Soumya Sankar BOSE

Soumya Sankar BOSE
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dates de séjour

01/09/2024 - 31/03/2025

discipline

Arts et études des arts

Fonction actuelle

Artist

pays d'origine

Inde

projet de recherche

We Need to Talk in Whispers

 

Bose's new project 'We Need to Talk in Whispers' is a rigorous scrutiny of suicide cases from recent past.

These references found in various case studies, suicide notes, newspaper archives, court verdicts and oral memories intrigued Bose to visit various places in India such as, JoshiMath in Uttarakhand; Benaras in Uttar Pradesh; Darjeeling, Shantiniketan and Digha in West Bengal. Bose's camera plays the role of an imaginary investigator, delving deep into the psyche of the person who had committed the act. The dark alleyways, desolate sea-shores at night, empty hotel rooms that have remained locked for years, spiral staircases of long abandoned houses, cornices of multistoried educational institutions have accompanied Bose in his search. All these visuals contribute to the formation of an alternative archive of suicide.

biographie

Soumya Sankar Bose (b. 1990, Midnapore, India) is an artist based in Kolkata, India. He reconstructs archival materials and oral history into photography, films, alternative archives, and artist books. Bose’s hybrid mode of practice interweaving long-term research and engagement with local communities including his own family history accentuates certain subaltern experiences of the marginalised yet resilient in post-Partition Bengal. Enmeshing fiction and reality, Bose’s work opens up daring realms of memory, desire, vulnerability and identity. Soumya Sanker Bose was awarded Magnum Foundation’s Social Justice Fellowship for Full Moon on a Dark Night in 2017 and received the Louis Roederer Discovery Public Award at Rencontres d'Arles for A discreet exit through darkness in 2023. Bose also received The Foundation for Indian Contemporary Art (Amol Vadehra Art Grant), The Agroecology Fund, Murthy Nayak Foundation Photobook Grant, Henry Luce Foundation grant and India Foundation for the Arts’ grant. Where the Birds Never Sing was selected as PHmuseum’s Best Photobooks of 2020 and shortlisted for the Paris Photo - Aperture Foundation First Photobook Award as well as the Lucie Photo Book Prize 2021. His works are in the permanent collections of The Royal Ontario Museum, The Ishara Art Foundation, Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, Les Rencontres d’Arles etc. Bose’s work has been reviewed by The New York Times, Art Review Asia, NPR, Granta, BBC, The Caravan and Indian Express among many others.

Distinctions

Bose was awarded Magnum Foundation’s Social Justice Fellowship for Full Moon on a Dark Night in 2017.