Shivanjani Lal is a Fijian-Australian artist and curator whose work uses personal grief to account for ancestral loss. She uses storytelling, objects and video to account for lost histories and to explore narratives of indenture and migratory histories from the Indian and Pacific oceans. Lal’s work acts as a guide through lived and imagined narratives, attempting to decipher what is lost and the possibilities of futures. Lal’s work is grounded in truth telling and a questioning of art history.
'Mere Porvaj [I am remembering]' speaks to the history that has been forgotten, the labour of women, and the love of a land that continues to hold them. Incorporating print making, textiles, objects and a song that holds it all together, this exhibition presents a meditation on who gets to remember but also small moments of joy and prayer that allow a community to continue and persist.
[Images > Shivanjani Lal, Mere Porvaj (Land in there bodies) 1, Eucalyptus Oil Transfer Prints on Rice Paper made on Wulgurukaba of Gurambilbarra and Yunbenun land. > Shivanjani Lal, Mere Porvaj (Land in there bodies) 2, Eucalyptus Oil Transfer Prints on Rice Paper made on Wulgurukaba of Gurambilbarra and Yunbenun land. Images courtesy of the artist.]