Researcher

Keywords

Fields of Research (FoR)

Fine arts, Art history, theory and criticism

Biography

I am Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran, a Sri Lankan-born contemporary artist and lecturer whose practice engages critically with global histories and languages of figurative representation. My work is informed by South Asian visual traditions and material culture, with a particular focus on the intersections of idolatry, monumentality, gender, race, and religion. While I am widely recognised for my experimental and often irreverent approach to...view more

I am Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran, a Sri Lankan-born contemporary artist and lecturer whose practice engages critically with global histories and languages of figurative representation. My work is informed by South Asian visual traditions and material culture, with a particular focus on the intersections of idolatry, monumentality, gender, race, and religion. While I am widely recognised for my experimental and often irreverent approach to ceramic media, my practice extends across a diverse material vocabulary including bronze, painting, and printmaking.

My artworks have been exhibited in major institutions, festivals, and public spaces, including the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the Dhaka Art Summit, The Sharjah Art Foundation, The Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, the Dark Mofo festival and many others. I have also worked with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) in various presenter roles, contributing to cultural programming that intersects with contemporary art, identity, and social politics. I also regularly sit on assessment, prize and consultancy panels within my industry and also sit as a director on the board of Artspace, Sydney. 

My research interests lie in contemporary art and sculpture, queer and gender theory, South Asian art histories, and diasporic visual cultures. These areas underpin both my studio practice and broader contributions to discourse on materiality, representation, and identity in global contemporary art. I am particularly invested in expanding narratives around non-Western figurative traditions and their relationship to contemporary aesthetics and critical theory.

In recognition of my contributions to the field, I was awarded a Sidney Myer Creative Fellowship in 2019 for outstanding artistic talent and professional courage. That same year, I exhibited in the largest historical survey of LGBTQ Asian Art at the Bangkok Art and Cultural Centre. My first major monograph, RAMESH—a 368-page volume published by Thames & Hudson—was released internationally in 2022.

My large-scale installation Avatar Towers, comprising 70 ceramic and bronze figures, was acquired by the Art Gallery of New South Wales following its presentation in the gallery’s historic vestibule. My work is also held in the numerous public collections including the National Gallery of Australia, The National Gallery of Victoria, The Kiran Nadar Museum of Fine Arts, the Art Gallery of South Australia, the Art Gallery of Western Australia, the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, the Ian Potter Museum of Art, and the Shepparton Art Museum.

I am represented by Sullivan + Strumpf (Sydney/Singapore) and Jhaveri Contemporary (Mumbai).

 

www.ramesh-nithiyendran.com

instagram: rams_deep69


My Qualifications

Master of Fine Arts (Research) UNSW, Bachelor of Fine Arts/Arts (Hons 1)


My Research Supervision


Supervision keywords


Areas of supervision

I am available to supervise research projects across a range of areas within contemporary art, with particular interest in practices that engage materially, conceptually, and critically with ceramics, painting, and sculpture. I welcome candidates exploring intersections of visual culture with queer and gender politics, especially those examining how identity, embodiment, and representation are negotiated through contemporary artistic practices within Non-Western frameworks. I also have a strong interest in supervising research related to South Asian art histories and diasporic visual cultures, with a focus on how these contexts inform and create new global narratives of art and aesthetics. My supervisory approach supports interdisciplinary and practice-led methodologies, and I am especially drawn to projects that challenge normative frameworks through experimental material processes and non-conventional approaches to critical theory and framing artistic practices.

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