Conversation Chambers: Museum Bhavan

Dayanita Singh

By Kiran Nadar Museum of Art

Kiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum Bhavan (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum Bhavan is a travelling family of museums made by Dayanita Singh. Each museum holds old and new images in movable wooden structures, from the time Singh began photography in 1981 until the present.

Museum Bhavan (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

The museums can be opened and closed by the artist to create different shapes, spaces and connections within and among them.

They come with their own boxes, tables, stools and benches. These become part of different kinds of movement, activity and interaction that animate the viewer's experience of the museums.

Museum Bhavan at KNMA (View 1) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Here, we enter Museum Bhavan, as installed in KNMA.

On our left is the File Museum

And on our right is the Museum of Little Ladies.

In front of us is the Museum of Photography and behind it, or through it, we can see the Museum of Furniture.

At the other end of the room is the Kochi Pillar on the left

and the Museum of Machines on the right.

Museum Bhavan at KNMA (View 2) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Each museum displays images on the outside, sometimes interspersed with framed texts.

It opens up to reveal a reserve collection of images stored inside.

The images on reserve are often kept in boxes that may be taken out of the museum and displayed on the walls of the room in which the museums stand.

Museum Bhavan at KNMA (View 3) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Combining display and storage, inside and outside, image and structure, the museums can also form shifting relationships among one another. This compels viewers not only to look at the images but also to engage with the physical experience of moving among the arrangements of images in space.

Sibling Museums (View 1): Little Ladies Museum and File Museum (2015) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Within the family, Museum of Little Ladies (left) and File Museum (right) are distinct but also sibling museums. They can stand apart from, or reach out to, each other, depending on how they are placed open or closed. Images can also move across the museums to suggest hidden connections.

Sibling Museums (View 2): Little Ladies Museum and File Museum (2015) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

The Museum of Little Ladies mingles photographs made by Singh's mother, Nony, of the artist and her siblings at different stages of their childhood with portraits made by the artist herself of various little girls and young women at different stages of their lives.

File Museum collects images of working bureaucratic archives and of the people who maintain the mix of chaos and order in these archives.

File Museum (2015) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

File Museum was the first of Singh's museums. Its 140 images become not only an elegy to paper and its decay in time but also a record of the cupboards, tables and chairs, the lights and fans, that hold this forest of matter and data together in an age of inevitable digitization.

But nestling in this timeless labyrinth is an image of a girl on a bed, one of Singh's iconic images, suggesting some secret traffic between the sibling museums.

Little Ladies Museum - 1961 to Present (View 1) (2013 - 2015) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

That girl on the bed assumes multiple forms in the Museum of Little Ladies. Its central panel is a chronological axis, a spine of time, formed by portraits of the artist made by her mother at key moments in her daughter's life.

It recalls themes and characters from other bodies of work by Singh -- Mona Ahmed, for instance, with whom Singh began her career as a maker of photo-book.

Little Ladies Museum - 1961 to Present (View 2) (2013 - 2015) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Just as the turning of the pages becomes part of the activity of reading a book, moving the arms of a museum to create different kinds of architecture become part of the organic life of these image-spaces. Book-making and museum-making are inseparable in Singh's work.

The Museum of Furniture and the Museum of Photography (View 1) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

If museums can be siblings, they can be cousins too, as the Museum of Furniture and Museum of Photography turned out to be. Beds and chairs have their unique way of marking the invisible presence of persons in the emptiest of rooms. But pieces of furniture are also like people.

The Museum of Furniture and the Museum of Photography (View 1) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

So, the Museum of Furniture becomes a collection of portraits -- of individuals, couples and groups. Meanwhile, the Museum of Photography gathers together the many ways in which human beings live with images, creating spaces and rituals around their changing relationships with these images.

The Museum of Furniture and the Museum of Photography (View 3) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

The closeness of the two cousins, Furniture and Photography, creates here an outside of broken visual planes as well as an inside space. The latter turns into a kind of room that both beckons the viewer in and keeps them out in a limbo between inside and outside.

The Museum of Furniture and the Museum of Photography (View 4) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

So, the whispering chamber created by Furniture and Photography reveals its own seat that could turn it into a room for solitary thought, if the viewer has the time for it.

The Museum of Furniture and the Museum of Photography (View 5) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

In all this structural flux, the Museum of Furniture took another name, at a certain time, and became the Museum of Conversation.

Meanwhile, the Museum of Machines opens up to become less pillar-like, as photography aspires to the conditions of sculpture or architecture, to entice and embrace the human body.

The Museum of Vitrines and the Museum of Furniture (2013) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museums also give birth to other museums. The Museum of Furniture, for instance, produced the Museum of Vitrines, which hangs behind it on the wall. As the furniture for both display and storage, vitrines become the homes for objects, preserving them both in and out of time.

The Museum of Men and the Museum of Photography (2013) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

The Museum of Men stands shrouded in white on one side, its images glimmering from behind the unbleached cotton cloth. This is how the museums are veiled when they return to Singh's residence between their travels.

In the Museum of Photography, the women holding their own portraits become images as well as contemplators of their own mortal passage through time.

The Museum of Machines (View 1) (2015) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Next door, the Museum of Machines closes its arms to turn into a Confession Chamber. Visitors are invited to make their appointments to enter and sit on the stool inside to commune with their favourite machine.

The Museum of Machines (View 2) (2015) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Poised between the domestic and the institutional the museums hold in their structures two kinds and scales of looking, editing, connecting and interpreting, the lines between which are blurred continually.

The Kochi Pillar (2015) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

The Kochi Pillar was unveiled by Bose Krishnamachari and Riyas Komu on 31st January, 2016. It is a distillation of Singh's "1.9.2014 Dear Mr Walter," shown at the Second Kochi Biennale.

On the wall, a row of empty boxes hangs, waiting to be turned into the Office Museum, which is incubating in the Museum of Furniture.

The Museum of Printing Press (2015) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Like pieces of furniture and the machines, the strange objects in the Museum of the Printing Press are both images from a history of the book and a typology of bizarre creatures and forms.

These printing machines stand witness to the importance of Singh's experience of printing her own books with Gerhard Steidl. She often calls herself an offset artist.

The Museum of Chance (View 1) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Some of the printing presses were originally part of the Museum of Chance, made up of two gigantic pillars that open up in different ways to form a large, single chamber for conversation, with its own stools and table.

The Museum of Chance (View 2) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum of Chance, closed or open, offers a place of chance encounters between people as they contemplate the endless relations among vertical, horizontal and diagonal sequences held together in the monumental embrace of Chance.

The Museum of Chance (View 3) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

That embrace waxes and wanes in order to create different patterns of viewing and movement. Visitors can encircle as well as enter, since there are images and text on both sides of the museum.

The Museum of Chance (View 4) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Chance works on a different scale from the other museums, It is more monumental than domestic, evoking a range of photographic and architectural associations and memories, from hugely enlarged contact sheets to distant urban house-fronts and skylines.

The Museum of Chance (View 5) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

As the two halves of the museum fan out and start to form a large chamber, what begins to change in complexity is not only the visual but also the auditory. The acoustics of both the venue and the gradually forming museum chamber gets transformed continually.

The Museum of Chance (View 6) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

A visitor dwells in solitude inside the chamber. But outside, there could be people who are not visible but are audible from inside, and therefore become part of the experience of the inside. And the same could be said of a visitor contemplating the images on the outer surface of the structure.

The Museum of Chance (View 7) (2013 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

The entire museum could be made to unfold in many different forms, from a simple enclosure to a labyrinth. The viewer is never allowed to contemplate photography as an encounter with a single image, but as a fluid, yet rigorously controlled and authored, constellation of images and forms.

The Museum of Erotics and the Museum of Chance (2016 - Ongoing) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Depending on what the viewer brings to this museum, Chance could prove to be a prolific goddess. One viewer was invited by the artist to create an entirely new museum out of the Museum of Chance. He called it the Museum of Erotics, and it hangs on the wall here alongside Chance.

Beginnings and endings come together in this journey of self-engendering museums as Mona Ahmed returns to this particular instance of a museum within a museum, to make longing, loss and the passage of time part of the same ongoing story.

Museum of Shedding (View 6) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum Bhavan in Storage (View 1) (2015-05/2015-05) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum Bhavan in Storage (View 3) (2015-05/2015-05) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum Bhavan in Storage (View 2) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum Bhavan in Storage (View 4) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum of Shedding (View 1) (2015-05/2015-05) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum of Shedding (View 2) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum of Shedding (View 3) (2015-05/2015-05) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum of Shedding (View 4) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Museum of Shedding (View 5) (2015-05/2015-05) by Dayanita SinghKiran Nadar Museum of Art

Credits: Story

Text by Aveek Sen
Images by Umang Bhattacharyya and Simon White
Video by Umang Bhattacharyya
Production by Simrat Dugal

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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