Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram
Fifty years since its inception,the birth control pill goes through different artistic interpretations
It happened over a dinner conversion in New York. In the 1950s,birth control activist Margaret Sanger entrusted Gregory Pincus,a low key scientist in the suburbs of Worcester with the task of inventing a birth-control pill. True to his word,within a decade,on May 9,1960,the scientist got a sanction from the US Food and Drug Administration to use Enovid as an oral contraceptive. It was approved in the UK in 1961 and was in medical stores worldwide. Fifty years later the magic pill gets a makeover,on canvas and through installations,at The Pill,an exhibition at Latitude 28 at Lado Sarai.
Suspended close to his work is New York-born and raised Vito Tumbarellos photograph titled Chloe,which makes an attempt to depict queer. My parents taught me to never be afraid of anyone,they also encouraged me to be myself. I identify myself as queer. It is the grey between the black and white. Transsexuals are another shade of grey, observes Tumbarello. Another hue of The Pill? Perhaps.
The exhibition is on till February 20. For details,contact: 4679 1111.
Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram