Sarah Dutt
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Sarah Dutt is a New Zealand artist of Māori and Fijian-Indian heritage. She is a founder and member of
The Kshetra Collective The Kshetra Collective is a creative collective of diverse multimedia New Zealand artists of Indian heritage. The collective is made up of Tiffany Singh, Shruti Yatri, Mandrika Rupa, Jacob Rajan, Rafik Patel, Sarah Dutt and Mandy Rupa-Reid. T ...
, a diverse group of artists in New Zealand of Indian heritage.


Biography

Sarah Dutt was born in New Zealand and is of Māori (Ngāi Tai, Whānau-ā-Apanui, Ngāti Porou) and Fijian-Indian descent. Her mother comes from the East Coast of New Zealand, and her father's ancestry is from Uttar Pradesh. Her great-grandfather moved from India to Fiji in the late 1800s during the
Girmit ''Girmit'' is a 2019 Indian Kannada-language film written and directed by Ravi Basrur. The film is also being dubbed into English with the same title, into Tamil and Malayalam as ''Podi Mass'', and into Hindi and Telugu as ''Pakka Mass'' s ...
. Her grandmother was from Trinidad and emigrated to Fiji in 1906. Dutt's father moved to Aotearoa New Zealand in the 1960s. Dutt's art practice was established in the 1990s. She attended Elam School of Fine Arts in Auckland and completed a Masters in Fine Arts with Honours in 2005. Dutt has also worked in education and as a teacher since 2003. Dutt is a founding member of The Kshetra Collective, a group of New Zealand artists of Indian heritage.


Artwork

Dutt's mixed media art practice is informed by the visual cultures of her Māori and Indian heritage. In 2009 Dutt exhibited a series of artworks entitled, ''Tara,'' at the
Māngere Arts Centre - Ngā Tohu o Uenuku Māngere Arts Centre - Ngā Tohu o Uenuku is an Auckland Council-owned and operated arts venue in the suburb of Māngere, in Auckland, New Zealand. The purpose-built facility was opened in 2010, and is considered by Auckland Council to be the h ...
. The series of paintings and installations took visual inspiration from Indian henna and rangoli design as well as Māori ta moko and kowhaiwhai motifs. Dutt plays on the visual and mythological connections between
Māori mythology Māori mythology and Māori traditions are two major categories into which the remote oral history of New Zealand's Māori may be divided. Māori myths concern fantastic tales relating to the origins of what was the observable world for the pr ...
and Hinduism in her work. In 2022 Dutt, as part of The Kshetra Collective, curated an exhibition at the Auckland War Memorial Museum entitled A ''Place to Stand.'' The exhibition aligned with the collective's aims to display the diversity of the Indian diaspora in New Zealand. It was the first exhibition of contemporary Indian New Zealand artists in New Zealand. The exhibition included the painting ''Where I belong, Toku Tuurangawaewae, Swadesh Hai, Mera,'' which explores the artist's sense of cultural, physical and spiritual belonging. In 2023 Dutt had work displayed with The Kshetra Collective in the exhibition, ''Invisible Narratives: Contemporary Indian Creatives from Aotearoa'' at the New Zealand Portrait Gallery Te Pūkenga Whakaata. Her painting ''All in a Day's Work (2023)'' makes reference to the history of indenture from India to Trinidad and Fiji. The exhibition also includes the painting ''Where I belong, Toku Tuurangawaewae, Swadesh Hai, Mera.''


References


Further reading


Te Taunga: A Place To Stand Webinar - Auckland Museum

Sarah Dutt Rangoli Artwork - Auckland Museum
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dutt, Sarah Living people 21st-century New Zealand artists 21st-century New Zealand women artists Elam Art School alumni New Zealand contemporary artists New Zealand people of Indian descent New Zealand people of Fijian descent New Zealand people of Māori descent Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki people Ngāti Porou people Te Whānau-ā-Apanui people Year of birth missing (living people)