A Dying Man Sings of That Which Felled Him

 

 

Installation with 'rebars' embedded in Concrete, Illumination, Furniture, Video Camera, two 42" Flat Screen Monitors, 1 DVD player and Text

“A dying man sings of that which felled him” presents its visitors with a silent song of a thousand words, a bier of iron rods for the repose of a fallen man, a setting sun, and an empty chair awaiting a visitor.

Here, in this long twilight, a story from the Bhishma Canto of the Mahabharata - replayed as if on a remote camera, realized with construction materials - is configured to form a meditation on contemporary capitalism.The list of a thousand words (reminiscent of Bhishma's death-bed incantation of the thousand names of Vishnu) may be thought of as a 'dying declaration', or as an eulogy chanted by a dying man to the power that felled him. The installation involves us all as witnesses to this terminal state.

At a time when the rhetoric of impending ‘super-powerdom’ resounds in the metropolises of South Asia with an exhausting monotony, this installation is a reminder of the whimsical contingencies of the operation of power which spare no one, not even those who imagine themselves at the helm of affairs. The iron rods - a notational trope that recalls both the buillding and destruction of cities as well as Bhishma's death-bed of arrows made by Arjun during the Mahabharata battle - act as a reminder of the fragility and tenuousness of our hold on the world. The visitor is invited to contemplate their own recorded image within the matrix of this installation, and to reflect on the caveats that this work offers to the discourse of triumph that surrounds us today.

1st shown at: 'Subcontingent' curated by Ilaria Bonacossa and Francesco Monacorda, at the Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin, Italy
29th of June, 2006 - 8th of October 2006

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