*Curating Erasure: When Art Festivals Colonise Goa’s Rivers*


This is the season of joy and celebration, the most wonderful time of the
year, marked by the annual spectacle of art and serendipity. This year, the
festival marks its ten-year milestone of hosting performances, exhibitions,
dialogues, and interactive workshops in Goa.



Since its inception, the festival has undergone a journey of growth. Goan
art, once segregated under the banner of the ‘Goan Artist’, has shifted
towards a more inclusive arrangement, where Goans appear as curators and
artists in their own right. Yet, beneath this celebratory surface lies a
quiet and persistent concern.



There is an erasure and a displacement of meaning, within ways of doing, in
cultural practices, and in the emergence of new hegemonic structures that
conform to the logic of the ‘festival’. This erasure takes form in the
neo-narrative of the village of Kurdi, and in the silencing of violence
inflicted upon women and communities, as these newly crafted stories
circulate through film festivals, biennales, and cultural spaces shaped by
caste and gendered power.



Meanings also shift when gods who embody ephemerality are rendered
permanent as sculptures, extended beyond their single-day existence.
Narkasur, once understood as immolating himself into enlightenment –
liberation from *maya* (illusion) – or, in other tellings, imploring
Kamakhya to slay him into deliverance, carried meanings rooted in release
from material temporality and union with *Brahman*. This was what was once
celebrated.



Alas, no longer. These meanings are now trapped within the spectacle of the
art-tourism circuit, circulating from Goa to Kochi and beyond.



What is not a happy accident – and far more difficult to digest – is *The
Barge*.



The barge first appeared at the festival in 2017. *On the Barge / The
Ground Beneath My Feet*, a project led by the curator of the Kochi Biennale
2026 in collaboration with HH Art Spaces, Asia Art Archive, and the Japan
Foundation, brought together four iterations of artworks in Goa. The
exhibition was framed as a reconstruction of fragments from the barge,
invoking “precarious fragments of land surrounded by rising oceans and
migrating populations.” It was presented as a political reckoning with
turbulent geopolitics – migrant labour, climate change, refugees, and
so-called “unrealised utopias”.



Vishal K. Dar was invited as the mise-en-scène for the project. Performance
artists included Bengaluru-based Hemant Sreekumar; New Delhi – based
Bhagwati Prasad, whose sound work addressed human labour, German artist
Anja Ibsch, whose practice explores the limits of bodily endurance;
Japanese Butoh dancer and choreographer Yuko Kaseki; and Kabir Masum
Chisty, an artist from Bangladesh, who performed a work involving burying
himself in sand inside a box on the barge.



Yet, no contextualisation of Goa or its histories was offered, nor was
there any meaningful engagement with the local. Instead, the barge – a
long-standing symbol of ecological destruction in Goa’s rivers and lands,
whose iron ore once fuelled Japan’s post–Second World War reconstruction –
was emptied of its specific histories and restaged as spectacle.



Here, the Japan Foundation, alongside international artists, academicians
from Ambedkar University, theoreticians from Delhi, and archivists from
Asia Art Archive – now embedded within major Middle Eastern institutions –
rewrote Goa’s histories. In doing so, they erased the pain, suffering, and
degradation endured by its people, lands, and waters. This was not curation
but a continuation of colonial dispossession: a modality of power that
appropriates while masquerading as interpretation.



The barge now returns in December 2025 at the Captain of Ports Jetty in Old
Goa. This time, the curator is Veeranganakumari Solanki, co-director of the
SqW:Lab Foundation and a member of the advisory committee of the Piramal
Photography Gallery at the National Centre for the Performing Arts, Mumbai.
The artists on board – Prajakta Potnis, Hemant Sreekumar, and Julien Segard
– respond to ideas of absence and presence through the barge’s architecture
and sound.



In Goa, along the Mandovi, we are already facing an ecological disaster
caused by the permanent anchoring of casino boats. Their presence disrupts
sediment flow, causing localised erosion and shoal formation. Associated
activities such as dredging physically alter the riverbed, while pollution
from sewage, waste, and fuel degrades sediment quality and aquatic life.
These impacts threaten traditional clam-fishing grounds (*tisryos*), alter
critical marine habitats, and destabilise the river’s ecosystem.



Sound pollution – from tourism, parties, traffic, and construction –
further intensifies this crisis. It disrupts marine behaviour in fish and
mammals, induces chronic stress in wildlife, and damages sensitive
ecosystems such as mangrove zones. Central studies have identified acoustic
pollution hotspots along the coast and have recommended stricter
enforcement, citing links to fish scarcity and broader ecological imbalance.



The barge has already been anchored in Old Goa for a considerable period
and will remain so until the end of this spectacle-festival. Old Goa
supports a rich diversity of mangroves, otters, cephalopods, crabs, fish,
and migratory birds. Its riverbanks are home to fishing communities whose
livelihoods depend on daily catches from these waters.



The infrasonic and low-frequency sounds generated by performances on the
barge pose further – and potentially irreversible – harm to local flora and
fauna, intensifying stress on an already fragile and contested ecological
space.



Upon the barge, neither the sound works nor the palm and AI abstractions
engage meaningfully with the ecology or the socio-cultural politics of Goan
communities. The sparse references to mining – coal and iron – remain
shallow, functioning as afterthoughts or crude justifications for the
work’s presence, without engaging Goa’s deep entanglements with extraction,
minerals, and wealth-capital generation.



What emerges instead is an exoticised and fetishised spectacle, where
meaning is imposed through the gendered, caste, and class authority of the
curator. In this process, the material histories of extraction, ecological
destruction, and lived harm caused by the barge itself are actively erased.



What continues is the impunity of settler-colonial violence upon the people
of Goa: the sustained erasure of our histories; displacement through
fetishised walks and displays; and the devaluing and deskilling of our
traditional knowledge systems and practices. All of this is produced
through the construction of normative, hegemonic meaning-making, masked as
serendipitous art language.

 _____





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