Banned Media in the Basement: Khajistan at SculptureCenter, NYC

Banned Media in the Basement: Khajistan at SculptureCenter, NYC

by Khajistan Cultural Desk

Exhibit: Jun 19–Jul 28, 2025 at SculptureCenter, New York City
Opening Reception: Jun 18, 6–8pm
Khajistan Bazaar: Sundays, Jun 22–Jul 27, 12–6pm

 

Image: Screenshot from a 1993 gonzo-style adult film shot in Peshawar, showing two unidentified performers kissing.

 

This summer, Khajistan brings its underground archive above ground, taking over the lower level of SculptureCenter in New York City with Spasial Program—a live exhibition of banned, censored, discontinued, and overlooked media from across our vaults.

 

Running from June 19 to July 28, 2025, Spasial Program showcases the visual debris of suppressed histories: war propaganda leaflets, Islamicate Judaica, blacklisted Urdu and Farsi magazines, untranslatable street ephemera, and rare audiovisual detritus from the forgotten or forbidden circuits of Pakistani, Iranian, and Arabic pop culture. Each piece in the exhibition bears a trace of refusal—by censors, by gatekeepers, by platforms that have no room for complexity.

 

Khajistan Bazaar every Sunday 12-6

 

Every Sunday from June 22 to July 27, the basement transforms into a bazaar—open to the public, collectors, and curious wanderers. Visitors can browse Khajistan merchandise, purchase archive duplicates, attend film screenings, and explore a rotating selection of rare materials from our Toshakhana, the Khajistan Special Collections.

 

Spasial Program is a deliberate misspelling of both “special” and “spatial.” It first surfaced as a hashtag on our now-banned Instagram accounts—attached to posts too unruly to algorithmically survive. These weren’t just aesthetics; they were evidence: mujra dancers mid-thrust in Punjabi stage shows, mannequins hung in garment shops, men embracing on empty streets, bodybuilders posing in alleys, and hairy man butts.

 

All of it comes from our digital archive—a living collection of media censored for being too vulgar, too sexual, too domestic, too sincere, or too strange for the public record. From accidental erotics to blunt exhibitionism, from macho posturing to softness mistaken for deviance, these are images that expose the contradictions of visibility in the Islamic world. In Khawaja Sira slang, spasial means “special event.”

 

Khajistan is more than an archive—it is a digital and physical fortress built by and for communities whose visual worlds were never meant to be saved. We don’t preserve memory—we activate it. What we show was never meant to be archived, let alone seen.

 

Come through. 

 

Visit Toshakhana Special Collections
Read the Khajistan Manifesto 2025


Leave a comment

Please note, comments must be approved before they are published

More Announcements + Insights

  1. Read more: Khajistan Leads the Program at Pioneer Works’ Press Play 2025 Book Fair in Brooklyn

    Khajistan Leads the Program at Pioneer Works’ Press Play 2025 Book Fair in Brooklyn

    We’re bringing our latest project to Pioneer Works’ Press Play fair on December 13–14, 2025: the launch of Smut of the Middle World Volume 1: Pakistan and the debut of the official Press Play tote. 

    Read more
  2. Read more: Karachi, After Midnight Vol. 1 Launch at Printed Matter, NYC

    Karachi, After Midnight Vol. 1 Launch at Printed Matter, NYC

    Karachi, after Midnight Vol. 1 Book launch and conversation December 4, 2025 6–8PM Join us at Printed Matter for the launch of Khajistan Press’ new...
    Read more
  3. Read more: Screening of Zinda Laash (1967) at Asia Society New York

    Screening of Zinda Laash (1967) at Asia Society New York

    Asia Society New York, in collaboration with Khajistan, presents a screening of Zinda Laash (1967) (The Living Corpse). The even...
    Read more
  4. Read more: Screening of Showgirls of Pakistan at Museum of the Moving Image

    Screening of Showgirls of Pakistan at Museum of the Moving Image

    Friday, Sep 26, 2025 at 7:00 p.m. Location: Redstone Theater Part of Open Worlds 2025 Screening and Q&A with filmmakers Saad ...
    Read more