Facebook Pixel The body as canvas | Mint Kolkata – newspaper – Lesen Sie diese Geschichte auf Magzter.com
Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Erhalten Sie unbegrenzten Zugriff auf über 9.000 Zeitschriften, Zeitungen und Premium-Artikel für nur

$149.99
 
$74.99/Jahr

Versuchen GOLD - Frei

The body as canvas

Mint Kolkata

|

February 07, 2026

Conceptual artists are using performance to create unsettling and thought-provoking experiences, often involving the viewer as a collaborator in the art piece

- Avantika Bhuyan

The body as canvas

Last weekend, a group of people were blindfolded and led through a path littered with obstacles while a narrator offered mysterious commentary like "If you speak plainly, you are punished" and "If you are dangerous and ask why, you are punished".

Mithu Sen's "trickster performance", What Do Birds Dream at Dusk, cleverly turned the viewers into part of the artwork even as she showed how curated truths and collective denial shape society today.

Though Sen was physically absent from the location, Mumbai's Chemould Prescott Road gallery, she was omnipresent in the orchestration of this metaphorical tussle between sight and blindness, control and freedom, reality and perception. Sen calls this the "poetics of instruction and choreography of control", where the performer's invisible body or deliberate absence still directs the audience's mind. The visitors are split into two groups of the blindfolded and the witnesses, thereby creating a tension where behaviour, vulnerability and power circulate unpredictably. "Performance becomes a site where viewers confront strangeness because my medium itself is the act of Un-ing: undoing, unravelling, unsettling," she says.

Meanwhile, at Aspinwall House in Kochi, a different kind of performance has been playing out. For the duration of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale, Berlin-based artist Anja Ibsch has been occupying different parts of the space for her shifting piece, Still. Visitors can observe the artist going about her work, rearranging objects and photos to create temporary installations. She works with locally sourced objects, cutouts from medical books and photos from older performances. The arrangement changes every day as a comment on the transient nature of life and memory itself.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

IDFC First vets papers in alleged fraud case

IDFC First Bank is investigating if the documents at the centre of an alleged ₹590 crore fraud at its Chandigarh branch were genuine or forged, two people familiar with the matter said, even as it has suspended four officials and prepares a forensic audit.

time to read

1 min

February 23, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

CEOs return to tariff war rooms

For a few minutes after the Supreme Court struck down President Trump's signature tariffs Friday, Ethan Allen Chief Executive Farooq Kathwari felt a jolt of relief.

time to read

1 min

February 23, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Why India's rare earth pact with Brazil, Pax Silica membership matter

As part of India’s playbook to diversify its critical mineral and rare earth supplies, India on Saturday inked a pact with Brazil.

time to read

2 mins

February 23, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

AI, the Godzilla in the room for advertising

Agency networks like WPP are focusing on the role of AI in shaping ad spends, and their own offerings for advertisers

time to read

4 mins

February 23, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Pakistan airstrike hits militant bases in Afghanistan

Women and children among dozens killed, injured in Saturday's attacks, Afghanistan says

time to read

1 mins

February 23, 2026

Mint Kolkata

ServiceNow eyes India push amid AI uptake

ServiceNow, which provides AI solutions to several top Indian companies, is looking to expand further in the country as it sees more sectors and centres joining the AI bandwagon.

time to read

1 min

February 23, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Tariff ruling sends CEOs back to company war rooms

iffs under a different legal authority prove costlier?

time to read

4 mins

February 23, 2026

Mint Kolkata

US tariffs got turfed out but keep the deal in play

The US Supreme Court's rejection of Trump's reciprocal tariffs may change his strategy but not India's need for trade liberalization. Easing imports will do our economy a good turn

time to read

2 mins

February 23, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Respite for exporters on US tariff, deal talks deferred

Section 122 allows the US President to levy a temporary import surcharge for up to 150 days

time to read

2 mins

February 23, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Xi wins upper hand before summit due to US tariff reversal

Chinese President Xi Jinping is heading to the negotiating table with Donald Trump with a boost in bargaining power, after the U.S. leader lost his ability to quickly raise tariffs for nearly any reason.

time to read

2 mins

February 23, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size