يحاول ذهب - حر
Notes on nature and art Wandering Violin Mantis
March 2020
|Domus India
In a recently concluded exhibition, artist Nibha Sikander creates stunningly lifelike creatures — birds, insects and moths — all handmade from paper. It is her preternatural rendering of the natural in all its gorgeous detail that summons forth, in the viewer, a wave of rapture.
‘The violinist’s shadow vanishes. The husk of a grasshopper Sucks a remote cyclone and rises.’ - Ted Hughes, ‘Cadenza’ [1]

Nibha Sikander brings a miniaturist’s eye to bear on the extraordinarily intriguing sculptures that she creates with the simplest and most minimal means, shaping them from layers upon layers of card paper with an X-Acto cutter. Wrought with unerring accuracy, and with a heightened attentiveness to delicate and often elusive detail, Sikander’s moths and birds testify to the dazzling enchantment of the natural world as well as to the magic of taxonomical science. Presented in segments, as a row of disjecta membra laid out from wing to beak and head, her birds make a graphic transition from field guide to portrait gallery. They come across, not primarily as representatives of a species, but as sharply individual denizens of a world menaced by predators, surly winds, changing weather patterns. Her moths, speckled, streaked and richly coloured, bring the shimmering warmth of their nocturnal ethos into the sobriety of the specimen case or vitrine.

هذه القصة من طبعة March 2020 من Domus India.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
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