December 2013

 


Negar Ahkami : The Consumption

0
Posted June 1, 2013 by artBahrain in Openings

Leila Heller Gallery – New York, NY
6 June – 6 July 2013

Negar Ahkami, Retroactive Autorretrato, 2013, Gesso, acrylic and glitter on canvas stretched on panel, 48 x 66 in / 121.9 x 167.6 cm

Negar Ahkami, Retroactive Autorretrato, 2013, Gesso, acrylic and glitter on canvas stretched on panel, 48 x 66 in / 121.9 x 167.6 cm

Leila Heller is pleased to announce The Consumption, Negar Ahkami’s second solo exhibition at the gallery, on view from June 6 – July 6, 2013. The Consumption will feature a selection of new works by Ahkami, including exuberant paintings with bas-­relief surfaces that depict a variety of figures in water. A fully illustrated catalogue, with an essay by art historian Jane Panetta, will accompany the exhibition.

Ahkami’s water imagery is calligraphic and patterned, inspired by Iran’s blue-­‐tiled mosques, which have been said to symbolize water and nature. The artist uses all-­over patterning and water symbolism expressionistically, to convey a psychic loss of control.  Families under water struggle to keep children afloat. Women sink on opulent loveseats, clinging to their possessions. Female figures submerged in patterned waves appear to be in ecstasy, willingly surrendering control. In these intense yet playful works, water acts as a symbol of struggle and passion.

Emerging in Ahkami’s work is a new vocabulary of universal iconography exploring the human condition in today’s world. Her current works dialogue with monumental compositions of ancient Near Eastern rock reliefs. While in the past decade, Ahkami routinely created overtly political imagery, in 3 paintings in this exhibit, she revisits her iconography of melting Persianate cityscapes spreading cartoonishly towards the viewer.  For Ahkami, this caricature of Iran’s regime, and of fears of its nuclear threat, is a product of consumption “of media images that have distorted the view of Iran from a distance”.  Her recent returns to this theme are spectacles of pattern that shift between entrancing and cartoonish, with more fascination than angst.

Page Views: 1331


0 Comments



Be the first to comment!


Leave a Response

(required)