Partition Parables – II
Exhibitions

Event details

  • Artcore Gallery
  • 5 January 2023
  • 11:00 AM to 5:00 PM
  • Exhibition open from 26/11/2022 to 13/01/2023

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Partition Parables – II

Artcore Gallery

11:00 AM to 5:00 PM
5 January 2023

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Partition Parables – II

Artcore Gallery

11:00 AM to 5:00 PM
5 January 2023

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An artist residency project, for 2 artists, for 2 months, beginning September 2022.

This residency project has as its seed the sombre remembrance of the 75th anniversary (1947-2022) of the Partition of India, England’s premier colony widely celebrated as the Jewel in the Crown, as well as the Independence of India. Several cultural events are being organized across England over the year 2022-23 to celebrate the historic landmark and bring together the hundreds of Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi families settled over the last many decades in the UK.

India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, which were together as the British Indian Empire till August 14, 1947, were first partitioned according to the lines drawn by Cyril Radcliffe, on religious lines, depending on where a majority of the Muslim and Hindu (and Sikh) communities lived. Thus was formed Pakistan on north-western India (West Pakistan) and on the east, Bengal was divided into West Bengal that went to India and East Bengal that became East Pakistan. This created a mass migration, displacing more than 14 million people.

An estimated 2,000,000 persons were killed or maimed, women were raped or abducted. The violence did not spare children and senior citizens either. For years, Hindus and Sikhs from the Punjab / Sindh areas in Pakistan lived in refugee camps across north India and Bengal. The same was true in Pakistan for those Muslims who opted to leave India for the promised land in West and East Pakistan. While India went on to become a democracy, Pakistan slipped into a military dictatorship. In 1971, East Pakistan fought for its independence from West Pakistan and became Bangladesh. It led to another wave of refugees into India.

Not many of us here in England, even if we originally are from the Indian sub-continent, are more than vaguely aware of this history. But it is still an issue which many affected families and their descendants in all three countries have yet to come to terms with, in spite of the fact that seven and a half decades have passed by.

However, for the present residency, we are taking this important landmark in the colonial history of England as a significant starting point for applying artists to think about the idea of Partition. And it can be ‘Partition’ of various kinds – actual, familial, psychological, physical, natural – and can be triggered by political events, pandemics, natural disasters, terrorism, wars and violent conflicts, ideological and religious intolerance and persecution.

In more recent times, Britain has also experienced a ‘Partition’ of sorts – the Brexit decision has fiercely torn the Continent away from Britain, creating invisible but very palpable partitions. Neither people and goods can move as freely across country borders as it was so easily possible earlier, creating major trade and talent constraints, and these have quickly filtered down to affect the ordinary lives of the British people in small yet significant ways, unimagined by those who thought of Brexit and those who voted for it. Just a few months back, the Russia-Ukraine conflict has also created ‘Partitions’ of many kinds – not just are families in the war-affected zones having to flee for their lives leaving behind their homes and all the beautiful memories associated with them, it has forced them to leave their motherland and find refuge in other countries who may or may not be very welcoming.

Yes, all ‘Partitions’ involve a separation of sorts. Unfortunately, they are often very difficult to bridge. However it is the sustained efforts to want to build those bridges that is the all-important narrative.

Rachel Magdeburg – Residency Artist

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Tarla Patel – Residency Artist

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