Responding
to National celebrations of the 2002 Manchester UK. Commonwealth Games,
'SPOrTLIGHT' explores current perceptions and representations of sport.
The works reinterpret 18th and 19th Century Indian miniatures paintings
- the initial concept behind the exhibition being "to create a
platform for introducing wider audiences to this traditional art form
through a subject that would have mass appeal as part of popular culture".
In a broader context 'SPOrTLIGHT' projects the artists' ongoing aims
to assert the value of traditional and non European aesthetics as a
legitimate form of expression within Contemporary art practice.
Dressed
To Kill (from the SPOrTLIGHT series)
2002
23 x 38 cm (9 x 15in)
Poster colour and gouache on mountboard
Artist: Amrit K.D. Kaur Singh
Here, Venus Williams’s accomplishment within tennis
is presented as an extension of the wider impact of black women on 20th
popular culture across the fields of sports, cinema, music and fashion.
This is an image about the ultimate ‘girl power’ - manifest
through women who have challenged the traditional social stereotypes
of black underachievement and pushed the boundaries of black success
within a global entertainment, fashion and beauty industry known historically
for its white bias tendencies.
Dwarfing the other figures in the composition, her imposing
presence mirrors the stature she shares with her practice partner and
co competitor Serena who, whilst physically absent from the scene, is
represented by association - as the sisters who rocked the conservative
white image of tennis to become the first black women to play at Wimbledon
and win the prestigious US Open final.
It’s also about how the sports arena in general
has become a showcase for designer sportswear companies who seek to
monopolise on the free advertising afforded by spin off media coverage
of the game and play on the growing tabloid tendency to panda to the
gossip element of a mass readership more interested it seems in what
the sports personality is wearing than how they are performing. In this
respect, Venus is shown wearing the infamous outfit which was captioned
in the press as the ‘Venus Eye Trap.
In a context where celebrity status is a major selling
point to potential sponsors, this further points to the growing pressure
on sports personalities to develop a public image that gives them an
edge over the competition in grabbing those important headlines. The
suggestion here is that in Venus’s case her risqué approach
to fashion on the court is an extension of a self created personal style
whose media appeal has acted as a catalyst for her equal success off
the court - a style that reinforces her highly sellable image as a young,
active, vibrant, young women and has totally broken the mould in terms
of the hitherto relatively reserved image and strict dress code of tennis.
It’s a painting which also shows Venus as truly modern icon who
reflects a sign of the times in emphasising just how far social attitudes
to fashion and women have come since the early days of women’s
tennis where Victorian values of decency and modesty dictated ankle
length skirts and chin high necks for work and leisure !
Proving to be one of the most celebrated female sports
personalities or her time, Venus takes her place at centre stage both
on the tennis court and the catwalk whilst adoring African - American
female fans gaze on; awe inspired and faithfully donning replicas of
actual outfits worn by their heroine.
Symbolising her universal renown within the field of
tennis, she swings the ball into a distant horizon, towards a pond which
takes the form of a global map. But as certain elements in the painting
indicate, the true measure of her success is revealed by the fact that
she has acquired a level of fame which transcends not only her own sport,
but all sport. It is the kind of fame that has been immortalised in
an episode of The Simpsons, influences prime time National network broadcasts,
commands multimillion dollar sponsorship deals ranging from beauty products
to chewing gum and has stars for fans.
Amongst these are female celebrities like Whoopie Goldberg
(who reportedly walked on to a set during the filming of Hollywood Squares
in 2002 and started bowing towards Venus and Serena) and the pop legend
Dionne Warwick (who serenaded Venus with a round of ‘That’s
What Friends are For’ at Wimbledon the same year). Even the black
queen of the catwalk herself - Super Model Naomi Campbell, is shown
stepping aside for the sports star turned sports model and her very
own collection of designer wear.
The
composition is based on an Indian miniature which depicts a group of
tribeswomen getting ready for the hunt. Its relative unusualness in
representing a female slant on a traditionally male dominated theme,
provided the initial inspiration for this painting, which similarly
highlights the female perspective within what’s popularly perceived
as the male world of sport.