Artefacting Mumbai workshops
Plastic chips, cardboard, magazines, plastic bottles and red wax were amongst the readily available materials that were turned into artwork. After setting up an art workshop in the ACORN Foundation’s community workshop, weekly art classes were held with the Dharavi Project children where different projects and techniques were introduced to the community. The children learn to make collage, to paint, some helped create a mural. In another workshop flower sculptures were created out of plastic and planted along the street (but they didn’t last long!) Even a performance art version of Anish Kapoor’s famed “Shooting Into the Corner” artwork had children pelting a white corrugated wall with red wax. Digital photography was also introduced to the children through basic courses led by the teams photographer. All of these workshops occurred over our team’s three month immersion into Dharavi’s recycling community.
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A series of questions by the Sunday Guardian are answered by the Artefacting Mumbai team…
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Update on the 13th Compound Exhibition that transformed the streets and industrial spaces of Dharavi into an art show, showcasing the works of Artefacting Mumbai to the local community and attracting an estimated 500 outsiders into Dharavi.
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January 17th, 2011
— Alex White
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After two and half months at almost the conclusion of my three month artistic immersion into Dharavi, the architecture, streetscape and public space of the corridors I frequent daily have emerged as public space. Be it that we are interacting with these spaces daily with our paint brushes, chai connections, etc., indeed we are getting more intimate with these spaces.
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January 15th, 2011
— Casey Nolan
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Field trip to the Anish Kapoor exhibition with kids from Dharavi!
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January 12th, 2011
— Casey Nolan
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We have entered the last phase of our immersion into Dharavi: The Intervention - which can safely be called Mural Mode. With less than three weeks left until our multi-media exhibition showcasing our work and forcing a dialog about the connections and disconnections between the “West” and a “Slum,” we have a renewed sense of energy and are…
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January 9th, 2011
— Casey Nolan
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“Nothing will go as planned in India. You have to go with the flow.”
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We are in the middle of a three month art project & immersion in the informal community of Dharavi - also known as Asia’s Largest Slum. Dharavi is right in the heart of Mumbai and is actually a beehive of industry and community.
Our initial project involved coming here to learn about the community in Dharavi through art - by making our own art as well as hosting art classes to people here. Our goal is to go beyond the imagery of a slum and embrace the humanity and identity of the people in this community.
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January 4th, 2011
— Casey Nolan
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The welcome sign is highly visible to everyone entering Dharavi from the west side
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January 1st, 2011
— Casey Nolan
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Good bye 2010 and hello 2011! A short note and video from our New Years Eve in Mumbai.
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