Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility Skip to content

DIVYA MEHRA

The End of You

Night Gallery is pleased to announce The End of You, an exhibition of new works by Divya Mehra. This is the artist’s second solo exhibition with the gallery and follows The funny things You do (2021) and her participation in Blue State (2018).

Installation view of Divya Mehra's "The End of You" at Night Gallery.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

“This one guy, he says to me, ‘You know what the problem is in the world nowadays?’ I said, ‘Is it a group of people?’”

— Norm Macdonald

A large woven rug in the shape of post-partition India with the corner attached to a pulley that raises the corner of the rug when a robotic wall mounted arm carrying a broom approaches and sweeps beneath it before gliding back along it's track.

Divya Mehra, You're Doing the Work (Diamond Jubilee), 2024

Detail of the robotic arm sweeping under the rug in Divya Mehra's "You're Doing the Work (Diamond Jubilee)", 2024

Divya Mehra, You're Doing the Work (Diamond Jubilee), detail, 2024

Installation view of Divya Mehra's "The End of You" at Night Gallery.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

What’s so funny about colonialism? The joke of colonialism is that it’s the end of someone. Structurally, it’s a collision of traditions and practices and modes of behavior that erodes the illusion of cultural homogeneity. But the joke doesn’t start there. Before the violent acquisition of land and lives begets the appropriation of culture, there is incongruity.

A small white painting with white text that reads "An Englishman a Cuban, a Japanese man and a Pakistani were all on a train. The Cuban threw a fine Havana cigar out the window. When he was asked why he replied ‘They are ten a penny in my country.’ The Japanese man threw an expensive Nikon camera out of the carriage, adding ‘These are ten a penny in my country.’ The Englishman then picked up the Pakistani and threw him out of the train window. When the other travelers asked him to account for his action, he said: ‘They are ten a penny in my country.’"

Divya Mehra, Ann Winterton 2002, 2024

Installation view of Divya Mehra's "The End of You" at Night Gallery.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

Installation view of Divya Mehra's "The End of You" at Night Gallery.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

A small ink drawing of a winding road on an open plane with a red mushroom cloud erupting against a black starry sky.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, from the series, The End of You, 2020

In other words, the joke is predicated on a disconnect between expectations and reality, or on the clash between two elements. From this perspective, comedy is embedded in the DNA of colonialism. What’s more incongruous than a group of oblivious white men claiming authority over an entire society they neither outnumber nor understand? The act embodies another principle of comedy: buffoonery—the tradition of the court jester mimicking the king for laughs. Yet in that tradition, the king’s ridicule is meant as a release for his subjects, called Relief Theory in the study of humor.

A 30 foot long and 21 foot high inflatable sculpture of the "StayPuft" character from the Ghostbusters movie franchise that who is white and bulbous with a sailor's collar and red tailed cap face down, feet in the air and left arm raised.

Divya Mehra, We’re Ready to Believe You!, 2024

Detail of "We Believe You!", 2024

Divya Mehra, We’re Ready to Believe You!, detail, 2024

Installation view of Divya Mehra's "The End of You" at Night Gallery.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

Large white neon letters that read "DIASPORA" mounted on the wall.

Divya Mehra, Landscape Painting, 2024

Colonizers play the king but become the buffoon, so the joke is on them. Or so it should be. But this dynamic is an occasion for a new beginning, one in which the clownish colonizer asserts his sovereignty by excluding the colonized from social subjectivity to the point of invisibility. In humor, this is called Superiority Theory.

Installation view of Divya Mehra's "The End of You" at Night Gallery.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

Detail of the neon letters in "Landscape Painting"

Divya Mehra, Landscape Painting, detail, 2024

Installation view of Divya Mehra's "The End of You" at Night Gallery.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

My invisibility as a diasporic subject, internalized across generations, is someone else’s visibility —not only the white colonizers who tore through my grandparents’ country, but the people who are still there, who were raised with a homeland that has become alien to me even as I fail to fit into this one. The joke on me is that I’m caught between two worlds. The effects of colonization still ripple through oceans and into modern capitalist society, in the “ethnic” section of the grocery store. Invisibility is my status but also my refuge. I become visible in relation to others, in my difference, but it is not the visibility of a full person. Invisibility allows me to see what the ruling class refuses to; I can see the end coming. The end of me, the end of you.

Installation view of Divya Mehra's "The End of You" at Night Gallery.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

A small ink drawing of a mailman about to ring the doorbell of a man whacking his television while a red mushroom cloud erupts in the background.

Divya Mehra, "Nothing works!”, from the series, The End of You, 2020

A small ink drawing of a man buying toilet paper at a grocery store while the cashier looks out at a red mushroom cloud erupting outside the store window.

Divya Mehra, "This is important.”, from the series, The End of You, 2020

 Installation view of Divya Mehra's "The End of You" at Night Gallery.

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

A small ink drawing of a waiter pouring wine but missing the glass for a woman while he looks at a red mushroom cloud erupting in the distance.

Divya Mehra, "A little HELP?!", from the series, The End of You, 2024

A small ink drawing of a group of people waiting in line outside a building with as the doorman looks out at a red mushroom cloud in the distance.

Divya Mehra, “You’re just a doorman, I know the owner.”, from the series, The End of You, 2024

The ruling class persists in upholding an illusion of equality by invisibilizing systemic and individual racism. Like any fantasy, it’s tenuous; it depends on everyone’s participation. When a diasporic subject draws attention to the illusion, it may seem like no one notices, but there’s power in policed invisibility, and in erasure. It leaves an unsettling trace, like a crack in the pavement that the puffed-up monolith of the oppressor, convinced of its infallibility, doesn’t notice. But the audience sees it and waits for the monolith to fall flat on its face. Or on a bunch of old white guys in a comedy club. That’s called slapstick.

—Natalie Haddad

c

Divya Mehra, “Remember, say NO to discomfort, guilt, anguish or psychological distress.”, from the series, The End of You, 2024

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

Divya Mehra, The End of You, installation view, 2024

A red white and blue neon sculpture of a robotic hand pressed in prayer position against a female human hand with text that reads "namaste" encircled in a read neon circle.

Divya Mehra, Bitches, 2024

Divya Mehra (b. 1981, Winnipeg) is known for her meticulous attention to the interaction of form, medium, and site. Her works are a reminder of the complex realities of displacement, loss, and oppression. Mehra’s work has been exhibited, screened, and commissioned by Frieze Sculpture, Los Angeles; Creative Time, New York; MoMA PS1, New York; Queens Museum of Art, New York; MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA; CCA Wattis Institute, San Francisco; Nuit Blanche, Toronto; and the Embassy of Canada in Washington, D.C. She has been featured in publications such as the New York Times, Times of India, ArtAsiaPacific, Hyperallergic, The Globe and Mail, and The Washington Post. Mehra’s work is in numerous public collections, including the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; Global Affairs Canada; and the MacKenzie Art Gallery, Regina. She is the recipient of the 2022 Sobey Art Award. Mehra lives and works in Seattle.

We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts; Manitoba Arts Council; and the Winnipeg Arts Council.

A large woven rug in the shape of post-partition India with the corner attached to a pulley that raises the corner of the rug when a robotic wall mounted arm carrying a broom approaches and sweeps beneath it before gliding back along it's track.

Divya Mehra

You're Doing the Work (Diamond Jubilee), 2024

servo motors, stepper motor, an aluminum linear rail system, aluminum structure, 22 American Wire Gauge and 14 American Wire Gauge wires, power supplies, terminal blocks, arduinos, voltage regulator, 3D printed parts made of ABS material, limit switches, a plastic DIN rail power enclosure, hand knotted bamboo silk and wool textile 

dimensions variable: overall, 214 x 273 x 240 in (543.6 x 693.4 x 609.6 cm)

Inquire
A small white painting with white text that reads "An Englishman a Cuban, a Japanese man and a Pakistani were all on a train. The Cuban threw a fine Havana cigar out the window. When he was asked why he replied ‘They are ten a penny in my country.’ The Japanese man threw an expensive Nikon camera out of the carriage, adding ‘These are ten a penny in my country.’ The Englishman then picked up the Pakistani and threw him out of the train window. When the other travelers asked him to account for his action, he said: ‘They are ten a penny in my country.’”

Divya Mehra

Ann Winterton 2002, 2024

Flashe and vinyl on panel 

10 x 8 in (25.4 x 20.3 cm)

A small ink drawing of a winding road on an open plane with a red mushroom cloud erupting against a black starry sky.

Divya Mehra

The End of You, from the series, The End of You, 2020

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm)

Inquire
A 30 foot long and 21 foot high inflatable sculpture of the "StayPuft" character from the Ghostbusters movie franchise that who is white and bulbous with a sailor's collar and red tailed cap face down, feet in the air and left arm raised.

Divya Mehra

We’re Ready to Believe You!, 2024

inflatable vinyl coated nylon

156 x 360 x 252 in (396.2 x 914.4 x 640.1 cm)

Inquire
Large white neon letters that read "DIASPORA" mounted on the wall.

Divya Mehra

Landscape Painting, 2024

neon with motion sensor 

56 x 408 in (142.2 x 1036.3 cm)

Inquire
A red white and blue neon sculpture of a robotic hand pressed in prayer position against a female human hand with text that reads "namaste" encircled in a read neon circle.

Divya Mehra

Bitches, 2024

neon, plexi

47 x 47 x 5 in (119.4 x 119.4 x 12.7 cm)

Inquire
A small ink drawing of a mailman about to ring the doorbell of a man whacking his television while a red mushroom cloud erupts in the background.

Divya Mehra

"Nothing works!”, from the series, The End of You, 2020

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm)

Inquire
A small ink drawing of a man buying toilet paper at a grocery store while the cashier looks out at a red mushroom cloud erupting outside the store window.

Divya Mehra

"This is important.”, from the series, The End of You, 2020

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm)

Inquire
A small ink drawing of a waiter pouring wine but missing the glass for a woman while he looks at a red mushroom cloud erupting in the distance.

Divya Mehra

"A little HELP?!", from the series, The End of You, 2024

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

4 x 6 in (10.2 x 15.2 cm)
framed: 7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm)

Inquire
A small ink drawing of a group of people waiting in line outside a building with as the doorman looks out at a red mushroom cloud in the distance.

Divya Mehra

“You’re just a doorman, I know the owner.”, from the series, The End of You, 2024

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm

Inquire
A small ink drawing of children in a classroom looking out at a red mushroom erupting outside the window as the teacher points to a chalkboard that read "CRT" with a line drawn across.

Divya Mehra

“Remember, say NO to discomfort, guilt, anguish or psychological distress.”, from the series, The End of You, 2024

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

4 x 6 in (10.2 x 15.2 cm)

Inquire
A large woven rug in the shape of post-partition India with the corner attached to a pulley that raises the corner of the rug when a robotic wall mounted arm carrying a broom approaches and sweeps beneath it before gliding back along it's track.

Divya Mehra

You're Doing the Work (Diamond Jubilee), 2024

servo motors, stepper motor, an aluminum linear rail system, aluminum structure, 22 American Wire Gauge and 14 American Wire Gauge wires, power supplies, terminal blocks, arduinos, voltage regulator, 3D printed parts made of ABS material, limit switches, a plastic DIN rail power enclosure, hand knotted bamboo silk and wool textile 

dimensions variable: overall, 214 x 273 x 240 in (543.6 x 693.4 x 609.6 cm)

A small white painting with white text that reads "An Englishman a Cuban, a Japanese man and a Pakistani were all on a train. The Cuban threw a fine Havana cigar out the window. When he was asked why he replied ‘They are ten a penny in my country.’ The Japanese man threw an expensive Nikon camera out of the carriage, adding ‘These are ten a penny in my country.’ The Englishman then picked up the Pakistani and threw him out of the train window. When the other travelers asked him to account for his action, he said: ‘They are ten a penny in my country.’”

Divya Mehra

Ann Winterton 2002, 2024

Flashe and vinyl on panel 

10 x 8 in (25.4 x 20.3 cm)

A small ink drawing of a winding road on an open plane with a red mushroom cloud erupting against a black starry sky.

Divya Mehra

The End of You, from the series, The End of You, 2020

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm)

A 30 foot long and 21 foot high inflatable sculpture of the "StayPuft" character from the Ghostbusters movie franchise that who is white and bulbous with a sailor's collar and red tailed cap face down, feet in the air and left arm raised.

Divya Mehra

We’re Ready to Believe You!, 2024

inflatable vinyl coated nylon

156 x 360 x 252 in (396.2 x 914.4 x 640.1 cm)

Large white neon letters that read "DIASPORA" mounted on the wall.

Divya Mehra

Landscape Painting, 2024

neon with motion sensor 

56 x 408 in (142.2 x 1036.3 cm)

A red white and blue neon sculpture of a robotic hand pressed in prayer position against a female human hand with text that reads "namaste" encircled in a read neon circle.

Divya Mehra

Bitches, 2024

neon, plexi

47 x 47 x 5 in (119.4 x 119.4 x 12.7 cm)

A small ink drawing of a mailman about to ring the doorbell of a man whacking his television while a red mushroom cloud erupts in the background.

Divya Mehra

"Nothing works!”, from the series, The End of You, 2020

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm)

A small ink drawing of a man buying toilet paper at a grocery store while the cashier looks out at a red mushroom cloud erupting outside the store window.

Divya Mehra

"This is important.”, from the series, The End of You, 2020

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm)

A small ink drawing of a waiter pouring wine but missing the glass for a woman while he looks at a red mushroom cloud erupting in the distance.

Divya Mehra

"A little HELP?!", from the series, The End of You, 2024

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

4 x 6 in (10.2 x 15.2 cm)
framed: 7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm)

A small ink drawing of a group of people waiting in line outside a building with as the doorman looks out at a red mushroom cloud in the distance.

Divya Mehra

“You’re just a doorman, I know the owner.”, from the series, The End of You, 2024

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

7 x 9 in (17.9 x 22.9 cm

A small ink drawing of children in a classroom looking out at a red mushroom erupting outside the window as the teacher points to a chalkboard that read "CRT" with a line drawn across.

Divya Mehra

“Remember, say NO to discomfort, guilt, anguish or psychological distress.”, from the series, The End of You, 2024

felt marker, watercolor on 300 lb cold press watercolor paper

4 x 6 in (10.2 x 15.2 cm)