Art Pritika Chowdhry’s ‘anti-memorials’ illustrate what is excluded from collective memories of Partition
The Jallianwala Bagh Massacre is one of the most significant events in the hory of the sub-continent. Many people, including women and children, lost their lives on April 13, 1919, the day of Baisakhi when General Reginald Edward Dy ordered soldiers to open fire on the gathering — camping in Jallianwala Bagh’s open ground — without any warning. “Yet, there are not many records of the event from the women’s perspectives,” expressed Pritika Chowdhry, an Indian art, who is paying homage to women’s narratives of traumatic events like the Jallianwala Bagh, India’s Partition through her exhition — Broken Column: The Monuments of Forgetting, on display at Women Made Gallery in United States’ Chicago.
Ahead of April 13, 2022 — the 102nd anniversary of Jallianwala Bagh Massacre, and India’s 76th Independence Day — Chowdhry emphasised that her goal is not to “speak for the women” but let her experiential art installations “invite viewers to bear witness, holding space for mourning, remembrance, and repair”.
“During Partition in 1947, India was split along religious lines, and 20 million people were displaced: Hindus traversed the border to India and Muslims to Pakan. Two million people died in violent Partition riots and, less-known, over 3,00,000 Muslim, Sikh, Bengali, and Hindu women were raped. Likewise, women were the erased victims in the Partition of Pakan when Bangladesh was formed in 1971. So, when a memory is unbearable, how do you memorialise it?” stressed the art who has a Masters in Fine Arts (MFA) in Studio Art and an Masters in Arts (MA) in Visual Culture and Gender Studies from UW-Madison, and has taught at Macalester College and College of Visual Arts in St Paul, Minnesota, United States.
As part of the exhibition, the art has created latex casts of the Jallianwallan Bagh memorial in Punjab, India; the Minar-e-Pakan memorial in Lahore, Pakan; and the Martyred Intellectuals monument in Rayer Bazar, Dhaka, Bangladesh (Source: PR Handout)
As part of the exhibition, Chowdhry has created latex casts of the Jallianwallan Bagh memorial in Punjab, India; the Minar-e-Pakan memorial in Lahore, Pakan; and the Martyred Intellectuals monument in Rayer Bazar, Dhaka, Bangladesh. “I bring these three monuments together to illustrate what is excluded in the formation of collective memories about the Partition of India,” she said, adding that women’s experiences are “often elided from national narratives because their experiences run counter to the heroic narratives that the nation-state would prefer to commemorate and perpetuate about itself”.
Citing that in the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971, nearly 2,00,000 – 4,00,000 women were raped, she told that women’s experiences of sexual violence, honour killings, honour suicides, and ostracisation from their families and communities are “virtually erased from national accounts of India, Pakan, and Bangladesh”.
Pritika Chowdhry’s work (Source: Pritika Chowdhry)
“As a post-colonial femin art, I create anti-memorials that center these counter-memories and counter-hories (the widespread sexual violence) of the Independence movements in the three countries,” described Chowdhry.
She has exhibited her works nationally and internationally in group and solo exhibitions in the Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis, Queens Museum in New York, Hunterdon Museum in New Jersey, Islip Art Museum in Long Island, Visual Arts Center of New Jersey, DoVA Temporary in the University of Chicago, Brodsky Center in Rutgers University, and Cambridge Art Gallery in Massachusetts.
She also founded the the Partition Memorial Project in 2007, on the 60th anniversary of the Partition. Her anti-memorial works are quietly provocative, temporary, and incorporate visceral materials and soundscapes, notes the press statement. “In part inspired the Gujarat Pogrom of 2002, and in part my own family’s hory of the Partition, I have created nine different anti-memorials to the Partition in the past 15 years, and the tenth one is in the works,” she shared.
Pritika Chowdhry’s anti-memorial works are quietly provocative, temporary, and incorporate visceral materials and soundscapes
The “rigourously researched” experiential art installations unpack several different facets of the Partition, such as: forced migration and border violence; conflicting roles of public monuments; use of rape as a weapon in communal violence; Mother India as a trope; cyclical occurrence of communal riots since 1947; an archive of the year 1919 and how it sowed the seeds of the Partition; the second Partition that created Bangladesh in 1971; maps and cartography as technologies of partition; English language as a tool of colonisation; and Partition through the lens of postmemory and diaspora.
Recognising that horical narratives are not neutral, and are written from a biased perspective, Chowdhry stresses that one can know the minoritarian perspective only “deliberately and consciously engaging with counter-hories, that is, the horical narratives written minoritarian populations”.
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