London: Arpita Singh: Remembering

by Rhea Mathur | Asia Art Pacific

“Amnesia lies at the core of the digital age. We have an overflow of information but not necessarily more memory,” said Hans Ulrich Obrist, artistic director of London’s Serpentine Galleries, to mark the opening of Arpita Singh’s exhibition at the gallery in March. “Remembering,” which brought together 165 works created by Singh over the course of her prolific six-decade career, was the artist’s first solo show outside of her native India.

 

As its title suggests, the survey highlighted Singh’s exploration of memory—especially recollections of war, gender-based violence, and communal riots. Singh portrays the human body as a recipient of collective memories, inherited at birth. These individual, ancestral, and social recollections come together in thick paint on her borderless canvases. As Obrist notes, by “engaging with the local and the global, exploring influences of Bengali folk art as well as a modernist exploration of identity, [Singh] brings the universe onto her canvas.”

30 April 2025