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Australia is preparing for a big boom in Indian art
Updated On: 06 December, 2015 07:05 AM IST | | Benita Fernando
<p>Australia has begun looking eastward, with hopes hitched on desi contemporary art</p>

The largest installation at the Asia Pacific Triennial (APT), which opened on November 21 in Brisbane, is a tower of timber, salvaged from mills, piers and wharfs around the city. The tower, exuding a sense of incompletion and angular branches, is titled, All We Leave Behind are Memories. It sounds sentimental, philosophical even, but the tower’s maker Asim Waqif borrowed the line from an Australian demolition company’s tagline. In talks with APT’s curators for the last two years, Waqif’s oeuvre is a statement on the rapid transformation that Brisbane has witnessed in recent years; construction and demolition go hand in hand. When APT concludes, the tower will be torn down, in almost Burning Man fashion, and parts will be returned to the city’s timber yard. But Waqif sounds like a content artist when he explains, "The installation is very contextual and is a take on Brisbane’s construction waste. I wouldn’t make the same one back home in India."
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