福利视频

Asha and Suhrid Sarabhai with Manu Dantani in background, Sarabhai Retreat, Ahmedabad, India, 2016.
Photo: Cameron Vanderscoff

Rauschenberg and Asha Sarabhai working on Unions series (1975), Sarabhai Retreat, Ahmedabad, India, 1975.
Photo: Sidney B. Felsen 漏 1975

Two workers, Anand and Suhrid Sarabhai, and Rauschenberg working on Box Cars (Bones) (1975), Kalam Khush paper mill, Gandhi Ashram, Ahmedabad, India, 1975. Photo: Gianfranco Gorgoni, www.gianfrancogorgoni.it. Courtesy Suhrid Sarabhai

Robert Rauschenberg
Box Cars (Bones), 1975
Handmade paper with bamboo and fabric
34 x 26 1/2 x 3 inches (86.4 x 67.3 x 7.6 cm)

Workers at the Kalam Khush paper mill, Gandhi Ashram, Ahmedabad, India, 1975. Photo: Sidney B. Felsen 漏 1975

Rauschenberg with fabrics, Ahmedabad, India, 1975. Photo: Suhrid Sarabhai

Celebration at Asha and Suhrid Sarabhai鈥檚 house for everyone involved in the Bones and Unions project (both 1975). Photo: Gianfranco Gorgoni, www.gianfrancogorgoni.it. Courtesy Suhrid Sarabhai

Asha and Suhrid Sarabhai


Wife and husband Asha and Suhrid Sarabhai established their roles in Indian textile manufacturing and design with artistic conviction and ethical consciousness. Suhrid and his elder brother Anand were young men in 1964 when Rauschenberg first visited the Sarabhai family estate in Ahmedabad while he toured with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company. Suhrid later joined his family鈥檚 business at the Calico Textile Mills. Asha is an accomplished clothing designer, who is celebrated for her modern interpretations of classic Indian garments. She foregrounds the artisanal skill of local craftspeople and locally sourced materials as an alternative to mass-production practices. Rauschenberg, a great enthusiast of Asha鈥檚 work, modeled her clothes in the 1990s. Asha鈥檚 designs are in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

In May 1975, the Sarabhais hosted Rauschenberg again when he traveled to Ahmedabad with a group of assistants and friends, including Gemini G.E.L. printers, Gemini founder Sidney B. Felsen, and Rauschenberg鈥檚 son Christopher. During this particular stay, Rauschenberg made the听Bones and Unions editions (both 1975), and following Anand鈥檚 suggestion, he worked with traditional, handmade, rag paper at the Gandhi Ashram, also in Ahmedabad. Rauschenberg acquired new and secondhand fabrics from local markets to incorporate into the projects, and he orchestrated a collaborative creative process that involved workers from the ashram, craftspeople, and the Sarabhai family, including Asha and Suhrid鈥檚 young sons Sanjay and Samir.

Excerpt from Interview with听Asha and Suhrid Sarabhai by Cameron Vanderscoff, 2015


S. Sarabhai: That鈥檚 at the handmade paper mill after the pulp is made using the rags, which are shredded. It comes into this. And these trays, this line was given to us, so then with a bucket it鈥檚 poured into the tray. And Bob would then insert whatever he wanted to insert in there, bamboo and fabric and others. So this is at the handmade鈥 Many of these workers are still there at the mill. They come from Bihar and eastern UP [Uttar Pradesh] and they鈥檙e still there. We go to this mill quite a lot still.

Vanderscoff:听So you have a lot of people who work there for their whole working life then? We鈥檙e now talking about forty years since that photo.

S. Sarabhai: I know. So these people were in their twenties, but they鈥檙e still there. They all recognize us when we go there.

A. Sarabhai: A few, some of them are still there. And there鈥檚 some elderly鈥

S. Sarabhai: Because it鈥檚 wonderful paper鈥攊t鈥檚 really wonderful paper.

Vanderscoff: Do you have any sense about what any of their impressions were of this visit?听

S. Sarabhai: Curiosity, I think. Curiosity.

A. Sarabhai: But they were quite cool about it too.

S. Sarabhai: Bob was very鈥

A. Sarabhai: Respectful of them.

S. Sarabhai: Yes, absolutely, completely.

A. Sarabhai: And very respectful of the space.

S. Sarabhai: Respectful of everyone who helped.

A. Sarabhai: There was no question of going in and taking over; it was, 鈥淚鈥檓 working in your space.鈥 And he did it very quietly, very calmly. So it really wasn鈥檛 disruptive.

S. Sarabhai: And with great humility. And Bob was really fantastic in terms of his interaction with the craftsmen who worked with him. He was really fabulous, fabulous in terms of鈥攏ot polite for the sake of politeness, but just naturally he was just such a gracious kind of person. He really was.

Vanderscoff: And I think the other thing that seems to be emerging in these photos is this sense of how really everybody got pulled in in some way. So you took photographs and there are other photographs of you, Asha, molding the mud.

A. Sarabhai: I loved it, actually. It was wonderful to be involved in the making of it because you would just鈥 Everyone was doing what was being done. It was really good fun.

S. Sarabhai: It was quite contagious, that whole excitement. When you went to the studio at that particular moment of time, you couldn鈥檛 just sit back. And Bob did not mind people coming there, but once you went there, you could not help but just roll up your sleeves. [Laughs]

A. Sarabhai: But I think that that was a nice thing; that he never worked as though he was, 鈥淚鈥檓 the artist and you can all come and take a peek and then go away.鈥 It was, 鈥淗ey, come on, why don鈥檛 we all do this?鈥 And it was very involving of other people鈥

S. Sarabhai: Very inclusive, very inclusive鈥

A. Sarabhai: 鈥攊n a quiet sort of way.

S. Sarabhai: 鈥攐f all ages, the children included. Nothing to do with grown-ups鈥攅veryone. If they wished to help, 鈥淧lease do, do this.鈥 [Laughs] It was really great fun.