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The

Artist

Dev Dhunsi

Nominated in
2023
By
Fotogalleriet
Lives and Works in

Dev Dhunsi is a Norwegian artist based in Stockholm, Sweden. In recent years, his works have revolved around a series of journeys to his father’s home country of India. His projects combine textiles, lens-based works and experimental printing techniques into mixed media presentations. The images themselves speak to sociopolitical and anthropological questions that exist beyond the picture’s frame. Dhunsi’s works examine identity, origin, and encounters between cultures; exploring the cultural bridge between his ancestry and his upbringing in Norway.

Projects

Ankhon Dekhi

My previous solo exhibition, MaskiniTaal, studied the link between human and machine energy. On a later journey to India, I became interested in human and machine noise – and how I could capture it through sound or images. I was in the perfect place. Unfortunately, the caste system still exists in India; the family you are born into and your occupational status determine your social position. Ramgarhia is the name of the craftsman caste to which my family belongs, and which is portrayed in Ankhon Dekhi. In the past, the ramgarhia were named "untouchables" – it is thought that upper castes should not be touched by lower castes, because they will become dirty. In my family home in Norway, we keep several carpets hand-woven by my grandmother. The textile industry in India is extremely varied, with hand-spun and hand-woven textiles sectors at one end of the spectrum, and capital-intensive sophisticated mills sector at the other end. I was eager to visit a larger production plant making towels and bed sheets, which supplies products to the likes of Ikea and Jysk. I later realised that my shared house in Oslo contained products from the same factory. I accessed the factory through a strict security gate, posing as part of another group. The building spanned over a kilometre long, making it the world’s longest of its kind. On such a scale, human bodies and machines seem to merge into a single energy and constant noise. In the book, Soundscape, by Murray Schafer, the author asks: "is the soundscape of the world a composition beyond our control, or whether we are the composers and performers responsible to give it shape and friction?” When I moved through the factory – with its unstoppable noise – I tried to capture the conditions of production behind the textiles we use everyday. 

Dev Dhunsi
was nominated by
Fotogalleriet
in
2023
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

The work of Dev Dhunsi is inspired by the migratory movement of his family from South Asia. His photo-installation Ankhon Dekhi (2022) touches upon the complexity of society with its many -scapes (landscape, soundscape, mediascape) and the materiality of his photographic approach spans different media from textile to sculptural installation. As a subject with a complex historiography and layered diasporic knowledge, he focuses on the sociological character of photography.

Paulina Tamara's commitment to photography as a means of representation is manifold. Her work comprises longstanding work with youth, exploring what they're coming to know in expressing their sexuality and gender freely. In Undress, looking at a queer woman undressing (2021), Tamara invited 15 people to watch her undressing while took pictures of the session with a trigger – an exercise in looking when both taking and giving complete control over the image.

Naina Helén Jåma is a photographer working for influential Norwegian newspapers and magazines. She started her career as a South Sámi mediator in Jåhkåmåhkke at the Ájtte Museum at 13, and continues to maintain a close relationship with traditional Sámi arts. In her project Vætnoe (2018–),  Jåma speaks about traditional forms in living matter in Sámi people's livelihood, and how these forms and shapes continue to be part of the technological availability of today.

Ilavenil Vasuky Jayapalan is a dissenting multidisciplinary artist. As a child of the Tamil Tigers ,and the subject of echoes of the traumatic effects of civil war, he ponders a postcolonial take on propaganda. Among the works Jayapalan has shared for FUTURES is Hello freeends 4.1 (2022), a self-portrait crafted through AI manipulation, based on what a South Asian person looks like to a machine when fed bits of information.

Bobby Yu Shuk Pui grounds her work in the queer and genderless exploration of body politics, with a critical perspective on the social norms and constructs dictating reproduction and beautification – pushed to the forefront of the capitalist agenda in Asia, where Pui began her work. In the ongoing Genetic Salon (2020–), Put presents a web of video clips, exhibitions, and other material, leading the audience into a seductive imagination of the future.