Cantos of the Sibylline Sisterhood Conjures a Feminist Future, LA Weekly

Throughout history, and across cultures and continents, there have always been women, sibyls, who possessed secret, sacred knowledges from the healing arts to folklore - and especially clairvoyance. Depending on the context, these figures might be revered, worshiped, sought out or feared, shunned and persecuted, but they always helped usher in the future. Taking this historical archetype as its framework, Cantos of the Sibylline Sisterhood gathers a group of feminist, queer and trans artists working in a range of mediums, all of whom tap into that ancestry, setting ages-old potencies against modern-day threats.

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Nightswimmers reviewed in ArtForum

Through a practice anchored in {though not limited to) drawing, Chitra Ganesh has developed a sophisticated iconography and lively illustrative style that synthesizes myriad references to South Asian mythology and religion, comic books, pulp and science fiction, Bollywood posters, and feminist and queer history and theory. Ganesh's exhibition here, "Nightswimmers," processed and responded to the profound shifts experienced during the widespread lockdowns that characterized the pandemic's early months, when life suddenly came to a terrifying and isolating standstill. In contrast to the unruliness of past work, from science fiction- inspired feminist utopias to scenes of violence and body horror, this show felt altogether calmer, offering up moments of respite and reflection. With works installed on dark-purple walls in a dimly lit space, the exhibition evoked, with a contemplative mood, the liminal state between sleep and waking life, a limbo that seems an apt metaphor for the atemporal stupor of the past two years.

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‘Nightswimmers’ review in New York Times

Ganesh's painted, drawn and sewn assemblages are like Borgesian libraries or delirious, encyclopedic archives. They combine South Asian cosmologies, Bollywood posters, queer histories, comics and science fiction to suggest hybrid narratives and utopias. Ganesh is at the height of her semiotician-creator powers in her current show, "Nightswimmers."

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Chitra Ganesh by Rahel Aima, 4 Columns, 2018

It’s the late nineteenth century in the British Raj. In my colonial tropical fantasy it’s a swampy, starry night. A fancy begum, an aristocratic lady, is reclining in a cane-and-Burma-teak easy chair.

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Artforum Review of The Scorpion Gesture, Rubin Museum, October 2018

As part of the Rubin Museum of Art’s yearlong exploration of the “future,” Brooklyn-based artist Chitra Ganesh took inspiration from the institution’s collection of Tibetan art to examine how the dystopic present can be changed fora better tomorrow in two separate, yet connected, exhibitions.

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