INDIGO Re-opens in Washington DC by Charge d’Affaires Ambassador Taranjit Singh Sandhu

INDIGO Re-opens in Washington DC by Charge d’Affaires Ambassador Taranjit Singh Sandhu

Shelly Jyoti   Newsletter

 November 16, 2013

INDIGO: WORKS BY SHELLY JYOTI & LAURA KINA

 The  distinguished  chief Guest –  Ambassador Taranjit Singh Sandhu ,Charge d’Affaires, Washington DC

November 16 until January 2014

                                                                                                                                                        These  exhibits will be presented by Gandhi Memorial Centre in co-operation with Embassy of India with support of Indian Council of Cultural Relations (ICCR)

Saturday, November 16, 2013 opening reception of “Indigo: An Exhibition of Textiles by Laura Kina and Shelly Jyoti” at the Gandhi Memorial Center with distinguished Guest Mr. Ambassador Taranjit Singh Sandhu, Embassy of India – Washington DC

Click to view  Priyum Jyoti speech on the opening day on  project Indigo Narrativeshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3NgUWvYR-g

View photos by Abby Moy from the opening reception:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/63834915@N03/sets/72157637763656534/with/10904726225/

View news from Gandhi Memorial Centre , Washington DC 

http://gandhimemorialcenter.org/

The exhibition will be on view through January 2013 Fri and Sat 10am-4pm and by appointment. 4748 Western Avenue, Bethesda, MD. www.gandimemorialcenter.org

 INDIGO project is a  two women show in collabration chicago based artist laura kina who presents INDIGO: Deveon Avenue series.The works were previewed in vadoadra,Gujarat (2009), exhibited in New Delhi (2010) , Mumbai (2010)and travelled across the continent to Seattle (2011), Miami (2011), Chicago(2013) and now re opening in  Washington DC (2013-14)

Shelly Jyoti

shellyjyoti12@yahoo.com

www.shellyjyoti.com

as

 

 

INDIGO:SHELLY JYOTI& LAURA KINA Re-opens in the seventh venue at washington DC

INDIGO:SHELLY JYOTI& LAURA KINA  Re-opens in the seventh venue at washington DC
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Opening Reception from 2:00 – 4:00pm
Inaugural Remarks at 2:30pm 

Click Here to RSVP

INDIGO, an exhibition of textiles by Laura Kina and Shelly Jyoti will be inaugurated at the Gandhi Memorial Center in cooperation with the Embassy of India and with support of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations on November 16th at the Gandhi Memorial Center, from 2pm to 4pm. Mr. Taranjit Singh Sandhu, Deputy Chief of Mission, will be the distinguished guest for the afternoon. The exhibition features Laura Kina’s “Devon Avenue Sampler” and Shelly Jyoti’s “Indigo Narratives”.  The common thread between both bodies of work is the color indigo blue from India’s colonial past, to indigo-dyed Japanese kasuri fabrics and boro patchwork quilts, through blue threads of a Jewish prayer tallis, to working class blue jeans in the U.S.  Since 2009, “Indigo” has exhibited in galleries and cultural centers in Baroda, New Delhi, Mumbai, Seattle, Miami, and Chicago.

‘CARE Package c/o New Delhi India’ Re-opens in India International Centre Lodhi road, New Delhi

‘CARE Package c/o New Delhi India’ Re-opens in India International Centre Lodhi road, New Delhi

MY RECENT INSTALLATION
for ‘CARE Package c/o New Delhi India’

Group show by women artists of Asian or Asian descent at India International Centre until November15, 2013

Shelly Jyoti :
RECIPROCITY OF LOVE: SHAGUN 2013
‘Beyond batuaas 101 : Textiles as gift Containers’
Size: variable

While textile container may perform the practical function of holding, carrying and covering everyday items, they are also objects of creativity made with a designing and purposeful eye. ‘Beyond the Batuaas101’ celebrates the use of textiles as utilitarian containers on joyous occasions and gift giving practice. Symbolically, the exchange of ‘money envelopes’ occurs during all auspicious family events from illness until the last journey of death from generations in India. A contemporary dialogue of ‘Gift giving’ is an expression of universal love and a part of the unwritten social contract that embodies strong cultural, socio-political, and economic codings.
inspired by Marcel Mauss book “Gift”1923 which notes the expressions of love that helps balances the power of relationships in the tradition of reciprocity and gift exchange.The hanging site specific investigates the manipulation of varied richly coloured textile envelopes suspended at different heights with sacred red ,yellow, green thread ‘mouli’.The installation explores the placement and richness of silk brocade to heighten the visual effect.view more;https://www.facebook.com/shelly.jyoti/media_set?set=a.10152007722694577.1073741841.550454576&type=1

Newsletter – SALT: THE GREAT MARCH

Newsletter  – SALT: THE GREAT MARCH

SHELLY JYOTI

NEWS LETTER  |SALT: THE GREAT MARCH

Re-Contextualising the contemporary Azrakh traditions in contemporary Art and Craft

September 28-October 20, 2013

Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts ,  New Delhi, India 

 Shelly Jyoti Salt: The Great March’ Site specific installation ‘Solidarity’-90 Azrakh textile buttons,108×108 Inches 2013

Overview:

“I learnt from my illiterate but wise mother that all rights to be deserved and preserved came from duty well done. Thus, the very right to live accrues to us only when we do the duty of citizenship of the world. From this one fundamental statement, perhaps it is easy enough to define the duties of Man and of Woman and correlate every right to some corresponding duty to be first performed”  –Mahatma Gandhi wrote to Julian Huxley, Director General, UNESCO (May 1947)

Exploring salt as a symbol of non-violence and investigating the sarvodaya theory in the practice of nonviolence, tolerance, peace and harmony through the narratives of swadeshi politics, these works  draw upon the history of India’s colonial past and Mahatma Gandhi’s 1930 Dandi March, which began the Salt Satyagraha and became an important part of the Indian independence movement. In her new series, ‘Salt: The Great march 2013’, artist Shelly Jyoti explores the possibilities of establishing alternative societies where Gandhian ideals of ‘swadharma’ and ‘sarvodaya’ could be adhered to and sustained with sincere implementation. In a society where patriarchal values threaten the free existence of women, the artist feels that re-introducing Gandhian ideals with critical changes would function as a correctional force.

This new complementary body of works are complementary are continuation of Jyoti’s earlier series, ‘INDIGO Neel Darpan’.  Neel Darpan (1860) is a literary text, symbolic of yet another anti-colonial, nonviolence movement that took place in 1917-18 as ‘champaran’ movement for indigo farmers in India. Shelly Jyoti’s new works feature a large khadi fabric with Sanskrit calligraphic print as a site specific installation, two sculptural installations of khadi yarn (aatis) and pipe cleaners, twenty five contemporary artworks with azrakh dyeing/ printing incorporating needle work on khadi fabric and multimedia spoken poetry.E Catalog: – http://issuu.com/shellyjyoti/docs/brochure_1-64 -IGNCA Publication

 

Press Release: https://shellyjyoti.com/salt-the-great-march-2013/press-release/

Artist Statement :https://shellyjyoti.com/salt-the-great-march-2013/artist-statement/

Gallery of Works:  https://shellyjyoti.com/salt-the-great-march-2013/gallery/

Catalog essay by Johny ML:  https://shellyjyoti.com/salt-the-great-march-2013/catalogue-essay/

Gallery Installations site specific: https://shellyjyoti.com/salt-the-great-march-2013/art-installations/

Multimedia Spoken poetry: https://shellyjyoti.com/salt-the-great-march-2013/multimedia-spoken-poetry/

Catalog Essay: https://shellyjyoti.com/saltthe-great-march-2013/multimedia-spoken-salt-the-great-march/

Press & Media Reports: https://shellyjyoti.com/press/

Video Documentation: by Syed Jawed Aghsar:https://shellyjyoti.com/salt-the-great-march-2013/youtube-video/

Opening Reception:Chief guest Karan Singh, MP, President  of ICCR :https://shellyjyoti.com/salt-the-great-march-2013/installations-opening/

Lecture & Talks:

October 9, 2013, 11.30-2.30 pm-Lecture Hall, IGNCA New Delhi

Re-Building: A Sense of Nationalism  by Shelly jyoti

Walking the Gandhi Way- by Johny ML

 

Shelly Jyoti   B 43 Trinity Towers, DLF Phase 5, Gurgaon 122002, Haryana.

Cell 91 958225062  Home 0124 4000154  E: shelly@shellyjyoti.com

www.shellyjyoti.com

Exhibition catalogue 2013- “Indigo: Shelly Jyoti and Laura kina”

Exhibition catalogue  2013-  “Indigo: Shelly Jyoti and Laura kina”

Exhibition catalogue -2013

“Indigo: Shelly Jyoti and Laura kina”

Abstract

Indigo: shelly jyoti and laura kina- The torrid history of Indigo is reimagined by artists from Chicago, USA and Gujarat, India. Indigo: Laura Kina and Shelly Jyoti presents complementary bodies of artwork by Indian artist Shelly Jyoti and US artist Laura Kina in a range of media including hand-embroidery on khadi fabric, indigo resist dyeing, Sanskrit calligraphy and mixed-media on canvas. The narrative threads running throughout the artists’ work evoke India’s colonial history, stories of immigration, and the tensions and transformations of cultures evolving in a changing world. This traveling exhibition was featured in three venues in India in 2009-2010 (Red Earth Gallery in Vadodara, India Habitat Centre in New Delhi, Nehru Art Centre in Mumbai) and is currently touring the US in 2011 (ArtXchange Gallery in Seattle and Diana Lowenstein Fine Arts in Miami). The accompanying exhibition catalogue features three essays: Johny ML -“Indigo Inscriptions” Murtaza Vali – “The Dye That Binds: Indigo Iconographies” Michelle Yee – “Moving Materials: Reclaiming Histories of Migration” To view the exhibition:

https://shellyjyoti.com/indigo-narratives/indigo-narratives-gallery-of-works

click the image below to view  online exhibition catalog 2013:


 

 

 

Indigo: Shelly Jyoti and Laura Kina at the Chicago Cultural Center January 26- April 27, 2013 Curated by Greg Lunceford and Lanny Silverman

Indigo: Shelly Jyoti and Laura Kina at the Chicago Cultural Center January 26- April 27, 2013 Curated by Greg Lunceford and Lanny Silverman

Indigo: Shelly Jyoti and Laura Kina at the Chicago Cultural Center

 

Indigo: Shelly Jyoti and Laura Kina
Curated by Greg Lunceford and Lanny Silverman
January 26 – April 2, 2013
Opening Reception: Friday, January 25, 2013 5:30-7:30pm
Chicago Cultural Center

The Chicago Rooms
78 E. Washington St.
Chicago, IL 60638

Artist talk with Shelly Jyoti, Laura Kina, and Pushipika Frietas, President of MarketPlace: Handwork of India
The Chicago Rooms
12:15pm Thursday, January 31, 2013

Employing fair trade artisans from women’s collectives in India and executing their works in indigo blue, Indian artist Shelly Jyoti and US artist Laura Kina’s works draw upon India’s history, narratives of immigration and transnational economic interchanges.

View the online exhibition catalog (you need flash for this):
http://www.laurakina.com/indigo-culturalcenter.html
Download a pdf of the brochure Indigo: Shelly Jyoti and Laura Kina Chicago Cultural Center
Watch the 2010 video on youtube Indigo: New works by Shelly Jyoti and Laura Kina

Indigo: Laura Kina and Shelly Jyoti –The torrid history of Indigo is reimagined by artists from Chicago, USA and Gujarat, India. Indigo: Laura Kina and Shelly Jyoti presents complementary bodies of artwork by Indian artist Shelly Jyoti and US artist Laura Kina in a range of media including hand-embroidery on khadi fabric, indigo resist dyeing, Sanskrit calligraphy and mixed-media on canvas. The narrative threads running throughout the artists’ work evoke India’s colonial history, stories of immigration, and the tensions and transformations of cultures evolving in a changing world. This traveling exhibition was featured in three venues in India in 2009-2010 (Red Earth Gallery in Vadodara, India Habitat Centre in New Delhi, Nehru Art Centre in Mumbai) and is currently touring the US in 2011 (ArtXchange Gallery in Seattle and Diana Lowenstein Fine Arts in Miami). The accompanying exhibition catalogue features three essays: Johny ML -“Indigo Inscriptions” Murtaza Vali – “The Dye That Binds: Indigo Iconographies” Michelle Yee – “Moving Materials: Reclaiming Histories of Migration” To view the exhibition:

Shelly Jyoti https://shellyjyoti.com/indigo-narratives/

 laura kina http://www.laurakina.com/devon.html