Building tapestries of drawings and found objects
Sarita Jaiswal studied at College of Art, New Delhi. After dabbling in various art forms, what fascinated Sarita the most were found objects. She uses a variety of materials such as textiles, jute and silk, overlapped with drawings to create her artworks.
Untitled- I by Sarita JaiswalKochi-Muziris Biennale
In Sarita's own words, "Artists have long been interested in the formal relationship between things."
"How do objects relate to each other?"
Untitled- I (drawing) by Sarita JaiswalKochi-Muziris Biennale
"How do colors, shapes and textures interact?"
Untitled- II by Sarita JaiswalKochi-Muziris Biennale
Her work is about relationships of different kinds..
..which she finds are mostly dominated by pretentiousness, formality, calculation, incompleteness, and confusion.
Unsorted by Sarita JaiswalKochi-Muziris Biennale
Misunderstandings often remain unresolved..
..and we have learned to live with conflicts without the possibility of closure.
The Students’ Biennale seeks to complement and strengthen the fine arts education system in India and is the largest educational initiative of the Kochi Biennale Foundation. The fourth edition was led by a team of five artists and art educators – Adip Dutta, Archana Hande, Manoj Vyloor, Suresh K Nair and Vasudha Thozhur, and featured 314 student artists from over 62 education institutions across India to produce approximately 45 projects.
Compiled and Edited by Mala Yamey
https://art.snu.edu.in/people/faculty/vasudha-thozhur