The Desert of the Anthropocene
Ravi Agarwal
(2013 – ongoing)
Installation with photographic works, text, videos and
objects
The
ongoing project traverses and contrasts a personal memory of a desert
homeland in a now abandoned ancestral home with new capitalistic
exploitation of the ‘barren’ landscape. Pointing towards the loss of the
local leading to the breakdown of ecological constructs of identity,
food systems, water, and land, the terrain is now increasingly thought
of as infertile, leading to it being a ground for nuclear testing, new
industrial mining and capital intensive irrigation canals. Meanwhile,
the dried up wells, ponds, loss of livelihoods, and the slow
disappearance of a rich culture is leading to another kind of human
evacuation. Yet, what is considered bare or barren is in fact deeply
inhabited and fertile in multiple ways.
The work
is a part of an ongoing investigation into the current state of the
nature, both as a crisis which traverses a political realm, but also a
cultural contestation of how ‘nature’ is thought of in the era of the
Anthropocene. Nature has been impersonalised into an abstract idea to be
exploited, even as on the ground everyday inhabitations of lived
ecologies weave in and out of the human life, and contest the idea of a
homogeneous nature. In many ways the reductionist binary man--nature has
taken over other cultural ways in which nature is or can be inhabited,
and brings into question the current overarching approach towards
sustainability.
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