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Installation view of “Memento,” at Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 2021. Courtesy and copyright Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.

Kindred Spirits: Jayashree Chakravarty and Lam Tung Pang in “Memento”

Asian Art Museum
USA India Hong Kong

Is it really possible to put on an exhibition consisting of only two artworks? It is no small feat to find two art pieces compelling enough to activate an otherwise empty gallery space. This is what the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco attempted with “Memento,” which transformed the corridor-like exhibition hall into a cohesive, immersive presentation of two large-scale installations by Kolkata-based artist Jayashree Chakravarty and Hong Kong artist Lam Tung Pang.

Installation view of JAYASHREE CHAKRAVARTY’s Personal Space, 2001, mixed media on paper, 247 × 975.4 cm, at “Memento,” Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 2021. Courtesy and copyright Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.

Chakravarty’s Personal Space (2001) is a monumental paper scroll that unfurls in mid-air, suspended several feet off the ground. The surface bears the lines and markings of a topographic map but possesses a veinous, gossamer texture that recalls reptilian shedded skin. Viewers can walk inside of the scroll’s main fold to be nearly enveloped by the grand, curtain-like swathes. Lam’s A day of two Suns (2019) consists of four projectors that cast images of mountains, flowers, and birds on both sides of an upright paper screen. Human figures drift alongside the projections of pale, slightly transparent wildflowers and fluttering birds that appear and then fade, momentarily forming atmospheric landscapes that recall Chinese ink shanshui paintings. Chakravarty’s and Lam’s fantastical yet slightly melancholy sceneries are unexpected representations of Kolkata and Hong Kong—two places more associated with rampant urbanization than nature.

“Memento” is one of the Asian Art Museum’s inaugural exhibitions, unveiling part of a USD 38 million expansion and rebranding project that includes a robust contemporary art program. The double feature of artists from Kolkata and Hong Kong marks the institution’s dedication to historically underrepresented regions in contemporary art. Creating artistic dialogue between India and Hong Kong suggests interest in postcolonial subjects, given their intertwined political and economic histories as British colonies. In writing, however, the exhibition barely mentions any macro-historical context. As the title implies, “Memento” focuses on the shared nostalgic sensibilities of Chakravarty and Lam.

Detail of JAYASHREE CHAKRAVARTY’s Personal Space, 2001, mixed media on paper, 247 × 975.4 cm, at “Memento,” Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 2021. Courtesy and copyright Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.

Detail of JAYASHREE CHAKRAVARTY’s Personal Space, 2001, mixed media on paper, 247 × 975.4 cm, at “Memento,” Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 2021. Courtesy and copyright Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.

The word “memento” denotes seemingly unassuming objects that hold deeply personal meanings. Indeed, both installations contain minuscule details that highlight Chakravarty’s and Lam’s childhood memories and interests. Walking along the length of Personal Space recalls traveling across the roads inscribed on the surface. It inspires a “choose your own adventure” experience. The map resembles one found at the beginning of a storybook or even a video game, where the viewer chooses one of the thin, black lines labeled “HOPE LANE” or “CONVENTIONAL STREET” that physically guides them around the scroll to signposts such as “HOME I,” “HOME II,” and “HOME III.” Minuscule drawings of bicycles and fish nestle between the lines, which spark connections to Chakravarty’s childhood memories of the jungles of Tripura and her journey to the urban sprawl of her current base in modern-day Kolkata.

Just as Chakravarty disrupts the traditional art form of map-making, A day of two Suns contains whimsical, childish details that break the gravitas of Chinese ink landscape. An eclectic series of object-sculptures, consisting of cobbled-together household goods, plastic toys, plywood, and laser-cut plastic, resemble islands that sit on both sides of the screen. In both material and subject matter, these islands commemorate Lam’s location in Fo Tan, a district in the New Territories tied to the history of Hong Kong’s postwar industry. Among the various commodities produced in Hong Kong were plastic toys, which primed Lam’s lifelong fascination with children’s material culture. When the factories moved to mainland China, artists set up studios in the old industrial blocks. Although the toys add whimsy to the fantastical landscape, they are also vestiges of Hong Kong’s economic history that convey Lam’s anxiety regarding rapidly changing urban and socio-political environments.

“Memento” revealed a vision for contemporary art that perhaps prioritizes personal stories over more historically oriented engagement. At the same time, the focus on the artist’s individual life stories over their sociopolitical context left the broader significance of this cross-regional exchange uncertain. The exhibition never explained the temporal gap between Personal Space and A day of two Suns, which were created 18 years apart. More information and explicit comparison of Kolkatan and Hong Kong histories would help contextualize the sociopolitical significance of the individual works, as well as their synergies.

Memento: Jayashree Chakravarty and Lam Tung Pang” is on view at the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco, until June 2022.

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Installation view of LAM TUNG PANG’s A day of two Suns, 2019, mixed media video projection, dimensions and duration variable, at “Memento,” Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 2021. Courtesy the artist and Blindspot Gallery, Hong Kong.
Installation view of LAM TUNG PANG’s A day of two Suns, 2019, mixed media video projection, dimensions and duration variable, at “Memento,” Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 2021. Courtesy the artist and Blindspot Gallery, Hong Kong.
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