Headlines
Curtains come down on Kochi Biennale after 108 days
Kochi, March 29
The second edition of the 108-day-long Kochi Muziris Biennale (KMB),
billed as country's biggest contemporary-art festival came to a close as
the sun went down in this Kerala port city on Sunday.
Official
figures put the attendance in the event in excess of half a million, at
least 100,000 more than in its debut year in 2012.
Kochi Biennale
Foundation (KBF), which organised this event that opened on December 12
last year with 100 artworks by 94 artists from 30 countries, thanked
the Kerala government for its support.
"We could explore not just
the operational and intellectual dimensions of art, but could directly
engage people through a wide range of cultural activities," said KBF
founder president Bose Krishnamachari about KMB'14 curated by
Mumbai-based artist Jitish Kallat.
Governor P.Sathasivam who was
the chief guest on the penultimate day said that KBF had positioned
itself as a sustainable platform for international dialogue and
enrichment of contemporary art.
KMB'14 director of programmes,
Riyas Komu, who is also secretary of KBF which was founded in 2010 as a
not-for-profit organisation for round-the-year strengthening of
contemporary art infrastructure, said such a wide range of activities
was strung together to essentially reveal and remind India's composite
culture-more so of the Kochi-Muziris region.
Kallat said he was
keen that the visitors at the biennale should journey through works as
varied as drawings, paintings, sculptures, installation, minimalist
poem, video and performance.
"Even cartography was instrumental in one's grasping of the world," he added.