Roberts Projects announces “Suchitra Mattai: In the absence of power. In the presence of love”, the gallery’s first exhibition with the artist. The show presents new mixed-media paintings, tapestries, and a soft-sculpture installation that evoke the artist’s Indo-Caribbean heritage. Mattai’s work engages with the subject and form of European pastoral landscapes and figuration as well as Indian miniature paintings. Linking craft-based processes, sumptuous weavings and traditional techniques, the artist portrays resolute brown heroines, replacing heroes and colonizers and reclaiming a patriarchal past.
The artist’s ancestral history informs her dialogue with European painting. Mattai’s great-grandparents were brought from the state of Uttar Pradesh, India to Guyana, South America as indentured laborers under British colonial rule. Guyana, South America, is considered part of the Caribbean due to its shared history, culture, and proximity. When slavery ended in the Caribbean in the 1800s, the British looked to their largest colony, India, to find laborers to work the sugar plantations.
Mattai describes her process as one of “brown reclamation,” reworking original images to tell new stories. Embroidery, needlepoint, beading and found objects insert women’s handiwork into the traditional painterly landscapes. In other works, the heroic stories, figures, animals, patterns, and landscapes of Indian miniature paintings are reconfigured. Here, the heroes are replaced by heroines—empowered and mythic, yet empathetic and accessible. They are peaceful warriors and include both the young and the old. In Future Tense (2023), a woman quietly reads of the future surrounded by floral needlepoints and a black beaded halo, combining myth, memory, and folktales.
The artist learned sewing, embroidering, and other techniques from her grandmothers, and uses family heirlooms in the work as an acknowledgment of her ancestry. Vibrant tapestries woven from saris (the clothes worn by many South Asian women) metaphorically unite members of the South Asian diaspora, who are spread across the globe—India, Europe, and the Americas. With every stitch and strip of fabric, the artist meditates on the lives of her maternal lineage.
Panel Discussion: Transgressive Materiality
Saturday, July 29th, 4-6PM
Using the framework of “Transgressive Materiality,” a select group of curators and academics who are expert in the different fields of Craft processes, South Asian and Caribbean culture, discuss Suchitra’s practice as well as other contemporary artists and how the three aspects intertwine and inform the contemporary art landscape.
Roberts Projects | 442 South La Brea Avenue, Los Angeles
On View July 15-August 26, 2023
Opening July 15, 2023 | 6-8PM
Panel Discussion July 29, 2023 | 4-6PM