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Arts & Culture

Professor Romita Ray Awarded National Endowment for the Arts Grant to Support Artist Rina Banerjee’s Exhibition and Residency at Syracuse

Wednesday, February 15, 2023, By Dan Bernardi
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art exhibitionarts and humanitiesCollege of Arts and SciencesfacultyHumanities Center鶹ƵUniversity Art Museum
Rina Banerjee seated in the 鶹ƵUniversity Art Museum with her artwork titled "Viola, from New Orleans"

Artist Rina Banerjee, with her artwork “Viola from New Orleans” (Photo courtesy of William Widmer)

While the world comes to terms with the profound impact of a global pandemic, it simultaneously continues to grapple with race, migration and climate change. , associate professor in the Department of Art and Music Histories (AMH) in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S), says one of the ways people can engage in important conversations about these pressing issues is through the power of art.

This semester, Ray opens “Take Me to the Palace of Love” at the , an exhibition she has curated of acclaimed artist ’s work, in consultation with Banerjee and Melissa Yuen, the museum’s interim chief curator. She will also host Banerjee as the 鶹ƵUniversity Humanities Center’s in collaboration with students, faculty, curators and staff across the University.

Born in Kolkata, India, and having lived briefly in Great Britain before growing up in the United States, Banerjee has lived with the challenges of ethnicity, race and migration. Not surprisingly, her work examines how diasporas and journeys can affect one’s sense of place and identity.

Banerjee’s colorful sculptures feature a wide range of globally sourced materials, textiles, colonial/historical and domestic objects. Her previous experience as a polymer research chemist informs her unique style, as she received a degree in polymer engineering from Case Western University and worked in that field for several years before receiving an M.F.A. from Yale University.

She was recently appointed the inaugural Post-Colonial Critic at the Yale School of Art. Banerjee’s works have been displayed at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and she has held a prestigious artist’s residency at the Centre Pompidou in Paris.

Banerjee’s exhibition and an upcoming residency at 鶹ƵUniversity are supported by the , the 鶹ƵUniversity Art Museum, the CNY Humanities Corridor, over 30 University departments and units, and Todd Rubin ’04, president of The Republic of Tea, who is providing tea for Banerjee’s different residency activities.

In addition, Ray was recently awarded a Grants for Arts Projects award from the (NEA), in support of “” and Banerjee’s public art-making project which will take place in the City of 鶹Ƶon Feb. 25. Notably, this is the first NEA grant for an exhibition at Syracuse’s art museum.

NEA Chair Maria Rosario Jackson says, “the National Endowment for the Arts is proud to support arts projects in communities nationwide. Projects such as this one at 鶹ƵUniversity strengthen arts and cultural ecosystems, provide equitable opportunities for arts participation and practice, and contribute to the health of our communities and our economy.”

“Take Me to the Palace of Love” on Display Through May 14

Banerjee’s exhibition includes one of her noted installations, a re-imagined Taj Mahal made out of pink plastic wrap. Officially titled “Take Me, Take Me, Take Me…To the Palace of Love,” this artwork is based on the famous Mughal monument in India, which also inspired the exhibition’s title.

“The ‘pink Taj,’ as it is affectionately known, is testament to Banerjee’s background as an artist and a polymer scientist,” says Ray. “It also evokes her birthplace, India, while reminding us of the consumerist culture of America in which she grew up—a culture reliant on the global economies of trade and exchange.” Ray notes that the sculpture is a portable object which, like the artist herself, is diasporic.

Rina Banerjee's sculpture "Viola, from New Orleans" on display at the 鶹ƵUniversity Art Museum

“Viola, from New Orleans” by Rina Banerjee, 2017 (Photo courtesy of Lily LeGrange)

“It has traveled from museum to museum, across oceans, not unlike the very image of the Taj which emerged a cherished souvenir from the 19th century onwards,” says Ray.

The installation is accompanied by examples of early 20th-century images of the Taj and Mughal architecture from the 鶹ƵUniversity Art Museum and Bird Library, as well as from the (Cornell University). A chair designed by American furniture designer Lockwood de Forest, on loan from the , greets visitors to the exhibition. A key figure in the Aesthetic Movement, de Forest was influenced by Mughal architecture and design.

Two additional critically acclaimed art installations by Banerjee in the exhibition alongside African, American and Indian art from the museum’s collections include “Viola, from New Orleans” (2017), a multimedia work that explores interracial marriage in America, and “A World Lost” (2013), another multimedia installation that critiques climate change.

“I hope exhibition visitors will be struck by Banerjee’s intricate constructions that remind us that beauty can reside in the most mundane objects and materials,” says Ray. “Most of all, I hope we can find our own stories to connect with her art installations and drawings, which are powerful, spectacular and thought-provoking.”

Jeannette K. Watson Distinguished Visiting Professorship in the Humanities

The University community will have the unique opportunity to interact with and work alongside Banerjee during her residency as the Humanities Center’s 2023 Jeannette K. Watson Distinguished Visiting Professor in the Humanities from Feb. 20-March 3. Banerjee will engage with faculty, students and members of the 鶹Ƶand Central New York communities during a .

, director of the Humanities Center and the CNY Humanities Corridor, is delighted to welcome Banerjee to campus and invites everyone to engage with the residency’s layered series of events. “Professor Ray’s interdisciplinary vision, combined with the scope of Rina Banerjee’s oeuvre, has resulted in an exciting, robust array of opportunities to interact with Banerjee’s ideas and work, from large-scale lectures to intimate dialogues,” May says.

Banerjee’s residency has been designed as a series of interactive conversations led by faculty and students from African American studies, architecture, English, geography, law, South Asian studies and Women in Science and Engineering. Banerjee’s residency also involves curators from the , which houses a unique  as well as a growing archive of artists of color.

Rita Banerjee's sculpture "A World Lost" on display at the 鶹ƵUniversity Art Museum

“A World Lost” by Rina Banerjee, 2013 (Photo courtesy of Lily LeGrange)

Banerjee’s residency begins with a virtual talk titled  on Feb. 20 at 5:30 p.m. ET. Graduate students  (AMH) and  (Newhouse) will introduce Banerjee as the 2023 Watson Professor in a Zoom conversation moderated by , assistant professor of art history. Arora has curated a wall of Mithila paintings from India, in response to Banerjee’s drawings displayed in the exhibition.

Next, Banerjee will give a public lecture on Feb. 23, which will be followed by a reception at the museum. Her residency will conclude on March 4 with a public (in-person) dialogue with internationally acclaimed scholar , University Professor in the Humanities at Columbia University. Spivak’s event is supported by an award from the CNY Humanities Corridor to the  working group, whose work focuses on public-facing humanities research, teaching and collaboration.

With support from the NEA grant, the CNY Humanities Corridor and an , “Take Me to the Palace of Love” will be extended into the City of Syracuse, allowing new American and underrepresented communities to document their own stories about identity and place—individually and collectively— with Banerjee. The program, titled “,” is co-organized by , Dean’s Professor of Community Engagement in A&S. , students, faculty and community members will be invited to collaborate on a public art installation with Banerjee.

“As a resettlement city with several new and older generations of immigrants and asylum-seekers, 鶹Ƶis uniquely positioned to serve as a source of everyday stories of resourcefulness and resilience,” says Nordquist, who is also co-founder of the Narratio Fellowship.

Rooted in cultural memory and storytelling, Nordquist notes that the public art-making project will foster a shared understanding of the diverse communities that make up the City of Syracuse. This event is Feb. 25 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Community Room at .

Four current 鶹ƵUniversity students and Narratio Fellowship alumni will also compose poetry and create a film in response to Banerjee’s art installations and public art-making project. The poetry and film will be revealed during a March 30 event titled  organized by Nordquist and  (Newhouse) at the Nancy Cantor Warehouse, 350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse.

Post-residency, the exhibition’s events will end with a chant performance by museum studies graduate student Amarachi Attamah. An online catalogue featuring essays and community responses to Banerjee’s art installations and the public art-making project, will also be published following the exhibition.

Collaborators who contributed to Banerjee’s exhibition and residency include Brice Nordquist, Dean’s Professor of Community Engagement (A&S); former 鶹ƵUniversity Art Museum director Vanja Malloy; Vivian May, director, and Diane Drake, assistant director, 鶹ƵUniversity Humanities Center; Sarah Workman, proposal development; Emily Dittman, Melissa Yuen, Kate Holohan, Dylan P. Otts, Jennifer Badua, Victoria Gray and Abby Campanaro, 鶹ƵUniversity Art Museum; Pastor Gail Riina, Hendricks Chapel; Danielle Taana Smith, director, Renée Crown University Honors Program; Joan Bryant (A&S); Sascha Scott (A&S); Lawrence Chua (Architecture); Timur Hammond (Maxwell); David Driesen (Law); Mike Goode (A&S); Shobha Bhatia (Engineering); Nicolette Dobrowolski and Courtney Hicks (Bird Library); Mark Cass, Northside Learning Center; Susan Wadley, professor emeritus, anthropology; and students Ankush Arora (AMH), Natalie Rieth (Newhouse), Samaya Nasr (Museum Studies) and Julia Neufeld (AMH).

  • Author

Dan Bernardi

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