From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

South Asian Women’s Creative Collective Information

The South Asian Women’s Creative Collective can be considered as one of the largest online south Asian women feminist collectives.

Citation or omit?

"SAWCC has served South Asian women since 1997 and has earned a reputation for showcasing cutting-edge work that deals intelligently with issues of gender and cultural representation. It is a nonprofit arts organization dedicated to the advancement, visibility, and development of emerging and established South Asian women artists and creative professionals by providing a physical and virtual space to profile their creative and intellectual work across disciplines." [1]

Background Information

The South Asian Women’s Creative Collective was founded by the artist Jaishri Abichandani in New York City in 1997, when identity politics were in the air, and artists from much of the Asian diaspora were still being given the cold shoulder by the art world here. Abichandani was born in Bombay, India, then immigrated to New York City in 1984. She received her MFA from Goldsmiths College, University of London and has continued to intertwine art and activism in her career as founder of the South Asian Women’s Creative Collective. [2]She left her home country of India when she was 14 to come to Queens, New York and is aware of what it means to reconcile different worlds; she has analyzed her relationship to those worlds through photography, her first medium, by using herself as a subject and then expanding to her family and immediate circle of friends who share her nomadic existence. In Reconciliations, an ongoing series of appropriated images of cities and landscapes culled from the Internet and photoshopped together, Abichandani has transferred the intimacy of her private life and the idiosyncrasies of her vision to the public realm of geopolitics. [3]

Sisterhood plays a significant role as it can be considered as a particularly South Asian brand of feminism and camaraderie. Many emerging artists have found a fertile nurturing ground and have gone on to show in galleries as well as gett media attention. At the same time, SAWCC finds support from noted artists like Shazia Sikander, writer Jhumpa Lahiri and filmmaker Mira Nair who donated an advance screening of ‘ Monsoon Wedding’ to raise funds for SAWCC. Another board member Prerna Reddy is an arts administrator and a founder of Third Eye. She states that “Basically we feel South Asian women have not had a space in the mainstream art world and our aim is to develop artists work and give them a space for exhibitions where curators can see it.  We want to show there’s a high level of work and we always seek curators that are well-known.” Some of the artists nurtured by SAWCC have made it big in the global art world, others have found their place while still others are emerging artists. This 15th-year retrospective received critical acclaim, including a glowing piece in The New York Times. [4]At the 15th year, the collective is still growing and attracting new members. Within the increasingly isolationist and hermetic New York art establishment, certain questions are raised about who they are, where they came from and where they’re going. In the rest of the world, these continue to be vital inquiries, as suggested by this cosmopolitan celebration. [5] In 2007, an art exhibition in New York presented  by SAWCC which was appropriately enough called (un)Suitable Girls – celebrating young women who wouldn’t have the arranged marriages and dowries like their mothers; the messy outspoken girls who might horrify prospective in-laws with their bitchiness and their wanton western ways. It’s about anger and angst, about questioning society’s iron-clad rules.

Also, SAWCC has drawn inspiration from other activist groups such as the Black Arts Movement in the UK, as well as the progressive South Asian arts festival Desh Pardesh in Toronto. According to the founder Abichandani, she emphasizes:”What has set SAWCC apart from our local peers was our pioneering commitment  to making art, and to date we remain the only exclusively feminist space.”Over the years SAWCC’s reach has extended to scores of artists, writers and performers, meeting informally in rented space in Manhattan. Social media has now extended its reach to many countries and the group has over 6000 members on Facebook. [6] Also, SAWCC has no membership dues and is totally volunteer-driven. It has monthly events presenting the work of South Asian women artists including a writing workshop called Brown Eyed Girls, Practice/Process/Portfolio, a studio circle for visual artists, a listserv for South Asian women and annual exhibitions and festivals open to the public.

On the other hand, for new immigrants, it is still a way to find one’s bearings in a new world. Josheen Oberoi, a specialist in South Asian art with the auction house Saffronart, recalls, ” When I first came to New York, it was such a comfort to find an intellectual space that allowed interaction with South Asian women who were practitioners of art, in one form or the other.  I realized that SAWCC- pronounced saucy- was the perfectly appropriate pronunciation for this community of women where each meeting was an honest exchange of ideas, debates – absolute firecrackers of discussions and where each diverse voice was heard.” [7]

Generally speaking, SAWCC provides women of South Asian descent with links to various communities and encourages their growth as artists by providing a venue to exchange ideas and feedback on their creative work and network with other South Asian women artists, educators, community workers, and professionals. [8]

History Information

The South Asian Women’s Creative Collective (SAWCC) held its first meeting in March of 1997 at the offices of the  Sister Fund in Manhattan. Fourteen South Asian women of diverse ages and sexualities attended that meeting, particularly Sakhi for South Asian Women and the  South Asian Lesbian and Gay Association.  Soon after, women began to gather monthly at the Asian American Writers’ Workshop to facilitate and present their work. At that time, there were no other (feminist or otherwise) South Asian arts–based organizations in New York, making SAWCC an eclectic and unique space of support and community.Their public event was a festival for women of color at the  Audre Lorde Project in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. This was followed by SAWCC’s first annual festival of visual art and performance, Karmakollage, which took place at the Gallery at 678 to an audience of over 400 diverse, enthusiastic supporters.

Within a year and a half, a volunteer board emerged, and SAWCC applied for nonprofit status and became incorporated. In February 2000, they set up a list for South Asian women artists and creative professionals, which includes over 500 members. Their writing workshop Brown Eyed Girls was initiated in 2002, and a studio circle for visual artists began in 2006. After that, SAWCC continues to hold public events such as annual visual arts exhibition, performances, film screenings, talks, and literary events. All of these have given visibility to emerge and establish women artists, writers, and academics, connecting industry professionals to women who would otherwise not have access to these resources. Over fifteen years SAWCC reach an annual audience of over 5,000 by outreaching through word of mouth. From its inception as a small artists’ community to its current status as a nationally-recognized nonprofit, SAWCC offers a phenomenal venue for South Asian women to connect through creative practice. [9]

SAWCC’s programming efforts now include: an annual visual arts exhibition, which has included artists such as Chitra Ganesh, Swati Khurana, and Sa’dia Rehman; an annual literary festival which has featured writers including Minal Hajratwala, V.V. Ganeshananthan, and Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist Jhumpa Lahiri; a writing workshop, Brown Eyed Girls, a studio circle of visual artists; and a series of monthly panel discussions and events featuring emerging artists. While serving as a space for South Asian women artists to showcase their work, identify resources, and seek support, SAWCC has become known for presenting cutting-edge work that engages with themes of gender and cultural representation which has collaborated with other arts organizations including 3rd I South Asian Independent Film, the Asian American Writers’ Workshop as well as Pratt Institute. [10]

Community Information

Brown Eyed Girls

Brown Eyed Girls is SAWCC’s writing workshop, which meets regularly throughout the year. BEG was created in spring 2002, in response to the needs of the SAWCC’s literary membership for a structured space within which to workshop pieces and receive critical feedback. 

Studio Circle

SAWCC’s studio circle for practicing visual artists was initiated in 2006 and consists of women of South Asian and Iranian heritage. This group meets regularly at the studio of a different artist to critique work and provide space for collaborations and networking, as studio critiques provide a deeper way to meet the needs of practicing visual artists.

SAWCC London

SAWCC is based in the New York City area and has a sister chapter in London. SAWCC London offers free women-only “monthlies,” as well as open public events. SAWCC London monthlies provide a platform for women artists of South Asian descent to actively network—and to share, discuss, and develop creative ideas and works. Since 2004, SAWCC London has nurtured independently-forged British South Asian female creative expression. It has developed into a respected network with a reputation for showcasing cutting-edge creativity embracing gender, identity, and cultural representation.  [11]

Events Information

Two Brown Girls x SAWCC Salon
Welcome To What We Took From Is The State
SAWCC Salon
Call For Submission:SAWCC's annual Visual Art Exhibition
New Films 2015
Call For Participation

References Information

  1. ^ "Mission Statement". SAWCC. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  2. ^ "Jaishri Abichandani". Retrieved 30 Mar 2016.
  3. ^ "Jaishri Abichandani: Reconciliations". 23 Mar 2008. Retrieved 01 Apr 2016. {{ cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= ( help)
  4. ^ Melwani, Lavina (7 Dec 2012). "SAWCC: A Space of their Own". Lassi with Lavina. Retrieved 28 Mar 2016.
  5. ^ Cotter, Holland (16 Aug 2012). "'Fifteen Years of the South Asian Women's Creative Collective'". Retrieved 30 Mar 2016.
  6. ^ MELWANI, LAVINA (7 Dec 2012). "The World of South Asian Women Artists". Lassi with Lavina. Retrieved 30 Mar 2016.
  7. ^ Melwani, Lavina (7 Dec 2012). "New Immigrants, New World". Lassi with Lavina. Retrieved 30 Mar 2016.
  8. ^ "About". SAWCC. Retrieved 31 Mar 2016.
  9. ^ "History". SAWCC. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  10. ^ "South Asian Women's Creative Collective Records". Asian/Pacific American Archives Survey Project. 28 Jan 2015. Retrieved 31 Mar 2016.
  11. ^ "Community". SAWCC. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

South Asian Women’s Creative Collective Information

The South Asian Women’s Creative Collective can be considered as one of the largest online south Asian women feminist collectives.

Citation or omit?

"SAWCC has served South Asian women since 1997 and has earned a reputation for showcasing cutting-edge work that deals intelligently with issues of gender and cultural representation. It is a nonprofit arts organization dedicated to the advancement, visibility, and development of emerging and established South Asian women artists and creative professionals by providing a physical and virtual space to profile their creative and intellectual work across disciplines." [1]

Background Information

The South Asian Women’s Creative Collective was founded by the artist Jaishri Abichandani in New York City in 1997, when identity politics were in the air, and artists from much of the Asian diaspora were still being given the cold shoulder by the art world here. Abichandani was born in Bombay, India, then immigrated to New York City in 1984. She received her MFA from Goldsmiths College, University of London and has continued to intertwine art and activism in her career as founder of the South Asian Women’s Creative Collective. [2]She left her home country of India when she was 14 to come to Queens, New York and is aware of what it means to reconcile different worlds; she has analyzed her relationship to those worlds through photography, her first medium, by using herself as a subject and then expanding to her family and immediate circle of friends who share her nomadic existence. In Reconciliations, an ongoing series of appropriated images of cities and landscapes culled from the Internet and photoshopped together, Abichandani has transferred the intimacy of her private life and the idiosyncrasies of her vision to the public realm of geopolitics. [3]

Sisterhood plays a significant role as it can be considered as a particularly South Asian brand of feminism and camaraderie. Many emerging artists have found a fertile nurturing ground and have gone on to show in galleries as well as gett media attention. At the same time, SAWCC finds support from noted artists like Shazia Sikander, writer Jhumpa Lahiri and filmmaker Mira Nair who donated an advance screening of ‘ Monsoon Wedding’ to raise funds for SAWCC. Another board member Prerna Reddy is an arts administrator and a founder of Third Eye. She states that “Basically we feel South Asian women have not had a space in the mainstream art world and our aim is to develop artists work and give them a space for exhibitions where curators can see it.  We want to show there’s a high level of work and we always seek curators that are well-known.” Some of the artists nurtured by SAWCC have made it big in the global art world, others have found their place while still others are emerging artists. This 15th-year retrospective received critical acclaim, including a glowing piece in The New York Times. [4]At the 15th year, the collective is still growing and attracting new members. Within the increasingly isolationist and hermetic New York art establishment, certain questions are raised about who they are, where they came from and where they’re going. In the rest of the world, these continue to be vital inquiries, as suggested by this cosmopolitan celebration. [5] In 2007, an art exhibition in New York presented  by SAWCC which was appropriately enough called (un)Suitable Girls – celebrating young women who wouldn’t have the arranged marriages and dowries like their mothers; the messy outspoken girls who might horrify prospective in-laws with their bitchiness and their wanton western ways. It’s about anger and angst, about questioning society’s iron-clad rules.

Also, SAWCC has drawn inspiration from other activist groups such as the Black Arts Movement in the UK, as well as the progressive South Asian arts festival Desh Pardesh in Toronto. According to the founder Abichandani, she emphasizes:”What has set SAWCC apart from our local peers was our pioneering commitment  to making art, and to date we remain the only exclusively feminist space.”Over the years SAWCC’s reach has extended to scores of artists, writers and performers, meeting informally in rented space in Manhattan. Social media has now extended its reach to many countries and the group has over 6000 members on Facebook. [6] Also, SAWCC has no membership dues and is totally volunteer-driven. It has monthly events presenting the work of South Asian women artists including a writing workshop called Brown Eyed Girls, Practice/Process/Portfolio, a studio circle for visual artists, a listserv for South Asian women and annual exhibitions and festivals open to the public.

On the other hand, for new immigrants, it is still a way to find one’s bearings in a new world. Josheen Oberoi, a specialist in South Asian art with the auction house Saffronart, recalls, ” When I first came to New York, it was such a comfort to find an intellectual space that allowed interaction with South Asian women who were practitioners of art, in one form or the other.  I realized that SAWCC- pronounced saucy- was the perfectly appropriate pronunciation for this community of women where each meeting was an honest exchange of ideas, debates – absolute firecrackers of discussions and where each diverse voice was heard.” [7]

Generally speaking, SAWCC provides women of South Asian descent with links to various communities and encourages their growth as artists by providing a venue to exchange ideas and feedback on their creative work and network with other South Asian women artists, educators, community workers, and professionals. [8]

History Information

The South Asian Women’s Creative Collective (SAWCC) held its first meeting in March of 1997 at the offices of the  Sister Fund in Manhattan. Fourteen South Asian women of diverse ages and sexualities attended that meeting, particularly Sakhi for South Asian Women and the  South Asian Lesbian and Gay Association.  Soon after, women began to gather monthly at the Asian American Writers’ Workshop to facilitate and present their work. At that time, there were no other (feminist or otherwise) South Asian arts–based organizations in New York, making SAWCC an eclectic and unique space of support and community.Their public event was a festival for women of color at the  Audre Lorde Project in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. This was followed by SAWCC’s first annual festival of visual art and performance, Karmakollage, which took place at the Gallery at 678 to an audience of over 400 diverse, enthusiastic supporters.

Within a year and a half, a volunteer board emerged, and SAWCC applied for nonprofit status and became incorporated. In February 2000, they set up a list for South Asian women artists and creative professionals, which includes over 500 members. Their writing workshop Brown Eyed Girls was initiated in 2002, and a studio circle for visual artists began in 2006. After that, SAWCC continues to hold public events such as annual visual arts exhibition, performances, film screenings, talks, and literary events. All of these have given visibility to emerge and establish women artists, writers, and academics, connecting industry professionals to women who would otherwise not have access to these resources. Over fifteen years SAWCC reach an annual audience of over 5,000 by outreaching through word of mouth. From its inception as a small artists’ community to its current status as a nationally-recognized nonprofit, SAWCC offers a phenomenal venue for South Asian women to connect through creative practice. [9]

SAWCC’s programming efforts now include: an annual visual arts exhibition, which has included artists such as Chitra Ganesh, Swati Khurana, and Sa’dia Rehman; an annual literary festival which has featured writers including Minal Hajratwala, V.V. Ganeshananthan, and Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist Jhumpa Lahiri; a writing workshop, Brown Eyed Girls, a studio circle of visual artists; and a series of monthly panel discussions and events featuring emerging artists. While serving as a space for South Asian women artists to showcase their work, identify resources, and seek support, SAWCC has become known for presenting cutting-edge work that engages with themes of gender and cultural representation which has collaborated with other arts organizations including 3rd I South Asian Independent Film, the Asian American Writers’ Workshop as well as Pratt Institute. [10]

Community Information

Brown Eyed Girls

Brown Eyed Girls is SAWCC’s writing workshop, which meets regularly throughout the year. BEG was created in spring 2002, in response to the needs of the SAWCC’s literary membership for a structured space within which to workshop pieces and receive critical feedback. 

Studio Circle

SAWCC’s studio circle for practicing visual artists was initiated in 2006 and consists of women of South Asian and Iranian heritage. This group meets regularly at the studio of a different artist to critique work and provide space for collaborations and networking, as studio critiques provide a deeper way to meet the needs of practicing visual artists.

SAWCC London

SAWCC is based in the New York City area and has a sister chapter in London. SAWCC London offers free women-only “monthlies,” as well as open public events. SAWCC London monthlies provide a platform for women artists of South Asian descent to actively network—and to share, discuss, and develop creative ideas and works. Since 2004, SAWCC London has nurtured independently-forged British South Asian female creative expression. It has developed into a respected network with a reputation for showcasing cutting-edge creativity embracing gender, identity, and cultural representation.  [11]

Events Information

Two Brown Girls x SAWCC Salon
Welcome To What We Took From Is The State
SAWCC Salon
Call For Submission:SAWCC's annual Visual Art Exhibition
New Films 2015
Call For Participation

References Information

  1. ^ "Mission Statement". SAWCC. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  2. ^ "Jaishri Abichandani". Retrieved 30 Mar 2016.
  3. ^ "Jaishri Abichandani: Reconciliations". 23 Mar 2008. Retrieved 01 Apr 2016. {{ cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= ( help)
  4. ^ Melwani, Lavina (7 Dec 2012). "SAWCC: A Space of their Own". Lassi with Lavina. Retrieved 28 Mar 2016.
  5. ^ Cotter, Holland (16 Aug 2012). "'Fifteen Years of the South Asian Women's Creative Collective'". Retrieved 30 Mar 2016.
  6. ^ MELWANI, LAVINA (7 Dec 2012). "The World of South Asian Women Artists". Lassi with Lavina. Retrieved 30 Mar 2016.
  7. ^ Melwani, Lavina (7 Dec 2012). "New Immigrants, New World". Lassi with Lavina. Retrieved 30 Mar 2016.
  8. ^ "About". SAWCC. Retrieved 31 Mar 2016.
  9. ^ "History". SAWCC. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  10. ^ "South Asian Women's Creative Collective Records". Asian/Pacific American Archives Survey Project. 28 Jan 2015. Retrieved 31 Mar 2016.
  11. ^ "Community". SAWCC. Retrieved 30 March 2016.

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook