NANDITA RAMAN:
DO NOT FORGET ME

September 27-November 17, 2018


sepiaEYE is honored to present our first solo exhibition of Nandita Raman entitled, DO NOT FORGET ME which features works from series, Film Studio (2014) and Cinema Play House (2006-2009).

DO NOT FORGET ME borrows its title from a short story by Alexander Kluge (Cinema Stories, 2007) about a German actor’s desire to be loved and remembered forever. The muted color works in Film Studio touch on the objects that produced lasting memories­­: cameras draped in faded fabrics, well-worn ladders— shrouded remnants of a once teeming industry left in the dust.  Raman’s photographs of these objects, tools, and spaces that at one time rendered the imaginary visible, serve as mnemonic devices that spark anecdotes and recollections of the history of Indian cinema.

In Manik-da’s Camera, there appears to be three floating cameras enveloped in a haze achieved by using the image multiplier filter from the floating camera’s kit. These filters were once popular for depicting fantastical dream sequences in Indian films. Satyajit Ray, the famous filmmaker, was known amongst his friends and the industry as Manik-da. The camera he shot on was forever known as that camera. As with past photographic series, Raman applies her almost decade-long exploration of temporality, impermanence, and the unreliability of memory to Indian cinematic history.

“When I went back to Kolkata in 2013 a few years after photographing the cinema halls there, it was evident to trace the footsteps of film backwards from the cinema hall to film studio. The old filmmaking gear was stored in corners of the shooting floors and in dark rooms shrouded under blankets. When this equipment was uncovered, I sensed the spirit of experimentation and whim of post independence (50s and 70s). It is this spirit that I pursued while photographing these machines of optics and sound.“ ­­— Nandita Raman

At Technician’s Studio founded by the legendary cinematographer Ramananda Sengupta, we see where Satyajit Ray’s Pather Panchali and fellow Bengali filmmaker, Ritwik Ghatak’s films were laced with sound, the console covered in a thin layer of dust and a towel casually draped on the back of the editor’s chair. In another image, Manik-da’s chair quietly sits in the exterior grounds of Image India, its white wrappings fluttering in the breeze.

The color photographs from Raman’s Film Studio (2014) compliment her earlier study Cinema Play House (2006-2009), wherein she traveled through India creating a series of black-and-white, formally composed photographs depicting the country’s slowly disappearing single-screen theatres.  Raman, whose family owned one such theater in Varanasi, focused her lens on the architectural anomalies and human touch that set these spaces apart from larger multiplex theaters that threaten their existence.

ABOUT THE ARTIST


Nandita Raman (b. 1980,Varanasi, India) works with a range of mediums including photography, video, drawing and language. Her work has most notably been exhibited at George Eastman Museum (Fall, 2017) Center for Documentary Studies, Duke University (2010), and Columbia University (2012).

Her cinema hall photographs are currently on view at The Museum of the Moving Image from September 15, 2018 – January 27, 2019.  This solo exhibition of Cinema Play House will include a film program presented by Priyadarshini Shanker, PhD Candidate and Adjunct Faculty at NYU and Columbia University.

Raman has curated exhibitions including “I need my memories. They are my documents” at sepiaEYE, NY (2015) and Riktata [emptiness] at Kriti Gallery, Varanasi (2017).  She is a recipient of Alkazi Foundation’s Documentary Photography Grant (2016), and residencies at Baxter St Camera Club of New York (2017) and Stanica Zilina-Zariecie, Slovakia (2013).

Raman is a graduate of the Bard College-International Center of Photography's MFA program and teaches at SUNY Purchase College where she continues to write and lecture on photography and art.

Collections holding her work include the George Eastman Museum, Kiyosato Museum of Photographic Arts, The Snite Museum of Art, Library of ICP, & Bard College, and many private collections.


NANDITA RAMAN: DO NOT FORGET ME

Exhibition dates: September 27 - November 17, 2018

Opening Reception: Thursday, September 27, 2o18 6-8PM

Press Release (PDF) 
Exhibition List (PDF)

REVIEWS/PRESS:
Nandita Raman, Do Not Forget Me @sepiaEYE, Collector Daily (October 23, 2018)
sepiaEye Gallery Review: Nandita Raman’s Do Not Forget Me, Musee Magazine (October 24, 2018)

sepiaEYE
547 West 27th Street, #608, New York, NY 10001