https://www.heraldgoa.in/Cafe/Afrah-Shafiq%E2%80%99s-alternate-reality/193833

If you have not yet visited, do not miss the last week of Afrah Shafiq’s
engrossing multimedia masterpiece *Sultana’s Reality* at the increasingly
invaluable Sunaparanta arts centre on the crest of Altinho in Panjim. One
of the best and most compelling recent artworks from India – after star
turns at the 2019 Kochi Muziris Biennale and the 2020 Lahore Biennial –
this interactive browser-based installation delights, awes and educates in
equal measure. Considering the artist has been happily based in Goa for
years, it’s surprising it took so long to be exhibited in what is now her
home state.

Better late than never, because *Sultana’s Reality *is an extraordinarily
rich engagement with archival materials, that is both rooted and liberated
by visual culture. Also available online at entersultanasreality.com, this
surprise-filled “history of women and books in India”, is inspired by the
pioneering 1905 short story *Sultana’s Dream* by Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain,
where women have all the power while the men are isolated in purdah. These
two questions are in the concept note: “If it’s said that well-behaved
women seldom make history, why is it that our history textbooks rarely have
women behaving ‘badly’? Are the readers forgetting certain kinds of books
or are the writers forgetting certain kinds of stories?”

Shafiq is 33, grew up in Bangalore, and earned degrees from Christ
University (BA in media studies, literature and psychology) and Symbiosis
in Pune (MA, media and communication in audio-visual production). In an
essay entitled *Animating the Archive*, she explains how “working with
archives can sometimes feel like swimming in the deep dark ocean or
navigating an endless sea of new window tabs on a computer browser. The
more I read the more lost I become until I completely forget how I got
where I am and what I came looking for in the first place.” In addition,
“much has been said about the “archival impulse” and its associated fevers
in both the art and academic spaces and it isn’t really a novel practice
anymore to breathe new meanings into old materials.”

Nonetheless, “I repeatedly find myself drawn to the archive, finding that
the depth of the ocean where the sun never reaches can be a pretty magical
place of discovery. The archival burden begins to lighten as I look at the
act of research as play, navigating through hidden “treasures” lucidly,
almost as one would solve a detective case. I often enter archives with a
hunch, a premonition, a gut instinct of what I am interested in and begin
looking for clues, allowing for accidental stumbling and playful remixing
outside the logical categories of form, collections, period, and data. And
the discoveries, they abound!”

That is putting it mildly, because *Sultana’s Reality* is a profoundly
rewarding artwork that satisfies at many levels simultaneously. As
described by the artist herself, “the story is told through animated video,
graphics, gif’s, comics, collages and other digital art forms made by
collating, re-mixing, re-interpreting and re-imagining traditional visual
imaginations of the female form. It tries to explore the multiplicity of
women’s history and also image making – the ways in which it is told and
remembered. Sultana’s Reality is perhaps an exercise in questioning
history. Not the history of the image, but a history that is constructed
with the image. Women gazing out of windows are perhaps not romantic
pictures connoting sensuality, luxury and the feminine form in all its
glory. They may rather be images of women who are bored, who are imprisoned
(sometimes within their own minds), who are uninspired.”

One thrill in viewing *Sultana’s Reality *in Panjim is the reminder that
some of the best artists anywhere are actually right here, and some of
their works are best understood in the context of this unique cultural
strand, with its “different ways of belonging” (in the poet Eunice de
Souza’s trenchant phrasing) to “the mainstream.” This is 100% Shafiq, who
produced the very Goan 2021 masterwork *A Tale of Two Sisters* – it was
also displayed at Sunaparanta, in collaboration with Goa Open Arts Festival
–which “used the form of the grinding stone to churn together religious
iconography, the syncretic nature of worship in Goa and the connections
between two of its most prominent female deities, Mother Mary and
Shantadurga.” She has also been building *Our Lady of I Can Be Anything You
Want Me To *(https://ourladyoficanbeanythingyouwantmeto.com) which will
debut at MoCA in January.

When I asked Shafiq about making art in Goa, she joked that “I really want
to make a quick fun video game where we can mow down tourists who block the
Parra "coconut tree selfie road.” More seriously, “what has felt very
conducive to making art in Goa (and I guess just mentally thriving here) is
the rhythm of the place. The day is made up of a lot of space, and yet has
anchors. In the morning the poder and the fish seller will come. You know
all the waddo dogs and their individual politics. In your lane everyone
knows each other, they talk to one another, there is a coming and going.
This is a daily rhythm. Then there is a seasonal rhythm. Perhaps the
additional Goa factor would also be the freedom and space to "be". There
isn't a violent or judgemental atmosphere - I feel very comfortable being
myself without having any fear or discomfort - not something one can say
easily about many parts of the country now.”

Of course, more and better art demands spaces to view it, and curatorial
wherewithal to match. Unfortunately, this is where Goa lags badly, with an
effectively absent state, and zero critical culture. This is why private
institutions like Fundação Oriente (and its stunning Trindade collection),
Xavier Centre of Historical Research (with its priceless trove from Angelo
da Fonseca), MoCA and Sunaparanta are so important, and it is to be truly
celebrated that the latter is finally living up to its full potential.

“2020 put a great strain on the cultural ecosystem worldwide,” says Leandre
D’Souza, the curator and programme director at Sunaparanta. “In spite of
this, we found new ways to adapt and respond to our present environment. We
developed new tools to communicate and to stay connected with our audiences
and community. As our world shrunk to the virtual screen, we kept our
institution running with online initiatives that included artistic
projects, online talk shows and a virtual art & theatre programme for
children. We learnt a new language to cope with the virtual space as a site
for reflection and discussion.”

D'Souza says “working under the direction and patronage of Isheta
Salgaocar, and with an all-women team, our foundation has thrust forward
with a particular emphasis on pedagogy and knowledge creation. Today, our
programmes include the Sunaparanta Art Initiator Lab (now in its second
edition, a mentorship programme that is practice-based, open to creative
professionals from various streams and offers them the opportunity to
refine their practices through innovative learning (and un-learning)
methodologies); Artist-in-Residence Lab (research-based and offers a space
for artists to critically examine existing practices through exchange and
dialogue); Fellowship Grants (for cultural operators producing scholarly
work in various creative fields); Emerging Artist Grants (contributes to
the advancement of research, practice and production); Art & Theatre School
(places children at the forefront of learning and thinking where they
become the protagonists in open and process-based art and theatre
practices).”

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