WE WERE ALWAYS NEIGHBOURS | ASIA NOW PARIS 2025
THE THIRD SPACE, ASIA NOW PARIS
Monnaie De Paris
21 - 26 Oct
The modern nation-states of South Asia were born from rupture—but in the archives of memory and migration, the region exists not as a divided bloc, but as a shared terrain of gestures, urgencies, and expression. We Were Always Neighbours begins from that understanding. It is not a regional showcase; it is a quiet act of resistance against the idea that identities must be defined by the lines drawn between us. It is an offering from a region constantly in tension, yet bound together by shared imaginaries, histories, griefs, and radical acts of making.
Curated by Sahil Arora, Founder, Method for Asia NOW 2025, We Were Always Neighbours brings together emerging artists from India and Pakistan into a common space of artistic and cultural kinship. While this edition focuses on the practices of these two countries, it gestures toward a wider South Asian terrain—Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka—where the same urgencies and affinities continue to unfold. It proposes a borderless corridor, one shaped not by politics or policy, but by gesture, form, and the desire to speak across imposed silence. The title holds a truth so obvious it feels radical: that before we were divided, we were connected. It is this sentiment the project seeks to translate into a living, breathing section of the Monnaie de Paris—through painting, sculpture, performance, and installation.
The Corridor section brings together the intimate, the surreal, and the symbolic through the works of Fatima Kaleem and Shamir Iqtidar from Pakistan; and Shivangi Kalra, Gargi Chandola, Darshika Singh, and Viraj Khanna from India. Through paintings and small sculptures, these artists chart internal geographies—feminine spaces, ornamentation, mythologies, and acts of quiet resistance—forming a layered, plural cartography of neighbouring imaginaries.
Beyond the gallery walls, site-specific installations unfold across the Monnaie de Paris. Works by Tarini Sethi, Sehaj Malik, Kunel Gaur, Mohd. Intiyaz, Sajid Wajid Shaikh, and Jibran Shahid respond to the site through architectural memory, gesture, material, and scale—turning corridors and courtyards into spaces of both disruption and reflection. Many of the works will arrive folded in suitcases—unstretched canvases, drawings on paper, and small, portable objects that carry within them the intimacy of handwork and the urgency of youth. Others will be larger and site-specific, created in collaboration with like-minded galleries across the region. Some will be ephemeral: bodies in motion, rituals of sound, live gestures that exist only in the moment and leave no trace.
This curated project also reflects the collaborative spirit at the heart of Method’s practice. Several artists are presented in association with like-minded spaces across the globe, including Rajiv Menon Contemporary (Los Angeles), Tao Art Gallery (Mumbai), and Art Manzil (nomadic)—extending the conversation beyond geography, into networks of support, dialogue, and co-imagination.
France, with its long and often overlooked history of engagement with South Asia—through film, diplomacy, literature, and cultural exchange—has maintained a capacity to hold dialogue even when formal politics fall silent. From the days of Pondicherry to the present, it has hosted artists, writers, and thinkers from across the subcontinent, creating room for plurality to unfold in public view. We Were Always Neighbours continues in this spirit. It gathers emerging practices that speak many languages—visually, politically, emotionally—yet carry within them a shared impulse: to reach across borders and remain in relation.
PARTICIPATING ARTISTS //
Emerging artists from India and Pakistan
WORKS ON DISPLAY //
The Reveal by Ammama Malik
Oil on Canvas
30" x 36"
Departure by Darshika Singh
Acrylics, Gesso, Carbon Paper, Oil Paint and Pencil on Canvas
36" x 48" | 91.5 x 122 cm
Script III (Diptych) by Darshika Singh
Acrylics and Charcoal on Canvas
24" x 9 | 61 x 23 cms (combined)
12" x 9 | 30.5 x 23 cms (each)
Self Swallowing Set by Darshika Singh
Acrylics, Soft Pastel, Oil Pastel on Canvas
24" x 36" | 61 x 91.5 cms
8:07 AM by Fatima Kaleem Khan
Colored Pencil, Lace, Hair, Spangles on Canvas
42.5" x 36.6" | 108 x 93 cm
8:44 AM by Fatima Kaleem Khan
Colored Pencil on Paper
11.8" x 7" | 30 x 18 cms
Mouth by Fatima Kaleem Khan
Colored Pencil, Oil Pastel, Lace on Canvas
48" x 22" | 122 x 56 cms
Vision by Fatima Kaleem Khan
Colored Pencil on Paper
12" x 7" | 30.5 x 18 cms
ﭘﻮﺳﭩﺮ
by Fatima Kaleem Khan
Colored Pencil on Paper
9.85" x 7.5" | 25 x 19 cms
Dropping Out by Gargi Chandola
Gouache on Wasli (Paper)
13.5" x 18.5" | 34.3 x 47 cms
In Memory Of My Mother by Hasanali Kadiwala
Acrylic, Oil, Laser Engraving on Torched Wood
48" x 48" | 122 x 122 cms
Orion (Leopard) by Jibran Shahid
Acrylic on ABS, 2K High Gloss Coating, MS Stand
8.7" x 9" x 11" | 22 x 23 x 28 cms
Zephyrus (Unicorn) by Jibran Shahid
Acrylic on ABS, 2K High Gloss Coating, MS Stand
8.7" x 9" x 11" | 22 x 23 x 28 cms
The Long Pause Between Forces by Kunel Gaur
Stainless Steel Frame and Hardware. Nylon Winch Strap. Cold Cathode. Steel Drawer Slides. Wood. Ceramic Tiles. Longboard Skate Wheels.
14" x 14" x 37" | 35.6 x 35.6 x 94 cms
Dar Badar 4.0 by Mohd. Intiyaz
Hand Painted Resin Sculptures, Acid-washed Plumbing Pipes, Steel Buckets
106" x 72" x 12.5"| 269.2 x 182.8 x 31.6 cms
(When arranged in a straight line - size is variable basis placement)
Unhomeliness & Displacement (set of 9)
Mild Steel & Motor
11.5" x 10" x 12" Each | 29.2 x 25.4 x 30.4 cms each
Feed My Eyes by Shamir Iqtidar
Oil on Canvas
36" x 24" | 91.5 x 61 cms
Root Rot by Shamir Iqtidar
Oil on Canvas
40" x 30" | 101.5 x 76 cms
Untitled by Shamir Iqtidar
Oil on Canvas
15" x 10" | 28 x 25.5 cms
Love Letter by Shivangi Kalra
Oil on Canvas
41" x 61" | 105 x 155 cms
WE WERE ALWAYS NEIGHBOURS | ASIA NOW PARIS 2025
THE THIRD SPACE, ASIA NOW PARIS
Monnaie De Paris
21 - 26 Oct