Barbican Centre, Silk Street, EC2Y 8DS, London, United Kingdom
Open: Sat-Wed 10am-6pm, Thu-Fri 10am-8pm
Sat 5 Oct 2024 to Sun 5 Jan 2025
Barbican Centre, Silk Street, EC2Y 8DS The Imaginary Institution of India: Art 1975-1998
Sat-Wed 10am-6pm, Thu-Fri 10am-8pm
£20 / £14 concessions
Early bird (14 Aug - 5 Oct), £16 / £14 concessions
Booking
A landmark group exhibition of art made in response to India’s changing cultural-political landscape during pivotal years.
Featuring artwork by over 30 Indian artists, this major exhibition is bookended by two transformative events in India’s history: Indira Gandhi’s declaration of a state of emergency in 1975 and the Pokhran nuclear tests in 1998. The fraught period between these years was marked by social upheaval, economic collapse, and rapid urbanisation.
Within this turbulence, ordinary life continued, and artists made work that distilled historically significant episodes as well as intimate moments and shared experiences. Across a range of media, the vivid, urgent works on show – about friendship, love, desire, family, religion, violence, caste, community, protest – are deeply personal documents from a period of tremendous change.
This is the first institutional exhibition to cover these definitive years, with many works never before seen in the UK.
Participating artists
Pablo Bartholomew, Jyoti Bhatt, Rameshwar Broota, Sheba Chhachhi, Sheela Gowda, Sunil Gupta, Safdar Hashmi, M.F. Husain, Rummana Hussain, Jitish Kallat, Bhupen Khakhar, K.P Krishnakumar, Nalini Malani, Tyeb Mehta, Meera Mukherjee, Madhvi Parekh, Navjot Altaf, Gieve Patel, Sudhir Patwardhan, C.K.Rajan, N. N. Rimzon, Savi Sawarkar, Himmat Shah, Gulammohammed Sheikh, Nilima Sheikh, Arpita Singh, Jangarh Singh Shyam, Vivan Sundaram, J. Swaminathan.