About the Artwork
In this work, Neha Vedpathak explores the theme of resilience — something she sees as a common ground connecting India, where she was born, and Detroit, where she now lives and works.
The lacelike paper, produced through a technique the artist invented, is both delicate and sturdy. In this rigorous process called “plucking,” Vedpathak carefully separates the fibers of Japanese handmade paper using a tiny pushpin.
Painted in gradations of yellow and red, the work’s vibrant colors evoke sunrise, sunset, and ongoing cycles of darkness and light. These pigments also recall turmeric and kumkum (vermilion powder), two substances that factor into many religious ceremonies and everyday practices in South Asia. For Vedpathak, the unpainted strip of white at the center “represents the common elemental fabric that connects us all,” transcending temporal existence.
Titled after Maya Angelou’s poem “Still I Rise,” the work offers hope and harmony in times of uncertainty, and its meaning continues to evolve.
Still I Rise
2018
Neha Vedpathak
born 1982
Indian
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Handmade japanese paper, acrylic paint, and thread
Overall: 83 1/2 × 88 inches (212.1 × 223.5 cm)
Handmade Paper
Asian Art
Museum Purchase, G. Albert Lyon Foundation Fund, L. A. Young Fund, and Asian Art General Fund, with funds from Gibbs-Williams Fund; gifts from Robert H. Tannahill, Roy D. Chapin, Jr., by exchange
2018.76
Non-commercial all standard museum
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Provenance
the artist, Neha Vedpathak (Detroit, Michigan, USA);2018-present, purchase by the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)
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Credit Line for Reproduction
© Neha Vedpathak
Neha Vedpathak, Still I Rise, 2018, handmade Japanese paper, acrylic paint, and thread. Detroit Institute of Arts, Museum Purchase, G. Albert Lyon Foundation Fund, L. A. Young Fund, et al., 2018.76.
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