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How Art Uplifts Journalism By Lending Soul To The Story

Art is a form of thinking. In a world where 바카라fake news바카라 dismantles 바카라facts바카라, art is another way to uphold the storytelling that is journalism바카라s soul.

바카라Even in the darkest of times we have the right to ­expect some illumination, and that such illumination may come less from theories and concepts than from the uncertain, flickering, and often weak light that some men and women, in their lives and works, will kindle under almost all circumstances and shed over the time-span that was given them on Earth.바카라

바카라Hannah Arendt, Men in Dark Times

바카라What is to be done바카라 is a sentence I have often wondered about. In every aspect. In his What Is To Be Done? (1902), Lenin argued that fighting economic battles with employers over wages and working hours won바카라t make the working class political. But that바카라s not where I came across the sentence. I found it while reading about the Russian art collective Chto Delat (What is to be done?). Since its foundation in 2003, the collective has published an English-Russian newspaper with a special focus on the re-politicisation of Russian intellectual culture. One of their early works, 바카라Builders바카라 (2004-05), had five artists restaging a painting. Four men and a woman, all workers, pose during their break against the distant backdrop of Viktor Popkov바카라s 바카라Builders of Bratsk바카라 (1961).  The idea was to retest the meaning of here and now. Sixty years later, the act of repetition made it possible to re-evaluate the meaning of labour and community in the new post-communist reality, a revelation of disappointment in the very bold promises of the arrival of democratic order in the early 1990s.

We live in the same world. We believed in the same promises. We have similar disappointments. In fact, the collective was formed as a response to these broken promises.

For Chto Delat, art was a necessary evil where they used it to produce political effect. Art is necessary in our times to say more, to show more and to make us see more. Over the years that I have ­covered art, I have come across a lot of work that ­reminded me of the old promises of journalism that now stand broken. Among them was the 바카라Sea of Pain바카라, a 2016 installation at the Kochi-Muziris Biennale by Chilean poet Raul Zurita.

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In that small town by the sea, we waded into the make-believe sea to read the poem that was displayed at the end. Zurita named it the 바카라Sea of Pain바카라.

바카라No one can mimic his final image moored face down at the water바카라s edge. No artist can provide that low blow. Ah, the world of art, the world of images, billions of images. The words of a poem are cleaner, more pure,바카라 Zurita wrote.

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Zurita offered no answers in a post-truth world. He only offered words, a sea, an art installation.

He had flowed seawater into an old warehouse at Aspinwall at the third edition of Kochi-Muziris Biennale, and in this sea he conjured a multitude of seas and deaths he had witnessed for years in Chile where he was born in 1950.

The poem was an ode to the Syrian refugee child who had drowned. He had read about Aylan Kurdi in the newspapers, heard about the drowned ­children on the radio and wondered about the faceless Galip Kurdi, the other brother.

Don바카라t you listen?
Don바카라t you look?
Don바카라t you hear me?
Don바카라t you see me?
Don바카라t you feel me?
In the sea of pain
Won바카라t you come back, never
again, in the sea of pain?

In another installation he envisioned, photographs of sea cliffs in northern Chile had phrases typed out across them. 바카라You Will See Soldiers at Dawn,바카라 바카라You Will See the Snows of the End,바카라 바카라You Will See Cities of Water,바카라 바카라You Will See What Goes,바카라 바카라You Will See Not Seeing바카라 and 바카라And You Will Weep.바카라 Zurita called it 바카라Your Life Breaking바카라.

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In 1993, he had used a bulldozer to construct a geoglyph in the sands of the Atacama desert. It was a phrase that read 바카라ni pena ni miedo바카라, or 바카라neither shame nor fear바카라.

That would have made a great cover for a news magazine. In abstraction, there is a message. Everything affects everyone. Mediums are different. Expressions are varied. Combined, they have a lot of power. Together, they can make a lot of thought possible. What we need is reflection. Design is not an excuse to underplay the stories. On the contrary, they add something more.

Waging Art

(L-R) Emily Hage바카라s 2020 book on Dadaist magazines; a still from Partisan Songspiel: A Belgrade Story, a 2009 film by Russian art collective Chto Delat

Poets, artists and journalists are storytellers. A convergence is the need of the hour. Magazines have used art on their covers or in the inside pages. The New Yorker covers are examples of this collaboration. An image can speak a thousand words. In times like these, images can say what we can바카라t. That idea compels us at Outlook to use works of artists in our stories and on the cover. To provoke, inspire and remind.

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The cracked foot on the cover of Outlook바카라s October 4 issue (Caste Faultlines) was from an installation by Prabhakar Kamble, a Mumbai-based artist and curator associated with the Secular Art Movement. The idea was to look at divisions in society on the basis of caste. When Outlook approached him for a collaboration, he said art is not less than journalism.

바카라There should be frequent collaborations bet­ween them. When I saw 바카라Broken Foot바카라 on the cover, I was impressed by the media바카라s power by getting an overwhelming response internationally. An image/artwork can convey thousands of words and a work like 바카라Broken Foot바카라, which speaks about social imbalance, must be seen and discussed by more people,바카라 Kamble says.

In my experience of reporting on art, mainstream art galleries don바카라t promote or appreciate works dealing with caste politics. We still live in a fractured society, a fractured time.

바카라We must have more modes to make it more acc­essible towards what cause it has been created and media is an important aspect to represent such thoughts. There are many artists working on such issues who need to get a good platform as representation. I am sure there will be more collaborations by Outlook in future,바카라 says Kamble.

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The cover of our last issue (November 1) ­featured Lahore-based artist Rashid Rana바카라s 바카라Ommatidia III바카라 (2004), a portrait of Shah Rukh Khan made of thousands of candid photos of men in Lahore. The issue looked at Shah Rukh, whose son Aryan Khan is in jail on drug charges. The endless trolling of the actor, also for being a Muslim, is what made us do this cover as an intervention, a pause, a reminder to people of a time when actors weren바카라t cast in religion-coded avatars. When Outlook approached the artist and Chemould Prescott Road gallery in Mumbai with the proposition of using the portrait, Rana said it would be interesting to see how an image of the Bollywood star he made using the compound eye analogy is rethought in the current context. His series explores notions of hero worship, identities and intersection of multiple gazes.

Books on the shelf that intrigue the writer with their covers, their words, their plots, their politics

An image has its own life, Rana says. This image is then an interventionist form. Images can be ret­hought. To me, SRK바카라s gaze, the illusionary whole, was the oppositional gaze, a defiant act. The term 바카라oppositional gaze바카라 was developed in 1992 by feminist author Bell Hooks, who said power is in the looking. It refers to 바카라looking바카라 as a defiant act. Here, we see the actor and a father and a Muslim and he sees us looking for his place in the 바카라new India바카라.

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Newsstands are the new art galleries. That바카라s how I conceptualise covers. I envision them in frames that hang on my walls. The cracked foot disturbed me. It made me remember the time when I saw the cracked feet of a manual scavenger in a village near Meerut. It made me think of the cracked earth. In our 바카라island lives바카라, we need such reminders. Every cover is a reminder. The wall in my house I imagine as memory wall. Post-memory, post-human, post-empathy. All these terms that exist and don바카라t exist.

I am interested in the interrogation and interpretation parts. Readers and viewers are artists, curators, thinkers. Art is a form of thinking. Hanneke Grootenboer, author of The Pensive Image: Art as a Form of Thinking (2021), argues thinking is also a collective act. French philosopher Alain Badiou says on contemporary art that 바카라it is better to do nothing than to contribute to the invention of formal ways of rendering visible that which Empire already recognises as existent바카라.

In Outlook, art is not confined just to the cover, but is also integral to the stories and columns inside, adding value to text

Art바카라s aesthetic potential is also at the core of pol­itical engagement. Jacques Rancière, ­another French philosopher, says aesthetic ­regime breaks the barriers and renders more ­engagement of art with politics, society and thought. Vibha Galhotra, a Delhi-based artist who works on climate change, environment and the Anthropocene, says she has always considered her work political. 바카라I am surrounded by dying rivers and industrial waste. My work is informed with my reality. It is political,바카라 she says. Contemporary art can be a counter-power.

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Tristan Tzara, poet and founder of the Dada movement that began in Zürich during World War I, was driven by his contempt for bourgeois values and traditional attitudes towards art. The Dadaists were irreverent. That바카라s a good thing to be. The rejection of art as a commodity can be traced back to the Dadaists.

Now, the echoes of Dadaism are everywhere. 바카라Art could be an ephemeral performance, a page in a magazine, an object found in the street. The strategies of Dadaism are now part of almost every artist바카라s vocabulary,바카라 said Adrian Sudhalter, art historian and curator, in a 2016 piece in the Wall Street Journal.

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Art and journalism began converging sometime around the French Revolution. That was when images that represented contemporary social conditions and politics began to appear in the work of artists like Francisco Goya.

바카라All art bears witness in some way to history or individual experience,바카라 said Jennifer Liese, ­director of the writing centre at Rhode Island School of Design and editor of Social Medium: Artists Writing, 2000바카라2015. 바카라Art does this ­explicitly and intentionally.바카라

While journalism in expected to take a more objective and dispassionate view, things are now churning and definitions are overlapping. Journalists and artists play very similar roles in society. In a post-truth world, we need such ­eng­agements. Facts are no longer enough. There has been a dismantling of facts, once held sacred in journalism, by fake news. And art is another way to uphold the storytelling that we hope can protect our institutions. As Shireen Gandhy, dir­ector of Chemould Prescott Road, says, we are storytellers. 바카라All artists are political,바카라 she says.

This wall in my house with artworks and ­manifestoes, the books on my shelves, ­magazine covers like one called 바카라black on black바카라 to mark the 9/11 twin tower tragedy in The New Yorker, the poems I have framed, the memory that is a lib­rary of images from everywhere, all give me hope that perhaps collaborations are the future of journalism. Just as we saw imperfect ­solidarities emerge in the last couple of years in movements like Shaheen Bagh and the farmers protest.

So, perhaps this is to be done now. A place for all as storytellers. Artists, poets, writers and journalists. As it should be.

(This appeared in the print edition as "Showing What Cannot Be Said")

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