Thursday, July 23, 2015

BEHIND THE BIENNALE: "MY EAST IS YOUR WEST"



This year, India and Pakistan are represented at the Venice Biennale for the first time. In an expression of solidarity, the two countries, often in conflict, installed projects under a single title, “My East is Your West,” and the same roof, Venice’s 17th-century Palazzo Benzon.

Here, we pass through the palazzo’s velvet-covered rooms to discover projects from Shilpa Gupta of India and Rashid Rana of Pakistan. Both exhibitions surface deep-seated issues of border geography, class struggle, and identity in a region mired in political controversy. Gupta’s focus is an extensive researched-based exploration of the border fence that separates India and Bangladesh.

In an ongoing performance, an actor writes on a long, scroll-like cloth that accumulates in a towering pile – its length represents a tiny fraction of the 3,400 kilometer barrier between the two countries. Rana offers a live video feed that connects a room in the palazzo to a small structure in Pakistan. Lahore locals and visitors to the Venice Biennale interact, erasing geographic boundaries and highlighting themes of globalization.