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Cast My Vote for Socrates' Acquittal

 


Year : 2020
Full art work size : variable
221 art work size each : 22.86cm X 15.24cm
Media : hand pressed impression with chiseled stone and black acrylic paint on 221 pieces of
300gsm watercolor paper
Stone : 4.6 lb (weight), size: 16(L)cm X 14(W)cm X 9(H)cm

Video duration: 6min, 29 sec.

Video link: https://youtu.be/_U2_ng20asM

 

 

 

My artwork titled "Cast my vote for Socrates' acquittal" is a memoir of a lonely soul. When I was invited by Durjoy Bangladesh Foundation to be a participating artist in FoH, I was already living in an unreal time. Alone in a Brooklyn apartment, far far away from home, during a time when covid was at its peak in NewYork, somehow my creative endeavors managed to keep me busy with work I was extremely passionate about.

After hearing about so many fatalities from covid, I tried hard not to be demoralized keeping the essence of Hope alive within. Different elements around me, such as the beautiful nasturtium flower from my childhood memories or the tree outside my  window, the spring breeze or rain  helped keep me optimistic for the future. They gave me Hope. But even then, I couldn't help but compare myself to Odysseus, stranded in strange lands away from my family. This thought came forth because I was reading The Odyssey and researching about ancient Greek society, a topic I always found extremely intriguing. I found out that the earliest recorded pandemic happened in Athens in 430 BC.

May 2020 was shocking not just for me but the entire country when George Floyd was tragically murdered. I will never forget the protests, hearing gunfire from my room, writings of Black Lives Matter on the streets, frequent fireworks up in the sky and people gathering in the streets in the name of human rights. The death of George Floyd has raised the question of equality and freedom as did the death of Socrates more than 2 millennia ago. Socrates and Floyd have nothing in common between them and come from two very different times but both survived a pandemic to be killed by the rage of man. So I  have connected the two characters in one thread placing them in the context of freedom, human rights, justice and respect. For this project I have taken a page from the history of the trials of Socrates where 280 jurors found him guilty and 220 jurors voted for his acquittal.

Those 220 people who valued Socrates, valued humanity. It is the group I would like to be part of and I want to keep the process of questioning  alive. In this artwork the 221 painted stones represent the 220 votes cast by the jurors and mine for Socrates' acquittal. I chose stone and paper as my ballot. I chiseled the stone arduously to see the reflection of my inner strength on the hard surface and the print it yielded on paper. The organic characteristics and texture of the stone mixed with black acrylic paint and the multi-layered impression on paper enabled me to create a collective voice.

I believe only Hope can give us the strength to fight society's injustice. With the 221 stones I am advocating for human rights and justice. I would also like to invite anyone and everyone to join me by adding stones of their own to vote for these ideals, questioning till the end of time.

Cast my vote for Socrates

Cast my vote for Socrates

Cast my vote for Socrates
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A self portrait on stone

A self portrait on stone

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221 pieces of artwork titled  ‘Cast my Vote for Socrates acquittal’ by Artist Bipasha Hayat 2020

221 pieces of artwork titled ‘Cast my Vote for Socrates acquittal’ by Artist Bipasha Hayat 2020

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Cast my Vote for Socrates’ Acquittal  - Artwork by Bipasha Hayat

Cast my Vote for Socrates’ Acquittal - Artwork by Bipasha Hayat

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