanyan and later Nalini Malani, her early works featured pensive girls in nature, evolving into expressionistic depictions of middle-class chaos. Gowda received the 2019 Maria Lassnig Prize.

Themes: human, agency, extinction

Category: Images

Giraud

Fabien Giraud

Every monument is a quarantine (Minamisoma – Fukushima District – Japan) 2012-2014

An image of a pile of irradiated earth, itself printed on photosensitive paper exposed to the radiation emitted by the Fukushima disaster. 

Artist Bio

Fabien Giraud, a French artist, is celebrated for his diverse artistic endeavors spanning film, installation, and research-based projects, often in collaboration with Raphaël Siboni. Their works, including “The Unmanned” and “The Everted Capital,” explore themes like automation and capitalism’s environmental impact. Giraud’s art has been prominently exhibited worldwide, with notable showcases at venues such as Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin and the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris.

Themes: ruins, waste, technofossils

Category: Images

Barry

Robert Barry

Project for a Monument to the Anthropocene

“The number of words will be determined by the size of the site, they must be in a perennial material such as metal or stone. The letters will be approximately 20/25 cm from the base to the top.”

Artist Bio

Robert Barry, born on March 9, 1936, in The Bronx, New York, is an American artist renowned for his contributions to Conceptual and Idea art. A graduate of Hunter College, where he later joined the faculty, Barry has been producing non-material works of art, installations, and performance art since 1967. He is known for pushing the boundaries of art by exploring invisible media to express the unknown or unperceived. Barry’s early works, such as “Carrier Wave,” “Radiation Piece,” and “Inert Gas Piece,” challenged conventional notions of art objects and perception. His piece for “Prospect ’69” exemplifies his focus on the ideas evoked rather than the physical object itself. Barry’s work has been featured in international events like the Paris Biennale (1971), Documenta in Kassel (1972), and the Venice Biennale (1972). Represented by Yvon Lambert Gallery in Paris and New York, his works are included in prestigious collections worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC.

Themes: hope, care, commoning

Category: Images