Namma Bengaluru

Concept Note
 
According to Irit Rogoff, each of us experience visual culture in different ways to remake the world of our fantasies or desires to narrate the stories that we carry within us.
 
While trying to segregate or define the visual culture of Bangalore, we found that it did not have a unanimous visual or cultural identity.
 
 The city is appreciated and loved by its natives and millions of people from different parts of India and the world who have made Bengaluru their own. Even though Kannada is widely accepted as the state language, there is an array of different languages and cultures found in different belts of the city.
We have tried to highlight how these languages give an identity to the city and make Bangalore truly cosmopolitan.
 
Our video and sound installation is a simple product of our understanding of this undulating concept of the city’s visual culture. Namma Metro, which is the city’s latest and most exciting addition, is global in its infrastructure and organization but local with respect to people and to an extent, the system. Thus, we have recorded the announcement Welcome to Namma Metro, next station, Indranagar in fifteen different languages. Along with it we have a video installation of a series of pictures that say My Bengaluru in various languages, further stressing on the cultural acceptance that forms a part of Bangalore’s visual identity. We present to you, Namma Bengaluru.
 
 
Find the entire book at this link,
 
 
 
 
 
Pages from the Book
Photographing the projections.
Photographing the projector.
Photographing the projection.
Namma Bengaluru
Published:

Namma Bengaluru

Namma Bengaluru is a project based on the Visual Culture of Bangalore. Project Group Aishwarya Kumar Benjamin Armel Pallavi Datta Shoumik Bis Read More

Published: