ABSTRACT

This book is an ethnographic study of the travelling art exhibition Indian Highway that presented Indian contemporary art in Europe and China between 2008 and 2012, a significant period for the art world that saw the rise and fall of the national exhibition format. It analyses art exhibition as a mobile "object" and promotes the idea of art as a transcultural product by using participant observation, in-depth interviews, and multi-media studies as research method. This work encompasses voices of curators, artists, audiences, and art critics spread over different cities, sites, and art institutions to bridge the distance between Europe and India based on vignettes along the Indian Highway. The discussion in the book focuses on power relations, the contested politics of representation, and dissonances and processes of negotiation in the field of global art. It also argues for rethinking analytical categories in anthropology to identify the social role of contemporary art practices in different cultural contexts and also examines urban art and the way national or cultural values are reinterpreted in response to ideas of difference and pluralism.

Rich in empirical data, this book will be useful to scholars and researchers of modern and contemporary art, Indian art, art and visual culture, anthropology, art history, mobility, and transcultural studies.

chapter 1|35 pages

Along the Indian Highway

An introduction

chapter 2|26 pages

“Cancel that flight to Delhi …”

Serpentine Gallery, London 2008

chapter 3|28 pages

“Indianness and the urgency of transmission …”

Astrup Fearnley Museum, Oslo 2009

chapter 4|25 pages

“There might be an Indian background, but the theme is global”

HEART Museum of Contemporary Art, Herning 2010

chapter 5|27 pages

Transcultural dissonances in the contemporary art world

Museo Nazionale Delle Arti Del XXI Secolo, Rome 2012

chapter 6|24 pages

Indian Highway VI finally on its way to China

Ullens Centre for Contemporary Art, Beijing 2012

chapter 7|26 pages

Shared exoticisms or the limits of the national exhibition

Some final observations