A Living Archive: Women’s Absences and the Painterly (Re)inscriptions of the Gendered Nation

Authors

  • Miranda Imperial London School of Economics and Political Science

Abstract

In recent years, within the concept of the archive there has been an ever-increasing notion that points to a repository for classification, cultural production, a locus for keeping the records of history, a paying tribute to memory, whilst, simultaneously, registering as much as what is kept as what is lost. My paper is a work-in-progress, and, as such, an exploration of what I call a “living archive,” an archive in the making, where, by recourse to a culturally rich repository of images of Indian women as represented by Indian women artists along the twentieth century, I will address women’s invisibility from official history. Generationally arranged, my choice of painters includes Sunayani Devi (1875-1962), Amrita Sher-Gil (1913-1941) and Nalini Malani (1946-).  Women artists in all these cases were privileged and educated, and developed a career in the Fine Arts. They all show a great interest and concern in the role of women within society, and they have portrayed and captured women and women’s relations and work with attention. In most cases, they exhibit a feminist or proto-feminist awareness.  From the visual format of the canvas both in historical perspective and at present, I will attempt to discuss how their work and their valuable repository of images is certainly evidence of significant historical and cultural change.

Keywords

archive, representation, painting, Indian women painters, Sunayani Devi, Amrita Sher-Gil, Nalini Malani, Indian nation

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Author Biography

Miranda Imperial, London School of Economics and Political Science

Miranda Imperial is a U. Cambridge (Human, Social, and Political Sciences) graduate, currently studying an MSc in Political Communication at London School of Economics. Her work under the direction of Prof. Christine Garlough (U. Wisconsin-Madison) on the South Asian Feminist Activist Archive is in press (Oxford U. Press). Her interests center at the intersection of Social and Political Theory and Gender Studies.

Published

2019-04-02

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