banner
News center
Refined taste

Asim Waqif launches installation at the Hayward Gallery

Dec 24, 2023

The Bagri Foundation Commission, Asim Waqif’s वेणु [Venu], opens at the Hayward Gallery in London

Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox

Thank you for signing up to Wallpaper. You will receive a verification email shortly.

There was a problem. Please refresh the page and try again.

A dense bamboo dwelling – part musical instrument, part refuge from the visitors who flock to the Southbank – has been erected outside the Hayward Gallery (until 22 October 2023). A matrix of 610 bamboo poles and 700 strips of bamboo, softened and made supple from days of soaking in water, arc over each other, fan out, and weave themselves through the rungs of a steel scaffolding frame. Conceived by Indian artist Asim Waqif, the installation, वेणु, translated as Venu, an ancient Sanskrit word meaning bamboo reed or flute, is interactive: you can walk through, sit in, and even play it.

Within, lengths of bamboo bend to form a cocoon-like seat embellished with woven palms, while thick stems, skilfully split and tuned, create a series of drums accompanied by a supply of carved sticks ready for visitors to strike a beat. Spontaneous creativity is a touchstone of Waqif’s practice, and it is reflected in the way he builds his interdisciplinary projects and opens them up to morph and be manipulated by audiences.

Working with a group of structural engineers, technicians, students at the Royal College of Art, and his long-time collaborator, the architect Shantanu Heisnam, Waqif shaped the installation over ten days after the team had been taught a knotting technique called lashing. ‘I wanted everyone to get responsibility for taking some creative decisions’, Waqif explains. ‘The kind of ideas and the work that happens is then very different from an instruction based process’. The design thus progressed on site.

वेणु[ is the first work Waqif has exhibited in the UK, and while related to a recent piece, Improvise, which was shown at Kochi-Muziris Biennale, it not only responds to the site but will likely also, given the expected levels of interaction, end up bearing the marks of its use. A scaffolding rig is encased within the form to de-exoticise and contextualise the bamboo as a resource that is a ubiquitous building material used in construction projects across South and Southeast Asia.

Having trained as an architect, Waqif is sensitive to what he sees as the need to preserve historic knowledge and existing ecologies as South Asia’s urban sprawl booms. Across his practice he uses vernacular techniques and materials to foreground the value and relevance of pre-industrial processes. ‘I like using traditional methods to arrive at very contemporary forms and find that weaving and basket making have very similar properties to what is now being talked about as parametric design’, he says. वेणु highlights what can be considered old technologies of sustainability that will, once the installation ends, be inherited as the work is unbound and redistributed.

Asim Waqif: वेणु [Venu] at the Hayward Gallery, 20 July – 22 October 2023

southbankcentre.co.uk

Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox

We remember Italian designer and architect Rodolfo Dordoni, who died on 1 August 2023

By Rosa BertoliPublished 1 August 23

The sought-after Los Angeles tattoo artist tells Wallpaper* about his ‘Dreamed by Dr. Woo’ collection for Golden Goose, a collaboration which began on the waterways of Venice

By Jack MossPublished 1 August 23

The ultimate weekend in Copenhagen starts here: discover the latest openings across the UNESCO World Capital of Architecture, stay in a hotel afloat, start your day with brilliant baked goods and ski down a power-station piste

By Simon MillsPublished 1 August 23

Brian Eno exhibits his new light box sculptures in London, alongside a unique speaker and iconic works by the late American light artist Dan Flavin

By Jonathan BellPublished 21 July 23

Forrest ‘Frosty’ Myers makes his mark at Catskill Art Space, NY, celebrating 50 years of his monumental Manhattan installation, The Wall

By Pei-Ru KehPublished 20 July 23

The legacy and future of virtual worlds is explored in ‘Between Worlds‘, a new exhibition at The Photographers’ Gallery, London

By Hannah SilverPublished 12 July 23

Your guide to the best London art exhibitions, as chosen by the Wallpaper* arts desk

By Harriet Lloyd SmithPublished 10 July 23

A former coal miner, Jim McDowell defied the odds to set up his workshop and keep a historic form of American pottery alive

By Aruna D’SouzaPublished 9 July 23

‘Jeffrey Gibson: ONCE MORE WITH FEELING’ runs until 22 July at Jessica Silverman in San Francisco

By Pei-Ru KehPublished 4 July 23

Artist duo Honey Long and Prue Stent intertwine abstract references in new photo book, ‘Drinking From The Eye’, embracing the female body and the natural world

By Hannah SilverPublished 29 June 23

We profile LA-based artist and Loewe Foundation Craft Prize finalist Tanya Aguiñiga, whose work explores life on the US-Mexico border and seeks to empower transnational voices

By Harriet Lloyd-SmithPublished 11 June 23