Being Singular Plural
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Being Singular Plural offers visitors the
unique opportunity to encounter recent
and new film, video, and sound-based
works by seven of the most innovative
and visionary contemporary artists, filmmakers,
and media practitioners living and
working in India today: Shumona Goel,
Shai Heredia, Sonal Jain, Vikram Joglekar,
Amar Kanwar, Mriganka Madhukaillya,
and Kabir Mohanty. The works included
in this presentation reveal the quiet principles
of practice, process, and perception,
while being grounded in a vital social
consciousness. This timely and discourse-defining
exhibition is oriented toward
coproducing new work, facilitating research,
and assembling a community of
practitioners.
Following the Deutsche Guggenheim
iteration of this exhibition-in-progress in
Berlin, the New York presentation consists of
seven context-specific projects, a majority of which have been specially conceived
of or coproduced for this occasion. They
are dispersed across three of the museum’s
Annex Level galleries as well as in the New
Media Theater and along the museum’s
exterior. Philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy’s
notion of “being singular plural” provides
the exhibition’s structural framework.
Recognizing the interconnectedness of
all beings, the selected films, videos, and
interactive sound installations invite visitors
to reassess conventional boundaries
between such categories as fiction and
non-fiction, art and cinema, the still and
moving image, documentation and poetry,
and objectivity and subjectivity. By
manipulating sound, image, and text
in experimental ways, these practitioners
shift viewers’ positions from passive
spectatorship to active participation—to
places where the “we” of “being together”
is in the immediate here and now.
Desire Machine Collective (Sonal Jain
and Mriganka Madhukaillya), whose name
derives from the philosophy of Gilles
Deleuze and Félix Guattari, seeks to
redirect attention toward careful looking,
watching, and listening. The collective
has installed, on the exterior of the
museum, an interactive, round-the-clock
public artwork Trespassers Will (Not) Be
Prosecuted (2012), inspired by sounds collected
in a sacred forest in northeastern
India. The exhibition also includes two
moving-image works on Annex Level 5: Residue (2011), a 35 mm film shot in an
abandoned power plant in the outskirts of
Guwahati, Assam, and Nishan (2007– ),
a four-channel video installation akin to
a miniature painting in its microcosmic rumination of time and space, as experienced
in a derelict apartment in Srinagar, Kashmir.
Shumona Goel’s films investigate the
stories of people who often go unheard
or events that go unwitnessed. For Being
Singular Plural, she and codirector Shai
Heredia present, in the New Media
Theater, I am micro (2011), a 35 mm black-and-white film that celebrates small-scale
independent filmmaking and collaboration
as it reveals the inner-workings of
filmmaking and exposes the conditions
of creativity (the filmmakers had to unexpectedly
shift production from 16 mm
to 35 mm owing to the closure of several
film labs internationally, a fate made public
through the work of artist Tacita Dean).
Amar Kanwar’s complex films and videos
are fragmented narratives of violence,
displacement, and resistance told through
lyrical images and texts, which elicit a compassionate
response. Kanwar’s 19-channel
video installation on Annex Level 2, The
Torn First Pages (2004–08) documents
the ongoing struggle for democracy in
Burma as it envelops viewers in multiple
spatial, emotional, and temporal zones.
The presentation also includes a small
reading area, where visitors can access a
“living archive” of news articles on Burma,
updated on a regular basis throughout
the run of the exhibition. These articles
remind us of the continuing historical
reverberations of these stories and events.
Kabir Mohanty also encourages alternative
visual and auditory experiences.
Mohanty’s approach stems from a filmmaker’s
sensibility but moves beyond this
framework to develop an innovative vision
for video. On Annex Level 7 he screens
the recently completed epic video Song
for an ancient land (2003–12) over four
hours, while stressing the haptic and the
physicality of video. Mohanty’s sensitive
sound installation nearby, In Memory
(2009/12), made in collaboration with
sound designer and engineer Vikram
Joglekar, invites visitors to interact with a
Foley pit that mixes live sounds with prerecorded
tracks. The installation overall
plays with ideas of distance and proximity,
interiority and exteriority, and singularity
and communality, traveling to the heart of
Nancy’s philosophy.
T. J. Demos, in reference to the first iteration
of this exhibition, wrote: “By reorganizing
aesthetic experience, these artworks
compel us to transition from recognizing
the self’s fundamental social being to considering
its ethico-political imperatives.”
—Sandhini Poddar,
Associate Curator, Asian Art
This exhibition is made possible by
The Leadership Committee for Being Singular Plural is gratefully acknowledged.
Installation view: Being Singular Plural, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, March 2–June 6, 2012. Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York





