LONDON.- Through a long and arduous journey, the Tibetan contemporary artist Tenzing Rigdol has transported twenty thousand kilos (20,000kg) of soil from Tibet to India to build a site-specific installation at Dharamsala. Constructed as a raised platform, it allows people to stand and walk on Tibetan soil. A microphone erected on the platform invites the viewers to express their feelings. The design of the installation comes from the inspiration and interpretation of the Tibetan national flag and the history of Tibet.
On September 18th 2008, Rigdols father, Norbu Wangdu, passed away as a refugee in the United States; his dearest wish was to visit Tibet, just once, before he exited this mundane world, but unfortunately it did not come to fruition. It was the fathers inherent wish, his sense of helplessness exemplifying the Tibetans nostalgic longing to return to their country before their death, which gave birth to the idea of the project. Through Rigdols work, the inhabitants of Dharamsala, separated from their relatives and banished from their homeland, will finally be able to once again step on Tibetan soil.
The location of the installation is significant to the artist, as Dharamsala, also known as Little Tibet, is the seat of the Tibetan government-in-exile and is home to the largest Tibetan population outside of Tibet. Rigdols flag-inspired installation is located right at the heart of Little Tibet, evoking the history of the Tibetan people.
Our People, Our Land exemplifies the ways in which art is capable of transcending political boundaries. The dangerous journey taken to transport the soil, which encompasses the borders of many countries and their numerous checkpoints, is in itself significant and raises questions about border control and the nature of sovereignty. Rigdols installation provides a form of resistance against authoritarian power, by giving voice to those who have been uprooted from their land. In many ways, it enables the displaced to return home. Although Rigdols work examines the plight of the Tibetan people in exile, it also has wider resonance, exploring the notion of nostalgia, the idea of homeland and how art is intertwined with the political and the social. It also demonstrates the transgressive power of art as an act of defiance.
Our People, Our Land is being recorded as a video and a series of photographs.
Tenzing Rigdol
Tenzing Rigdol was born in 1982, in Katmandu, Nepal to a Tibetan refugee family. An artist of Tibetan origin, he currently lives and works in New York. Rigdols work encompasses many media, including painting, sculpture and video. He is trained both in the Tibetan and Western art traditions. He studied Tibetan traditional sand painting and butter sculpture at the Shekar Chorten Monastery in Katmandu and Thangka painting at the Tibet Thangka School, Katmandu. In 2005, Rigdol was awarded a BFA in Painting/Drawing and a BA in Art History at the University of Colorado, Denver. Recent exhibitions include Beyond the Mandala Contemporary Art from Tibet, Volte Gallery, Mumbai, India, in collaboration with
Rossi & Rossi, London, UK (2011); Works on Paper, Rossi & Rossi, London, UK (2010); Scorching Sun of Tibet, Songzhuang Art Center, Beijing, China (2010); Tradition Transformed - Tibetan Artists Respond, Rubin Museum of Art (RMA), New York, USA (2010). In 2008, Rigdol was awarded the Rubin Museum of Arts Himalayan Fellowship, at the Vermont Studio Center, USA.