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Home / Arts and Entertainment / Artist's Extinction Archive: Ash, Laser Dots Mourn Species

Artist's Extinction Archive: Ash, Laser Dots Mourn Species

6 Feb

Summary

  • Artist uses ash and pesticide-dipped rice paper to depict over 900 species.
  • Laser dots symbolize uncountable deaths across species due to human crises.
  • The art serves as a memorial to ecological and social violence.
Artist's Extinction Archive: Ash, Laser Dots Mourn Species

At the 17th India Art Fair, artist Kulpreet Singh presents 'Extinction Archive,' a powerful installation questioning humanity's trajectory. Nearly a thousand square panels, made from pesticide-dipped rice paper and ash from stubble burning, depict over 900 threatened animal, fungal, and plant species. Laser dots on each panel signify the uncountable deaths resulting from various man-made crises, from pollution to climate change.

The work, commissioned by the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, acts as a memorial to ecological and social violence. Singh, based in Patiala, aims to archive the transformed environment, highlighting issues like farm fires, polluted rivers, and increasing carbon pollution. He expresses concern that elements of nature are slipping from collective consciousness, with many species now existing only in imagination.

Species like the Mauritian giant skink and white blotched shrub frog, drawn from the IUCN Red List, are featured. Singh connects his art to farmers' plight, using stubble ash and pesticide imagery to represent farmers who have died by suicide due to environmental ruin. The 'Extinction Archive' is an ongoing project, with Singh planning to add more endangered species.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Kulpreet Singh's 'Extinction Archive' is an art installation featuring drawings of over 900 threatened species on rice paper, using ash and laser dots to represent ecological and social violence.
Kulpreet Singh uses pesticide-dipped rice paper, ash from stubble burning, and laser dots in his 'Extinction Archive' installation.
Kulpreet Singh's 'Extinction Archive' is being exhibited at the ongoing 17th India Art Fair.

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