Chitra Ganesh Journey to the Great Below
In summer 2026, Baltic will present the first major UK solo exhibition in a public institution of Chitra Ganesh. Journey to the Great Below will feature a new animation, newly commissioned sculptural works and a site-specific wall drawing, alongside a selection of recent paintings, prints, works on paper and mixed media works.
Major Exhibition Supporters
Bagri Foundation / Bukhman Foundation
Exhibition Supporter
Henry Moore Foundation
Ganesh’s practice is rooted in drawing and painting and has a distinctive multidisciplinary approach. Over the past twenty-five years, she has developed an expansive body of work that encompasses wall drawings, collage, animation, installation, and sculpture.
Informed by her studies in literature, semiotics, and contemporary social theory, her visual vocabulary also draws from histories of surrealism, science fiction, anime, and South Asian visual culture including ancient statuary, popular Indian comics and graphic design.
Ganesh creates richly layered worlds that probe epic myths and historical narratives to offer speculative visions of society. Reorienting traditional forms of storytelling around queer and femme protagonists, Ganesh’s world building explores themes such as psychic transformation, sexuality, power, and loss. Centring figures that have long been marginalised, her shape-shifting characters occupy liminal spaces, inviting us to consider utopian possibilities in moments of precarity and turbulence.
For this exhibition at Baltic, Ganesh will premiere a new large-scale animation titled Journey to the Great Below, inspired by what is widely considered to be the world’s oldest recorded myth, The Descent of Inanna into the Underworld. Written c. 1900–1600 BCE in Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq), the story follows Inanna, the Sumerian Goddess of love, fecundity, and war, also known as the ‘Queen of Heaven’, on her treacherous journey to face her sister (and darker half) Ereshkigal, the ‘Queen of the Underworld’. The poem describes Inanna’s confrontation with death and her eventual return to the world of the living.
In Journey to the Great Below, history, myth, and contemporary life converge. Vibrant scenes interweave three-dimensional speculative mapping with archaeological materials and artefacts, infusing Mesopotamia and Indus Valley cosmologies with the language of futurism. Inanna’s tumultuous journey into the underworld resonates deeply with the current moment marked by political and ecological upheaval. Her shattered and renewed life is a potent metaphor for navigating our increasingly dark times with resilience and courage, offering a message of hope for our contemporary situation.
A new body of related sculptures, commissioned by Baltic, create a three-dimensional staging of The Descent of Inanna in real space and time. Fragmented architectural forms evoke the ‘Great Below’, inviting us to experience a world imagined thousands of years ago. Large-scale sculptures inspired by Inanna’s passage through the underworld – including an oversized eye (symbolising piety, devotion, fear, and destruction in Mesopotamian culture), and a descending staircase – draw upon artefacts held in the collections of The British Museum in London and The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. A site-specific wall drawing with collaged elements, also commissioned especially for the exhibition, features vignettes from the poem.
As the story unfolds across the gallery space, mixed media works from Ganesh’s studio, including Open Expectations of the Unknown Event and Untitled (Staircase) (both 2021), and the paintings Tree of Life and Breathing Water and Air (both 2024) explore recurring ideas such as bodily transformation and states of becoming. Heads and bodies have turned into animals, trees, and flowers, creating hybrid beings. The sculpture Manuscript (2018) constructed from aluminium and raw silk, replicates the artist’s hand magnified twelvefold. Informed by Ganesh’s embodied experience of monumental statuary in India, the hand’s otherworldly scale, combined with futuristic animated scenes mapped onto its surface, immerses us in the imaginary.
Summer Block Party | Baltic x The Glasshouse
Get your summer on with our annual Art Car Boot Fair with 50 stalls of arts, crafts and more. Plus two brand new exhibitions artist talks, free tours, life drawing class, drop-in creative sessions and more.