ArtAsiaPacific

CHITRA GANESH

Sitting atop a mattress on the floor of her studio apartment in New York City’s Ditmas Park district, Chitra Ganesh lamented being unable to properly host guests. “It’s so weird,” she said, her voice slightly muffled through her face mask. “I keep wanting to offer a cup of tea to people who come over.” Some six feet away, I perched on a blanket-draped futon, my own face partially hidden behind a mask. Although I had previously covered Ganesh’s 2018 dual exhibition “The Scorpion Gesture/Face of the Future” at the Rubin Museum of Art in New York, this was my first meeting with the visual artist, known for her futurist twist on feminist and queer mythologies.

Normally, between January and March, Ganesh would be working in India, preparing for art fairs across Asia. But like everyone adjusting to pandemic life, she found herself unexpectedly homebound. “I grew up in New York, so

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