Art In The Fort

Fort Kochi has emerged as an important destination for lovers of art and culture. A visit to the Kochi–Muziris Biennale can be a prized experience

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Fort Kochi has emerged as an important destination for lovers of art and culture. A visit to the Kochi–Muziris Biennale can be a prized experience

When artist Sue Williamson visited Fort Kochi in 2017, she was struck by the similarities of the colonial histories between the place and Cape Town, where she lived. Back in South Africa, she discovered transaction records at the Cape Town Deeds Office that chronicle the enslavement of Indians who were brought there by the Dutch East India Company to work in estates and gardens in the 17th century. For the fourth edition of the Kochi–Muziris Biennale (KMB), Williamson has inscribed white T-shirts with the little information she found in the archives—the name given by the master and the slave’s age, gender and place of birth. These T-shirts that Williamson calls ‘One Hundred and Nineteen Deeds of Sale’ flutter on a clothesline at the edge of Aspinwall House, overlooking a picturesque Arabian Sea. It’s a stirring reminder of what displacement means, so very unlike all the tourists who have flocked from all over the world to see the biennale.

Fort Kochi, off the coast of Kerala in south India, was always on the radar of international tourists. It is part of Kochi, a natural harbour, that was fought for and won by three colonizers—the Portuguese, the Dutch and the English. Not to mention the varied cultures—the Chinese, Israelis and Arabs—that made it their home. From the writings of the Frenchman Jean-Baptiste Tavernier to China’s Ma Huan, Fort Kochi finds mention in several pre-modern texts by explorers, stoking the curiosity of the discerning traveller. The Chinese fishing nets that dot the shore and the St Francis Church where Vasco da Gama was first buried are all testament to history that is strewn around, accessible without effort, inspiring artists like Williamson.

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