試す 金 - 無料
Limelight for the labour of fashion
Mint Ahmedabad
|February 21, 2026
In 'Disobedient Objects', artists question the world of fashion and spotlight the labour behind the making of clothes
In the sun-kissed space of STIR Art Gallery in New Delhi, a large muslin scroll with a kurta sewn into it hangs from the ceiling.
Looming large in the middle of the arts space, the fabric features blood red flowers emerging from black vines—a metaphor for the state of women's desires within patriarchal societies and religious orthodoxies. In this Untitled work, ink has been used to mimic embroidery and question, “where do dreams go” through the ephemerality of the medium. This collaborative work is part of the ongoing An-nisa series, created by artist Arshi Irshad Ahmadzai with rafoogars (darners) from Najibabad, Uttar Pradesh. It reflects the desires of a community of women, who work on embroidery over songs and sisterhood (Ahmadzai grew up in Najibabad and has since then lived in India and Afghanistan). Now based in Germany, she is known for combining textile and text to interrogate the agency, or lack of it, of Muslim women in South Asia.
This work signals protest within the larger exhibition, Disobedient Objects: The Biography of Clothes, curated by Sreyansi Singh. Featuring eight designers and artists, including Debashish Paul, Ahmadzai, Anuj Sharma, Ashita Singhal and RKIVE City, the show explores clothes-making as a layered sociopolitical practice within contemporary art, beyond the conventional frameworks of consumption.
"Can the material and labour involved in its making carry the ultimate meaning instead of design?" asks Singh, who focuses on textile art with an emphasis on experimental and underrepresented approaches in contemporary South Asian cultures.
The majority of the works have been created specifically for the show. "We wanted to talk about disembodied garments, clothes that are not occupied by the wearer. The artists focus on materiality and labour—the choices that people make when they design the garment," says Singh. This has resulted in a diverse set of works in
このストーリーは、Mint Ahmedabad の February 21, 2026 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Mint Ahmedabad からのその他のストーリー
Mint Ahmedabad
The post-Beatles life and music of Paul McCartney
Man on the Run looks at how McCartney branched out on his own
2 mins
February 26, 2026
Mint Ahmedabad
Fitness inflation: burning fat—and a hole in your pocket
Urban fitness costs are climbing, with professionals allocating 5-25% of income just to stay fit
4 mins
February 26, 2026
Mint Ahmedabad
Filed Schedule FA but missed dividend income: what now?
I am a resident Indian who invested about ₹5 lakh in US-listed shares under LRS in November 2023.
2 mins
February 26, 2026
Mint Ahmedabad
Uranium supply deal likely during Carney’s India visit
Cameco CEO Tim Gitzel to be part of the business delegation accompanying Canadian PM
2 mins
February 26, 2026
Mint Ahmedabad
The US tariff ruling gives India a stronger hand to play
Nothing has more starkly defined US President Donald Trump's second term than his aggressive and protean application of tariffs.
3 mins
February 26, 2026
Mint Ahmedabad
Delhi HC's expired patent order is win for India's generic firms
Macleods Pharma has not yet responded.
2 mins
February 26, 2026
Mint Ahmedabad
CHASING 12% EQUITY RETURNS? LONG-TERM INVESTING ISN'T JUST ABOUT A NUMBER
Most investors enter equity mutual funds expecting an annual average return of about 12%.
3 mins
February 26, 2026
Mint Ahmedabad
Uber opens wallet to counter Rapido's surge
The battle for market share in India’s ride hailing industry between American giant Uber and homegrown Rapido has intensified, even as the once-dominant position of the country’s first major ride-hailing service—Ola Cabs—steadily erodes.
1 min
February 26, 2026
Mint Ahmedabad
Zoho eyes Mideast, Africa data centres
Zoho Corp., a software firm owned by the Indian billionaire Vembu family, is in talks to build out its own data centres in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia and South Africa, three of its fastest-growing markets.
1 min
February 26, 2026
Mint Ahmedabad
Anthropic dials back AI safety commitments
Anthropic, the artificial-intelligence company known for its devotion to safety, is scaling back that commitment.
2 mins
February 26, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

