A tearful dialog with an artist from Pakistan ignited Postcards from Residence: my images and writing challenge that paperwork 47 artists from each India and Pakistan, all of whom share a reference to the partition of India in 1947.
Born to folks of pre-partition India, my childhood recollections had been embellished with tales of my dad and mom’ properties in Quetta and Sargodha, each now in modern-day Pakistan. Now of their 90s, my dad and mom nonetheless miss the “house” they fled in a single day, leaving all they’d and the deep friendships shared over generations, by no means to return. These had been tales that served because the fertile soil on which the seeds of my partition challenge had been to be sown.
Manisha Gera Baswani portrait. Courtesy of the artist
Getting visas is rarely straightforward on either side of the border, however I’ve been lucky sufficient to go to Pakistan just a few occasions within the final 7 years. I initially travelled there to undertake one other photographic challenge, which allowed me to spend lengthy hours in lots of Pakistani artists’ studios, conversing with them over cups of tea, and photographing them as we spoke.
It was throughout these visits that I stored listening to tales round partition. Nonetheless, this time they had been from the opposite aspect of the border. However it turned out that the emotions—these of deep ache, nostalgia, longing and love for what was as soon as house—had been as pervasive on their aspect as they had been mine. What’s extra, I realised that my topics had been therapeutic via the act of narrating these tales to me. Repeating these tales appeared to assuage the completely displaced. Every recounting gave them a muted hope that their recollections may not be endlessly buried within the sands of time. These tales continued to echo inside me till I felt compelled to report them, so they might stay past their teller.
The challenge consists of shows of 47 postcards—a quantity that was fastidiously chosen—that characteristic an artist photographed by me of their studios. On the cardboard’s reverse is a reminiscence of their “house” that has been misplaced.
Postcards from Residence, proven on the inaugural Lahore Biennial in 2017. Photograph: Manisha Gera Baswani
I used to be invited to point out the challenge on the inaugural Lahore Biennale 2017, the place I shed tears with strangers as they narrated their tales of partition. It was in all probability the primary public artwork challenge on the Partition by an Indian, exhibited in Pakistan. Later that 12 months, Salima and Moneeza Hashmi, the daughters of the good poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz, whom each India and Pakistan name their very own, invited me to exhibit on the Faiz Pageant in Lahore. Numerous viewers got here throughout every of the 4 days throughout this cross border cultural alternate. And my assortment of tales from either side of the border stored rising as I exhibited the challenge at numerous venues, together with faculties.
A postcard that includes a portrait and phrases by the artist Saba Iqbal. Courtesy of Manisha Gera Baswani
It quickly dawned on me that the challenge was additionally chatting with those that haven’t witnessed partition however had skilled private loss and longing, maybe having left their war-torn properties for safer lands or in want for a greater life. My challenge began being embraced by a wider viewers relatively organically wherever it was proven, whether or not within the Kochi Biennale in Kerala in 2018 or on the India Artwork Honest 2019 the place it was proven as their essential public artwork challenge. It’s at present on show on the Ashmoleon Museum, Oxford till March 2023.
I’m a agency believer within the “therapeutic energy of artwork”. The method of therapeutic requires time, sharing and listening, which each our nations and its individuals haven’t carried out sufficient of. Those that witnessed partition are nonetheless deeply bruised and in ache. We, the kin of the victims of 1947, additionally carry a collective grief that persists. I generally ask myself if my youngsters and their youngsters will grieve the best way we do, for that technology. I don’t have any solutions, solely prayers that they inherit a fantastic, easy and peaceable world, one that also lives in our dad and mom’ recollections.
• Manisha Gera Baswani is New Delhi-based, multi-disciplinary artist. Her work focuses on establishing connections throughout Asian cultural traditions, together with portray, images, sculpture, and poetic writing.






