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Singh Twins (1966 - )
Beginning Sketches: Painting in a White Man’s World
Born in London in 1966, twin sisters and painters Amrit and
Rabrinda KD Kaur Singh moved with their family in 1974 to Merseyside. Although
they did not grow up in a major Asian enclave, the constant presence of a
large, extended Asian family exposed them to traditional values and mores. This
close-knit family structure was crucial to their subsequent development as
artists. The Twins were aware, from early on, that their identities had several
layers: they were British, Asian, Sikh, and women.
The Biblical account of the temptation of Adam and Eve
is reinterpreted in the context of 20th century technological and scientific
advancements. It questions mankind’s seemingly unquenchable thirst for
knowledge and also warns of the destructive potential of the misuse of
knowledge driven by political and economic greed in absence of moral
conscience.
View catalogue item
Paradise Lost by Rabindra K.D Kaur
Singh, 2000
Initially completing their O and A Levels at a Roman Catholic
Convent school with the aim of joining the medical profession, unforeseen
circumstances compelled the Twins to read for a BA Hons Degree in ‘Contemporary
Western Art, Ecclesiastical History and Comparative Religion’ at University
College of Chester between 1985-7. In 1987 they completed a Post-Graduate
qualifying course entitled ‘Religion and the Arts’ at Manchester University.
During these years at university the Twins became increasingly disillusioned
with the official view of contemporary art education and practice in the UK,
discovering that it was completely Eurocentric in its dictates, void of
non-Western aesthetic models and forms. During the final marking of their
dissertations, both of which explored the significant impact that non-European
art had on the development of European art, one examiner refused to give either
of them marks. The fact that this resulted in their final degree being
seriously downgraded was justified by the comment he is reported to have made
to the other examiners in the final stages of marking which betrayed an
assumption that as Asian women, the twins would be married upon completion of
university and thus never become professional artists.
This experience was significant for the Twins, symbolising
the Institutionalised prejudice of the Art Establishment – to the extent that
even attempts to show the existence and importance of non-Western styles, as
the Twins did in their dissertations, was out of the question. Furthermore, the
examiner’s rebuff of the twins and his assumptions regarding their future
careers illustrated how disengaged contemporary arts in the UK were with
minority communities and cultures. Even the so-called liberal ‘arts’ was rife
with racism and cultural homogeneity. The Twins developed their unique
partnership and artistic style, in part, as a political statement against the
discrimination: “Our art and collaborative partnership developed largely in
response to the serious criticisms we faced during our first degree for
pursuing common interests and goals in developing personal styles which were
deemed to be unacceptable because they were 'inappropriately' rooted in Eastern
cultural aesthetics and our experience as British Asians.”
Developing a Style: The Indian Miniature Tradition
In 1989, the Singh Twins registered at Manchester University
for postgraduate research into Sikh Art. The following year in 1990, they both
won the competitive INTACH (Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural
Heritage) scholarship to carry out a year’s field research in India on
religious art and the miniature tradition.
This image is used as part of the publicity material used
by the Singh sisters. The image depicts the artists working on an artwork
together
View catalogue item
Twins Painting Photograph by Howard
Barow, Date Unknown
It was during the Singh Twins’ first trip to India as
teenagers, however, that they discovered and became enthralled with the Indian
miniature art form. Several years later when they were at university and began
to study art formally, they found themselves once again inspired: “we were
amazed by the technical skill and symbolic content of miniatures and the power
they had to communicate to people. We also had a natural inclination towards
this particular form of art as it belonged to our cultural heritage.” The
Indian miniature form offered the Twins an established Eastern model of art,
drawn from Persian and Indian roots that, in their view, had played and
continued to play a crucial role in the development of Western contemporary art
forms and styles. Furthermore, the miniature tradition still had resonance in
modern society; it enabled the Twins to represent both their experiences as
British Asians and as members of modern society more accurately than the art
forms that were impressed upon them in university. It is this interplay between
the past and modern that has made so many, including the Twins, describe their
art as ‘Past Modern.’
Added
Knowledge: Understanding the
Work of the Singh Twins
The highly decorative and ornate style of the Twins’
paintings thinly veils a careful and thorough exploration of pertinent social
and political issues. Every object in their paintings has a place and a
meaning; how each object is represented and manipulated adds a further layer of
significance. In the work Nyrmla’s Wedding, Amrit KD Kaur Singh depicts a
classic scene from an Asian wedding: the painting of ‘mehndi’ or henna on the
hands of the bride-to-be. Ronald McDonald appears to be staring at the bride
from a window. Behind him is a landscape of waste and ruin. The work represents
how globalisation and economic development, if left unchecked, though equated
with progressiveness can be negative or disruptive forces, whilst so-called
primitive and third world cultures, though often equated with backwardness, can
provide a model for global and social stability.
This painting looks at the role that both the media and
the commercialization of sport have played in turning the humble sportsman into
Universal Hero, celebrity Super Star, and popular culture Icon.
View catalogue item
Zero to Hero by Rabindra K.D. Kaur
Singh, 2002
Other times the message of the Twins’ work is found in their
subtle reworking of major historical and modern day events. In the work
Nineteen-Eighty-Four, which depicts the storming of the Golden Temple by Indian
troops, the Twins have added objects and individuals that were not at the
original event. Blindfolds are placed on the eyes of the press, representing
their imbalanced coverage of the event; Indira Gandhi is present and holding
her left palm up, symbolising her complicity to an atrocity perpetrated against
a community traditionally recognised for its noble and proven record of loyalty
to India. It is through this ‘added’ that we are meant to understand the
painting and the 1984 riots at the Golden Temple.
Exhibitions and Public Art Work
Since they started exhibiting in 1987, the Singh Twins have
gone on to feature in several solo and group shows both in the UK and
internationally. Major group shows have included: The Mall Gallery, London
(1993/4); The National Portrait Gallery, London (1995); The Whitechapel
Gallery, London (1997), Gallery of Modern Art, Milton Keynes (2000); The
Smithsonian Institute, Washington DC (2004). Solo shows of their work have
included: Bluecoat Gallery, Liverpool (1994); Birmingham City Art Gallery,
Huddersfield City Art Gallery and Glasgow Gallery of Modern Art (1999/2000);
Royal Museum of Scotland (2000/2001); Leeds City Art Gallery (2001); official
artists in residence for the Commonwealth Games (2002); an exhibition entitled
Past Modern: Paintings by the Singh Twins
that toured
India (2002/2003); UCR Sweeny Art Gallery and Riverside Art Museum, California
(2003); McMaster Gallery of Fine Art, Toronto (2004); and a major solo
retrospective at the Walker Art Gallery (2005).
Krishna is depicted as the ultimate manifestation of
Divine beauty: 'God the Beloved', whose intoxicating fragrance and glowing
resplendence captivates the lost soul (his lover) which yearns for the supreme
bliss of spiritual union..
View catalogue item
God the Beloved by Amrit K.D. Kaur
Singh, 1997
The Twins are featured in the Oxford History of Art series,
have given numerous television, radio and newspaper interviews and have also
been the subject of various documentaries detailing their work and the
socio-political issues that inform it. In 1994, they were elected as members of
the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts; they have been invited speakers at various
venues including the Tate, London; The Smithsonian, Washington; and Asian Art
Museum, San Francisco. In addition to working at their own practice, the Singh
Twins have set up Mali, a voluntary and community-focused organisation based in
Wirral that works to promote Asian heritage, culture and community building
through the arts. Mali was responsible for Zindabad 1997 — Wirral’s first Asian
arts festival—which included dance performances, family workshops, and various
exhibitions.
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