Double Vision
lau12feb(feb 12)00:00sun17apr(apr 17)00:00Double VisionExhibition
Om arrangementet
Double Vision displays 37 prints made by artist from all over the world – organized by International Print Exchange Program, India. For the 2020 edition of the International Print Exchange Program,
Om arrangementet
Double Vision displays 37 prints made by artist from all over the world – organized by International Print Exchange Program, India.
For the 2020 edition of the International Print Exchange Program, India, ‘Double Vision’ is presented as both a conceptual and technical provocation inviting playful responses in the search for one’s inner dyad. – Sitara Chowfla, Curator, IPEP India 2020
In medical terms, double vision, or diplopia, is a condition in which a person sees two images of a single object. The condition has a number of potential causes ranging from an irregularity of the cornea to brain trauma caused by injury to the head, and can sometimes even be brought on by stress. Whatever the cause, the result is seeing a blurred or doubled image — the original and its ‘ghost’. A whisper or a shadowy spectre of the original form which distorts the viewer’s perception, confusing what is really there with what is not.
In film and literature the idea of double vision is somewhat less morbid and instead serves as a commonly used narrative technique that allows the audience to explore multiple points of view from a single vantage point. The idea of a double could be used to explore a plot from the various possible experiences of a single character. Such as in Tom Tykwer’s 1998 film Run Lola Run, in which the audience consecutively views the same narrative three times, with only slight deviations to Lola’s journey each time. Or in Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde — a highly referenced 19th c novel by Robert Louis Stevenson in which the titular character embodies two completely opposing personas trapped within one body. Although only one person, both personas see and experience the world in an entirely different way than the other; a kind of double vision embedded into a single set of eyes. The use of the double has allowed writers, filmmakers and artists to bend time, to alter perception and to move freely between the reality of the ordinary world and the phantasm of the imagined one.
Printmaking as a process is no stranger to this intentional dualism either. The inversion of an image from plate to substrate; the application of a single image through multiple layers; and the intentional misregistration of the printed image to create experimental outcomes are all tricks inherent to creative print practice used to create both visual and narrative depth.
Participants:
Adarsh Palandi, India
/ Adi Sundoro, Indonesia /
Al-Qawi Tazal Nanavati, India
/ Amit Lodh, India
/ Anant Nikam, India
/ Atsuko Honda, Japan
/ Avni Bansal, India /
Bikash Acharjee, India
/ Dilip Sharma, India /
Elizabeth Kwant, UK /
Fiona Kelly, Ireland
/ Gloria Quispe Tinco, Perú
/ Ioannis Anastasiou, Greece
/ Jayasimha C., India /
Jimmy Khatri, India
/ Johann Booyens, UK
/ Judith Elisabeth De Haan, Norway
/ Julian Campos Da Silva, Brasil
/ Katsutoshi Yuasa, Japan
/ Manolis Angelakis, Greece
/ Nilanjan Das, India
/
Prabhakar Pachpute, India
/
Purnima Ngangom, India
/ Ramendra Nath Kastha, India
/ Rebecca Holmes, UK
/ Royalkriss Thangjam, India
/ Rumyana Karastamova, Bulgaria
/ Sama Rahmani, Iran
/ Sancho Mitzy, Costa Rica
/ Sanjeev Sonpimpare, India
/
Saurabh Narang, India
/ Shivangi Ladha, India
/ Shraddha Kumbhar, India
/
Soghra Khurasani, India
/
Subrat Behra, India
/ Temsuyanger Longkumer, UK
/
Victoria Bilogan, Australia
Tid
Februar 12 (Laurdag) 00:00 - April 17 (Sundag) 00:00(GMT+00:00)
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