June 28, 2026 04:53 pm (IST)
Follow us:
facebook-white sharing button
twitter-white sharing button
instagram-white sharing button
youtube-white sharing button
Fresh paper leak rocks India: Maharashtra TET postponed a day before exam, over 4 lakh aspirants affected | Pune fort murder case: Siya Goyal's brother says family would have called off marriage if she had objected | Donald Trump gets a road named after him in India, says 'Thank You!' | Fresh setback for Gautam Adani? US judge asks DoJ to justify dropping criminal charges | Ram Mandir Trust chief Champat Rai resigns as alleged donation siphoning row escalates | Ram Mandir fund row deepens: 8 arrested days after BJP called allegations 'false narrative' | 'Who tied the hands of CBI?': Calcutta HC on RG Kar case; victim's mother, now BJP MLA, says she is 'deeply disturbed' | Construction comes to a standstill at nearly 700 Kolkata projects after Taratala warehouse tragedy kills 15 | World Cup shocker! Ecuador stun Germany 2-1, storm into Round of 32 | Iran-US conflict: Cargo vessel hit near Strait of Hormuz, UN agency pauses evacuation operations

Kolkata hosts first solo show of Bangladeshi painter Ayesha Sultana

| | May 09, 2014, at 12:27 am
Kolkata, May 8 (IBNS) Kolkata based gallery Experimenter is hosting Bangladeshi painter Ayesha Sultana’s first solo exhibition, Outside the Field of View, starting May 9 here.

Rooted in process and the act of making, the exhibition will provide an insight into her ongoing investigation of drawing, of seeing space in continuum, of exploring gaps in visual memory and of looking at the periphery and what is overlooked in plain sight.

In a constantly evolving process, Sultana’s work cannot be identified as belonging to a single artistic tendency. She concurrently works in different mediums and techniques, but with a specific interest in the features of materials she uses in the act of making. This leads to other ways of looking and engaging, in the relevance of formal properties of various materials and the depth of meaning of the medium itself. 

An attempt to make visible or to delve into what one can see, and simultaneously translating the visual information, is what engages Sultana. Through the primacy of drawing, this act of looking is to assimilate the experience of her surroundings and space. Space to Sultana seems relational, a field emerging as a result of matter and its parts, in the movement or weight of its fragments, not necessarily marked by a beginning or an end but a structure or a space that never ends – the periphery.

Born in Jessore, Bangladesh, in 1984, Ayesha Sultana received a BFA in Visual Arts (2007) and subsequently a Post-Graduate Diploma in Art Education (2008) at the Beaconhouse National University in Lahore. From 2007-2009 she taught as Lecturer at the School of Visual Arts and Design at Beaconhouse National University.

Recent group exhibitions include B/Desh, Dhaka Art Summit, curated by Deepak Ananth; Cross-Casting, Britto Space, Dhaka, curated by Mahbubur Rahman; Listen Up! New Delhi, curated by Diana Campbell-Betancourt &

Says the painter: "During the course of my fine arts studies in Pakistan, there was a distinct way of reading artwork in general deriving either from landscape or figuration. I presented my work in this context of the body or human figure in particular environments, recounting often personal, individual circumstance. Since then in the past few years, there has been a gradual shift in these preconceptions and of considering other ways of looking."

"The work has become process-oriented as an attempt to negotiate and translate notions of space, which is inseparably connected with perceptions of time. The recent works of drawing series’ and sound are not directly about architecture or the man-made environment but have implications of space, whether anonymous, real, tangible or psychological."

"Memory and erasure play an important role in the work. There has been ongoing interest in the surface of materials, in depth and flatness, of layering, fragmenting an image and making it whole again.The psychological implications of using sound as a way of ‘looking’ has steadily filtered into my practice; the disjunction of the in between, of what remains unseen is what I find interesting.

Support Our Journalism

We cannot do without you.. your contribution supports unbiased journalism

IBNS is not driven by any ism- not wokeism, not racism, not skewed secularism, not hyper right-wing or left liberal ideals, nor by any hardline religious beliefs or hyper nationalism. We want to serve you good old objective news, as they are. We do not judge or preach. We let people decide for themselves. We only try to present factual and well-sourced news.

Support objective journalism for a small contribution.