Shivangi Gupta

About

Shivangi Gupta b.1996 is an interdisciplinary designer, maker and curator. Currently pursuing her Master’s Degree in Design Products at the Royal College of Art (RCA), London; she received a BFA in Furniture Design from the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), Providence in 2018. 

Gupta has most recently worked as a Curator at Nature Morte, a contemporary art gallery based in New Delhi.

Growing up in Moradabad, commonly known as the ‘pital nagri’ literally meaning abode of brass. She has fond memories of visiting factories/Karkhanas, looking at different vernacular crafts such as sand casting, metal etching, and aluminium weaving and seeing industrial machines and techniques in effect side by side. This has left her with a keen interest in the processes with which objects are made and the wider systems within which they sit. Within a trend-based industry and design-first mentality, what happens to vernacular craft? How do we balance the space between sustainability, technology and craft? Through her work, she wants to explore “The New Handmade”.

Statement

My work attempts to materialise a concept of practice or the idea of working that places collaboration with artisans and craftspersons at its heart. It builds on the idea of lore and craft having been fascinated with craft as a landscape - of habitation, livelihood, and politics. It is at once an investigation into the chain of communication and execution between a designer and a maker, the socio-political landscape of such an exchange as well as an ethnographical study into the self as an embodiment of culture and as a repository of embodied knowledge passed down through generations. 

‘Language of Tools’ and ‘Second Nature’ both delve deeply into the craft of weaving together baskets. Making a basket is a way to understand important cultural teachings. As an object, it is immediate and versatile in material, form, and function. It becomes an interesting reflection on the cultural, environmental, economic, and social environment that these objects have been created within. For example, the paper mache baskets from India give a glimpse into its history as a migratory art form that travelled from Persia to Kashmir and then to the rest of India through its patrons and the composition of these baskets gives one an insight into the composition of local plantlife whereas the function and decorations give away the social ecosystems it exists within. Contrasting this with the importance of plaited baskets in the history of the South Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala can be traced to the abundance of palms in their respective ecosystems. Basketry is one of the first expressions of human culture, humans have been weaving pliable materials into three-dimensional shapes for nearly 10,000 years and as such it became a simple, direct everyday object with immediate recall to work with.


Image on the left: Screenshot of a basket for sale from the WBC website

The Language of Tools

Second Nature: Vessels of Habitation, Livelihood and Politics