Stay the Night: Meera Margaret Singh at the Gladstone Hotel

Authors

  • Kerry Manders York University, Toronto

Keywords:

Meera Margaret Singh, photography, hotel, home, mother, liminal, mourning

Abstract

This essay examines Meera Margaret Singh’s exhibition Nightingale in the time and place of the liminal space we call “hotel.” In intertexual dialogue with Wayne Koestenbaum’s Hotel Theory, the author not only reviews Singh’s intimate photographs of her mother, she reads the images with and against the architecture in which they are exhibited. The Gladstone as exhibition space redoubles Singh’s emphasis on the tense connectivity of apparent binaries: youth and age, public and private, artist and model, object and spectator, living and dying. The quotidian activities of hotel living—guests’ arrivals, departures, and returns—become inextricable pieces of Singh’s site-specific installation. The author theorizes what Freud calls the “foretaste of mourning” in this work, grappling with what will be but is not yet the death of the mother. Singh’s Nightingale proposes that we do not “work through” mourning: mourning is a perpetual way of being in the present.

Author Biography

Kerry Manders, York University, Toronto

Kerry Manders writes about gender, memory, and mourning while teaching in the Department of English at York University, Toronto. Her essays have appeared in Latch, MediaTropes, Magenta, and C Magazine; her photographic triptych, Mourning Drawer, is published in Becoming Feminist (Eds. Lorena M. Gajardo and Jamie Ryckman, 2011). She is currently working on a photography project that explores unofficial signage in and around Toronto.

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Published

2012-07-23