Visiting Ballarat for the first time in 2016, Indian-born artist Dr. Anindita Banerjee was struck by the similarities between the colonial buildings of Ballarat and the crumbling mansions of North Kolkata, India. Now living in Ballarat, Dr. Banerjee has assembled the visual imaginings of a Bengali girl whose consciousness shifts across multiple points of time, including Kolkata in the early 20th century, the artist’s own memory of Kolkata as a young woman, and the colonial streetscapes of 21st century Ballarat.
Ms Banerjee explores themes of memory, imagination, displacement and home. Source: The Art Gallery of Ballarat, Victoria
Ms Banerjee has assembled the visual imaginings of a Bengali girl. Source: The Art Gallery of Ballarat, Victoria
Ondormohol, a Bengali word meaning the inner or private areas of a house. Source: The Art Gallery of Ballarat, Victoria
The Lindsay Family Sitting Room has been reimagined as the living quarters of a Bengali girl from Kolkata. Source: The Art Gallery of Ballarat, Victoria
Each photograph is printed on the top of a pidi, a low wooden table traditionally used in the home for domestic and devotional purposes. Source: The Art Gallery of Ballarat, Victoria
The exhibition will continue at the until 16 January 2022, 10 am to 5 pm daily.
Click on the audio player above to listen to the full conversation of Dr. Anindita Banerjee in Bangla.
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