Rina Banerjee's work explores specific colonial moments that reinvent
place and identity as complex diasporic experiences, their aesthetic
and cultural beginnings suggest in particular how the many regional
culture affects continue to stain our perceptions of home, the exotic,
the foreign and domestic worlds. Her system of assemblage' of colonial
objects, souveniers and decorative crafts make the experience of
seeing artifact and history in art making as an entangled process
which reconfigure our boundaries and those trespasses that occur with
increased mobility. The global place is garden made out of travel both
real and imagined and illusionary world.
She began her education/profession as a material science engineer
hence the artwork has a sense of material awareness often mixing the
organic and plastic to invite a blurring of our recognition. She
creates sculptures, installations, videos and drawings inspired by a
wide range of mundane objects, home crafts, and her imagery stem from
multiple cultural histories both eastern and western art. Rina's
characteristically mischievous process of transformation of objects
and their cultural locations playfully unhinges them from their unique
specificity. The result has been both a fragmented object that
offered a new way of seeing the culture. Her use of narrative text
which decorate the work with meaning and intention further playing
with the idea of artist voice and the aesthetic of exotic beauty
physical illusion of ornamental object as sign.
Rina Banerjee was born in 1963, Calcutta, India. Educated at Yale
University, School of Art 1995 and currently lives and works in New
York City. She has exhibited internationally including solo
exhibitions in New York City, with upcoming exhibitions Berlin(2007),
Paris(2006) . She has shown in such prominent group exhibitions as
Tsumari – Echigo's 3rd Triennial , Japan(2006), The Greater New York
Show, PS1 MOMA(2005), Massachusetes Museum of Contemporary Art, North
Adams (2004), Whitney Museum of American Art's Atliera Space(2003).The
Whitney Biennial (2000) at the Whitney Museum of American Art.
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