Victoria Miro is delighted to present High Seas; Closed Skies, the gallery’s first exhibition by Shahzia Sikander since announcing representation of the New York-based artist.
A focal point of the exhibition is the artist’s acclaimed new animation, 3 to 12 Nautical Miles, a radiant cinematic tableau that navigates the enduring currents of power and trade that have shaped the global landscape from the nineteenth century to the contemporary era.
Animated from hand-painted images, 3 to 12 Nautical Miles traces the entangled histories linking the British East India Company, Mughal India and Qing China through objects and symbols that signal how authority was constructed, distributed and contested. The work interrogates Britain’s opium cultivation in India, its coercive trade with China and the First Opium War, exposing the mechanisms of imperial extraction and the deep power asymmetries between Britain and China at the time. Its title refers to the incremental expansion of territorial waters: the legal zone between three and twelve nautical miles from any coastline where sovereignty can be asserted, contested and enforced.
Co-commissioned by M+ and Art Basel and presented by UBS, 3 to 12 Nautical Miles received its debut this spring in Hong Kong (where it is on view until 21 June), transforming the exterior of M+ into an immersive screen within the cityscape, and in doing so aligning subject with setting, past with present.
The work now comes to London, the city in which the East India Company was chartered, where decisions that turned Bengal into an opium production system were ratified, and through which Hong Kong was seized as a colonial outpost. Here, it will be heard for the first time with its score, by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Du Yun. The exhibition also features new mosaics and works on paper.
Commentary about the works in the exhibition is written by Haani Jetha.
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Installation view, Shahzia Sikander: High Seas; Closed Skies, Victoria Miro, 2026
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3 to 12 Nautical Miles
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‘The poppy swells and scatters across the portraits of the powerful – Chinese generals, the assembled East India Company men, Victoria herself.’
– Haani Jetha
Sikander's thinking happens simultaneously in multiple materials, and each one thinks differently, holding what the others cannot alone and together constituting a single inquiry conducted across different registers of time, permanence, and light. At its centre is the animation: a cinematic tableau of ink and gouache drawings set in motion, the hand still foundational even as the work passes through digital form.That inquiry circles one recognition: that power is not fixed but infrastructural. The animation makes this viscerally visible. Thrones dissolve. Akbar II morphs into the Daoguang Emperor of Qing China. Ships burn, but crucially, it is the archetypal British vessel that goes up in flames, the HMS Nemesis, the HMS Wellesley. Nineteenth-century British records almost always depicted Chinese junks alight; to show the imperial vessel as combustible is to perform what the archive refused to record. Then the sampan: the small, locally crewed Chinese boat that sustained everyday trade, fishing and transport, and with it the informal labour and survival economies that endure beneath the ledgers of empire. Scaleless and adaptive, slipping between regimes, borders, and epochs, the sampan enters the animation as a modest particle, then proliferates until it is beyond counting. This is the arithmetic of extraction. Its vastness accrues act by precarious act. -
Queen Victoria appears wearing a map of India and Hong Kong as a necklace, territory made portable, the violence of possession rendered as refinement. And the poppy swells and scatters across the portraits of the powerful – Chinese generals, the assembled East India Company men, Victoria herself. Not as historical footnote but as temporal loop unspooling into the Opium Wars, beauty and devastation collapsed into one recurring form that will not stop blooming.And yet the animation does not end in destruction. It ends, as it begins, with the shamsa, the symbol of illumination and the passage of light in the Indo-Persian manuscript tradition within which Sikander trained and has spent over three decades opening outward. At the heart of that final sunburst appear two female faces, a suggestion of collective feminine presence, an antidote to the extractive logic the work has traced. The sunburst does not redeem history. It insists on holding it, in light.
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Excerpt of Shahzia Sikander, 3 to 12 Nautical Miles, 2026
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Parting Skies
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‘A red tree bleeds down the centre over the rise of a hill, its rivulets arrested in the moment of falling, as poppies bloom, dissolve and are flung upward into a cloud-occluded sky.’
– Haani Jetha
A single moment of the animation is seized and vitrified in Parting Skies. A red tree bleeds down the centre over the rise of a hill, its rivulets arrested in the moment of falling, as poppies bloom, dissolve and are flung upward into a cloud-occluded sky. That Sikander arrived at mosaic through animation is itself telling. ‘The dynamism of the pixel emerged in my mind as a parallel to the unit of a mosaic,’ she has said; both build from discrete fragments that resolve into an image through accumulation. The opium poppy obeys as so: singular then countless, making visible how vast systems, ruinous or beautiful, are assembled from innumerable small acts. Beauty and catastrophe stay inseparable here, as they are in empire's account of itself. The poppy is the flower and the war at once.
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Possessed
Shahzia Sikander, Possessed, 2026 -
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Rich in Ghazal
Shahzia Sikander, Rich in Ghazal, 2026 -
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The Alchemist
Shahzia Sikander, The Alchemist, 2026 -
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The Charter Star
Shahzia Sikander, The Charter Star, 2026 -
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The Hour Glass
Shahzia Sikander, The Hour Glass, 2025 -
About the artist
Portrait of Shahzia Sikander
Courtesy the artist, Sean Kelly and Victoria Miro
Photo © Landon Speers -
Related
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Shahzia Sikander talks to The Art Newspaper about her new animation at M+
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