‘Naga Land. Voices from Northeast India’ art exhibition in Berlin

Art by Naga artist, Zubeni Lotha exhibited at the ‘Naga Land. Voices from Northeast India’ art exhibition at the Humboldt Forum, Berlin. The art installation will be kept in display for a year.
Art by Naga artist, Zubeni Lotha exhibited at the ‘Naga Land. Voices from Northeast India’ art exhibition at the Humboldt Forum, Berlin. The art installation will be kept in display for a year.
Art by Naga artist, Zubeni Lotha exhibited at the ‘Naga Land. Voices from Northeast India’ art exhibition at the Humboldt Forum, Berlin. The art installation will be kept in display for a year.
Art by Naga artist, Zubeni Lotha exhibited at the ‘Naga Land. Voices from Northeast India’ art exhibition at the Humboldt Forum, Berlin. The art installation will be kept in display for a year.
Art by Naga artist, Zubeni Lotha exhibited at the ‘Naga Land. Voices from Northeast India’ art exhibition at the Humboldt Forum, Berlin. The art installation will be kept in display for a year.

Art by Naga artist, Zubeni Lotha exhibited at the ‘Naga Land. Voices from Northeast India’ art exhibition at the Humboldt Forum, Berlin. The art installation will be kept in display for a year.

Art installation will be kept in display for a year at Humboldt Forum

Dimapur, September 16 (MExN): The ‘Naga Land. Voices from Northeast India’ art exhibition collaboratively organized by the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, the Humboldt Forum, and the Berlin Botanical Museum in Berlin opened on September 16.

An office release from the Humboldt Forum said that Naga artist Zubeni Lotha is part of the interdisciplinary curatorial team behind this collaborative exhibition organized by the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, the Humboldt Forum, and the Berlin Botanical Museum, and critically examines the constructed image of the Naga in historical Western photography.

The art installation will be kept in display for a year at the Humboldt Forum, Berlin.

‘I will not weep,’ a new sound installation by Naga artist Senti Toy Threadgill in the Humboldt Forum’s listening room also reflects on contemporary Nagaland, its colonial past and current political situation.

Setting the context of the exhibition, the Humboldt Forum mentioned that all over the world, minorities are fighting for cultural self-determination or political autonomy. One such minority is the Naga- an umbrella term for more than thirty different tribal groups which, despite many similarities, differ in their culture and language and in the way they see themselves. The majority of the approximately three million people now live in the state of Nagaland in north-eastern India, it stated. 

The forum in its statement said that since the end of British colonial rule, the Naga have been fighting for autonomy from mainland India and for cultural self-determination. It was only during this period that the desire for a common identity emerged. Christianity is the main religion in Nagaland and has greatly influenced the culture. So what does it mean to be a Naga today? it stated.

The exhibition ‘Naga Land. Voices from Northeast India’ looks at different aspects of contemporary Naga society and its cultural identity. It brings together the historical Naga collection of the Ethnologisches Museum with contemporary photography, fashion, and visual arts from the region. The Naga have been an important research focus for European scholars since as early as the nineteenth century, it added.