148 x 98 cm
While most of Ashmina Ranjit’s work has been large-scale installations, often immersive and site-specific, the series Hair Warp – Travel Through Strand of Universe is a brilliant concentration of both her beliefs and aesthetic. In this series, human hair is treated as a sacred element that connects womanhood and as Ranjit states, “all phenomena beyond the sky”. In the painting, the sinuous hair strands morph constantly into different braids, swirls, and landscapes, emitting a mysterious force of life. Human hair is one of the most symbolically powerful body parts, and essentially every culture has some form of taboo in regards to when and who should hide it or reveal it, respectively. For Ranjit, women have been most subjected to these interdictions, so her representation of uncovered and unleashed strands of hair, both dancing frenetically and whipping away with confidence, is a sign of liberated female power. The graphite representation on traditional Nepali rice paper alludes to an art history with very different ideas about representing women, and as such, Ranjit manages to inscribe her plea for emancipation at the core of that tradition, shaking it up and bringing it up to contemporary relevance.
Ashmina Ranjit is Nepal’s leading figure in the conceptual and performance fields, as well as an emblematic voice in South Asian feminist art making and activism. From the time of the revolutionary civil war in the 1990s and early 2000s, Ranjit produced several legendary interventions/performances in public space (in the royal quarters at the heart of Kathmandu), widely remembered beyond the art circles, highlighting the ongoing violence, class struggle, and gender issues that were at the forefront of society’s upheavals at the time. Her impact has gone far beyond the art community and participated in national debates, marking a rare case in which performance, and art in general, manages to participate in public intellectual and political debates. After the establishment of a democratic republic in Nepal, Ranjit pursued her work with a particular focus on women’s issues across the country, on subjects such as menstrual discrimination and violence against women.
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Video: new posters on display | Blog | Royal Academy of Arts Poster Bar by José Video: new posters on display Read more Become a Friend Video: new posters on display Published 22 August 2023 Watch our team refresh our iconic Poster Bar for the first time since 2018, featuring 21 new posters from our past exhibitions...
Los Angeles museum repatriates Asante artefacts to Ghana Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Repatriation news Los Angeles museum repatriates Asante artefacts to Ghana The Fowler Museum at UCLA has repatriated seven artefacts that were taken during the Sagrenti War of 1874 Scarlet Cheng 5 February 2024 Share Unidentified member(s) of gold workers' guild (Asante peoples, Kumasi, Ghana), Royal necklace (gorget) or stool ornament; Before 1874; gold Fowler Museum at UCLA, Gift of the Wellcome Trust Seven handcrafted Asante objects have just travelled halfway around the globe to be returned, 150 years later, to the family of their original owners in Kumasi, Ghana...