2014 M.F.A. in Graphics (Printmaking), Faculty of Visual Art, Rabindra Bharati University
2012 B.F.A. in Graphics (Printmaking), Faculty of Visual Art, Rabindra Bharati University
Exhibitions
2022
India Art Fair 2022
Shrine Empire | New Delhi | ‘Now They Stopped Building Granaries’ | Solo show
2020
India Art Fair, Shrine Empire, New Delhi
2019
Serendipity Art Festival, Goa, curated by Rahaab Allana
Group show at Shrine Empire, New Delhi
India Art Fair, Shrine Empire, New Delhi
2018
Solo show at Clark House Initiative, Mumbai
India Art Fair, Shrine Empire, New Delhi
2017
India Art Fair, Shrine Empire, New Delhi
2016
EXPERIMENTS |CIMA Art Gallery, Kolkata
EXPERIMENTS | Dr. Bhau Daji Lad Mumbai City Museum
2015
CIMA Award Show | CIMA Art Gallery, Kolkata
2014
Khoj Peers Residency Show | Khoj Artists Association, New Delhi
Art for Young Collectors | Galerie Mirchandani + Steinruecke, Mumbai
Emami Chisel Annual Exhibition | Emami Chisel Art, Kolkata
Birla Academy Annual Exhibition | Birla Academy of Art & Culture, Kolkata
State Academy Annual Exhibition |ICCR Gallery, Kolkata
Students’ Annual Exhibition | RBU at Emami Chisel Art, Kolkata
2013
Industrial Portraits | Clark House Initiative, Mumbai
Students’ Annual Exhibition | RBU at ICCR Gallery, Kolkata
Annual Exhibition of State Academy | RBU at ICCR Gallery, Kolkata
2012
Annual Exhibition | Academy of Fine Arts, Kolkata
Students’ Annual Exhibition | RBU at Kolkata Town Hall
2011
Students’ Annual Exhibition | RBU at Kolkata Town Hall
2010
Annual Show of Oriental Art Society | Academy of Fine Arts, Kolkata
Group Show at Gorky Sadan | Russian Cultural Centre, Kolkata
Students’ Annual Exhibition | RBU at Victoria Memorial Hall, Kolkata
Awards / Residencies
2018-20 Junior Fellowship of Ministry of Culture from the Government of India
2015 CIMA Jury Award, Kolkata
2014 Khoj Peers Residency, Khoj Artists Association, New Delhi
2013 Certificate of Merit, Students’ Annual Exhibition, RBU at ICCR Gallery
2012 Certificate of Merit, Students’ Annual Exhibition, RBU at Kolkata Town Hall
2010 Award- Annual Show of Oriental Art Society at Academy of Fine Arts
Sangita Maity (b.1989, Kanthi, West Bengal) lives and works in Kolkata. Sangita completed her post-graduate studies in printmaking from the Faculty of Visual Arts, Rabindra Bharati University. Her work involves extensive research and she uses photographs, photo-etchings, serigraphy and various other mediums to describe her experience. In 2019 Maity participated at the Serendipity Art Festival, Goa, curated by Rahaab Allana; a group show at Shrine Empire, New Delhi; solo show at Clark House Initiative, Mumbai, 2018. She was awarded the Junior Fellowship of Ministry of Culture from the Government of India, 2018 -2020, Experiments 2016, group show at Dr. Bhau Daji Lad Museum, Mumbai and Khoj Peers Residency 2014 at Khoj Artists Association in New Delhi. Galerie Mirchandani + Steinruecke’s 2014 edition of ‘Art for Young Collectors’, in Mumbai. She received Cima Jury Award in 2015.
Her recent projects are based on socio-cultural, geographical, political and environmental issues on excessive rubber plantation in Tripura, India’s second-largest rubber producing state. She interacts with the land and visits rubber planted forests as well as its related factories in Tripura to understand the process, occupational history of the people involved as a labour in the business.
During her last visit, she investigated the environmental impact of genetically modified rubber plants and occupational migration of local tribal communities. Occupational migration has forced the locals to abandon their traditional way of life and practices. Traditions have been altered by their new circumstances, adapting to other cultures to sustain their livelihood. This body of work investigates the relationship between tradition and situation and their contradictions, in the lives of indigenous communities in Tripura.
“I have been engaged with indigenous communities of Barbil in their makeshift settlements over the course of time to understand what they have unlearned in the process of displacement and what they have learned by unlearning their tradition. Series of portraiture, daily living and activities around the transformed landscape and collective narrativity of the displacement process have been represented into my visual practice over a variety of mediums which I find simulates the sensitivity of the issue.” – Sangita Maity