Today.Az » Arts & Entertainment » YARAT! introduces 'Love Me, Love Me Not' exhibition at Venice Biennale
24 May 2013 [09:27] - Today.Az
Yarat! Contemporary Art Space will take part at the Venice Biennale with the exhibition "Love Me, Love Me Not".
Love Me, Love Me Not is an unprecedented exhibition of contemporary
art from Azerbaijan and its neighbours, featuring recent work by 17
artists from Azerbaijan, Iran, Turkey, Russia, and Georgia. Produced and
supported by YARAT, a not-for-profit contemporary art organisation
based in Baku, and curated by Dina Nasser-Khadivi, the exhibition will
be open to the public from 1st June until 24th November 2013 at Tesa
111, Arsenale Nord, at The 55th International Art Exhibition - la
Biennale di Venezia.
Artists featured: Aida Mahmudova (Azerbaijan), Faig
Ahmed (Azerbaijan), Rashad Alakbarov (Azerbaijan), Afruz Amighi (Iran),
Kutlug Ataman (Turkey), Shoja Azari (Iran), Rashad Babayev (Azerbaijan),
Mahmoud Bakhshi (Iran), Ali Banisadr (Iran), Ali Hasanov (Azerbaijan),
Orkhan Huseynov (Azerbaijan), Sitara Ibrahimova (Azerbaijan), Taus
Makhacheva (Russia), Farhad Moshiri (Iran), Farid Rasulov (Azerbaijan),
Slavs and Tatars ('Eurasia'), Iliko Zautashvili (Georgia).
"There is currently equal curiosity and misconception about
Azerbaijan and the countries surrounding it," explains curator Dina
Nasser-Khadivi. "The works on show will provide insight into the
dynamics of each nation, bringing to light forgotten aspects of history
and demonstrating the breadth of vision and creativity at play within
their borders."
The exhibition offers a diverse range of media and subject matter,
with video, installation and painting all on show. Pieces range from
those steeped in historical reference, to those with more site-specific
responses through to those which are inspired by personal history.
Faig Ahmed takes the motifs found in Azerbaijani
carpets as a starting point for his work, reinterpreting these to
underline the rapid shift Azerbaijan is experiencing towards modernity.
His thread installation Untitled (2012) deconstructs the notions of
craft inherent to the traditional process of weaving, extending the
usual two-dimensional plane of the finished carpet across a
three-dimensional space.
Kutlug Ataman's video installation Mesopotamian
Dramaturgies / Column (2009) is inspired by the Trajan Column in Rome
and was originally commissioned for the MAXXI (National Museum of XXI
Century Arts, Rome). A tower of 42 used TV screens each feature the
silent face a villager from Erzincan in Eastern Turkey, Ataman's place
of origin. This key work is both an attempt to show a story without
narration as well as a tribute to the history of Anatolian people, who
he sees as silenced throughout history.
In his most ambitious project to date, Shoja Azari
will show a specially commissioned film which recreates the Haft Paykar,
the romantic epic of the 12th century, by Nizami of Ganja. Haft Paykar
or Seven Beauties is an allegorical romance, which takes self-knowledge
as the essential path to human enlightenment as its central theme.
Ali Banisadr will be producing his largest work to
date for the exhibition, in the form of a triptych inspired by the
pervasive symbolism of fire and light. These elements, prevalent in both
Azerbaijan and Iran, relate to the origins of Zoroastrianism as well as
the etymology of 'Azerbaijan,' which derives from the Persian name for
'Guardians of Fire'. Through effective use of colour and painterly
control, Banisadr translates the imagery of his childhood, his extensive
understanding of art history, and his sharp observations of everyday
life onto canvas, capturing insightful details of humanity with
movement, energy, and abstraction. Banisadr's works are housed in public
collections worldwide including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New
York, Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, the Saatchi Gallery and
the British Museum in London.
Ali Hasanov, from Azerbaijan, uses a contemporary
appropriation of everyday materials. His work Masters (2012) features
hundreds of "veniki" (brooms made of bundled twig and common in
post-Soviet countries) which are bound together to form a sculptural
whole.
Taus Makhacheva, will re-produce a film, recently
shown at the Liverpool Biennale about an abandoned silk-road city
Gamsutl (2012) through a young male protagonist who "dances" to enact
the fragmented qualities of the city, now half forgotten.
Slavs & Tatars' installation entitled Molla
Nasreddin The Antimodernist (2011) is a life-size sculpture as a
playground "ride" for adults and children alike and refers to the
popular Sufi philosopher of the 13th century. By creating works that can
be directly engaged with by the public, the collective addresses
notions such as generosity and participation through the disarming use
of humour.
Molla Nasreddin also refers to the legendary Azerbaijani satirical
periodical of the early 20th century, which not only contributed to a
crucial understanding of national identity, but offered a momentous
example of the powers of the press. In their installation Love Me, Love
Me Not, the collaborative pluck the petals off the past to reveal an
impossibly thorny stem: entire metropolises are caught like children in
the spiteful back and forth of a custody battle, representing the
evolution of the region over time - a theme which is at the core of this
exhibition.
By bringing artists from Azerbaijan and its surrounding region
together in one exhibition, Love Me, Love Me Not will create new
perspectives on the contemporary art of Azerbaijan, as well as that of
Iran, Turkey, Russia and Georgia.
The catalogue:
Edited by curator Dina Nasser-Khadivi and Farah Rahim Ismail, contributors to catalogue include:
• Nada Raza, Assistant Curator at Tate Modern
• Nicholas Cullinan, Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at Metropolitan Museum of Art
• Negar Azimi, writer and Senior Editor of Bidoun Projects
• Monica Steinberg, PhD Candidate, The Graduate Center, City University of New York
• Suad Garayeva, writer and curator specializing in Contemporary Art from Russia, Central Asia and the Caucasus.
• Slavs and Tatars, a faction of polemics and intimacies devoted to
an area east of the former Berlin Wall and west of the Great Wall of
China known as Eurasia. The collective's work spans several media,
disciplines, and a broad spectrum of cultural registers (high and low)
focusing on an oft-forgotten sphere of influence between Slavs,
Caucasians and Central Asians.
Love Me, Love Me Not is produced by YARAT contemporary art
organisation, a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to the promotion
and nurturing of contemporary art in Azerbaijan.
For press information and images please contact:
Anna Cusden or Sophie Furse at Pelham Communications Tel: +44 20 8969 3959
Email: [email protected] or [email protected]
Notes to Editors:
Exhibition details
Title: Love Me, Love Me Not
Location: Arsenale Nord, Tesa 111, Venice, Italy
Exhibition dates: 1 June until 24 November (open to the public)
Vaporetto stop: to get to Arsenale Nord the closest are Bacini and Celestia stops, vaporetto lines 5.1, 5.2, 4.1, 4.2
Directions to access:
By clicking the link below you will find a map with the two stops and Tesa 111 pointed out.
https://maps.google.it/maps/ms?msid=200760762308548777660.0004d63bed7569df3938e&msa=0&ll=45.439208,12.35242&spn=0.00126,0.001459
Website: www.loveme-lovemenot.com
Twitter: @yaratartspace
Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/Yarat.Art
About YARAT Contemporary Art Organisation:
Founded in 2011 by Aida Mahmudova, YARAT is a not-for-profit
organisation dedicated to nurturing an understanding of contemporary art
in Azerbaijan and to creating a platform for Azerbaijani art, both
nationally and internationally.
Based in Baku, YARAT, (which means CREATE in Azerbaijani) realises
its mission through an ongoing program of exhibitions, education events,
and festivals. YARAT facilitates dialogue and exchange between local
and international artistic networks, including foundations, galleries
and museums. A series of residencies further fosters opportunities for
global cultural dialogue and partnerships.
YARAT's educational initiatives include lectures, seminars, master
classes, and the Young Artist Project ARTIM (meaning PROGRESS in
Azerbaijani). ARTIM aims to encourage the next generation of Azerbaijani
creative talent to seek a career in the arts and gives young
practitioners the opportunity to exhibit their works in a professional
context.
Founded as part of YARAT's ongoing commitment to growing local art
infrastructure, YAY Gallery is a commercial exhibition space. In line
with this, YAY (meaning SHARE in Azerbaijani) shares all proceeds from
sales between the artist and YARAT and supports a range of national and
international artists.
About the Curator:
Dina Nasser-Khadivi is an independent curator and consultant,
specialising in Contemporary art from the Middle East, Iran and selected
areas of the Caucasus. Originally a 19/20th century Orientalist art
specialist at Christie's, Dina began to work with Middle Eastern and
Iranian Contemporary art in 2006, developing an international platform
for the artists by organising numerous awareness-raising initiatives,
such as the landmark symposium An Introduction to the World of Iranian
Modern and Contemporary Art held at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in
New York, the Houston Museum of Fine Arts and the Museum of Contemporary
Art (MOCA) in Los Angeles in the fall of 2010. With projects that have
included curating private collections and advising major institutions,
Dina divides her practice between New York, London, Geneva, and Dubai.
Over the last three years Dina's shift towards the Caucasus region
has been driven by an affinity with the people and culture of
Azerbaijan, a neighbouring country of her native Iran, and her interest
in the artists who belong to the growing contemporary art scene in Baku
in particular.
Sponsors:
GILAN - A consumer company with a number of brands in Azerbaijan.
Jale - A market-leading brand of juice in Azerbaijan
Technical support is provided by the Azerbaijani Ministry of Youth and Sports and the Ministry of Culture and Tourism
Artists' biographies:
Faig Ahmed (b. 1982) deconstructs motifs and
formulae of Azerbaijani carpets, which remain a popular art form on
walls and floors across Azerbaijan its neighbours. Making
two-dimensional arrangements into sculptural and spatial objects, and
mixing hand-woven carpet elements with fibreglass forms, he offers a
contemporary vision of a cultural icon.
After graduating from the Azerbaijan State Academy of Fine Art
(2004), Ahmed represented Azerbaijan in their first appearance at the
52nd Venice Biennale in 2007. Selected exhibitions include: "Fly To
Baku", London, Paris, Berlin, Moscow, Rome (2012-2013); Sharjah Islamic
Art Festival, Sharjah, UAE (2012); Museum of Modern Art Baku, Azerbaijan
(2012); 012 Baku Public Art Festival (2012) Kunsthalleim Lipsiusbau,
Dresden, Germany (2008); 52nd Venice Biennale, Azerbaijan Pavilion
(2007); Caucasus, National Center for Contemporary Art, Moscow, Russia
(2006). Faig Ahmed lives and works in Azerbaijan.
Rashad Alakbarov (b. 1979) uses installations
involving incongruous objects and coloured shadows to play upon
expectation and allude to cultural issues. For the 55th Venice Biennale,
he will create an installation focusing on the development of the
Azerbaijani alphabet which was changed over three times in the past
seventy years, reflecting as such the nation's history, identity and
evolution.
After graduating from the Azerbaijan State Academy of Fine Art
(2001), Alakbarov was chosen to represent Azerbaijan at the 52nd Venice
Biennale in 2007. Selected exhibitions include "Fly To Baku", London,
Paris, Berlin, Moscow, Rome (2012-2013), Sharjah Islamic Art Festival,
Sharjah, UAE (2012); YARAT Contemporary Art Organisation, Baku,
Azerbaijan (2012); 012 Baku Public Art Festival (2012); Den Frie Centre
for Contemporary Art Copenhagen (2010); 52nd Venice Biennale, Azerbaijan
pavilion (2007). Rashad Alakbarov lives and works in Azerbaijan.
Afruz Amighi (b. 1974) reflects upon history to
create her multimedia installations. She has an in-depth and critical
understanding of Iran's visual culture, from both an insider and
outsider point of view. Her largest work to date, specially commissioned
for the 55th Venice Biennale, focuses on the crossroads of culture at
the Biennale itself as well as the history of Eurasian exchange.
Developed from a parable about a contest between Chinese and Greek
artists by Jalal al din Rumi, it fuses patterns of Venetian lace with
water, shadow and architectural design.
Selected group exhibitions include Museum of Art and Design, New York
(2012); The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2012); Museum of Fine
Art, Houston, Texas (2010); Victoria & Albert Museum, London
(2009). Selected solo exhibitions include "Suspended City", Bloom
Projects, Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, California (2012);"The
State Within", Nicelle Beauchene Gallery, New York (2011); "Angels in
Combat", Isabelle Van Den Eynde Gallery, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
(2010). Afruz Amighi lives and works in New York City.
Kutlug Ataman (b. 1961) Considered to be one of the
forerunners of a new language in film and video art blurring the lines
between fiction and reality, Kutlug Ataman's work focuses on individual
and collective identities, as well as historical and geographical
narratives as constructs, revealing the ways in which identities are
constantly re-written and negotiated. For the 55th Venice Biennale
Ataman will show the work Column from the Mesopotamian Dramaturgies
(2009) a video sculpture commissioned by The British School at Rome,
Italy; Francesca Minini, Milan, Italy; The Henry Moore Foundation, UK;
MAXXI - National Museum of the XXI Century Arts, Rome, Italy and
UniCredit Group, Italy. Inspired by the Trajan Column in Rome, revisited
in the Eastern context, Column is a tower constructed with 42 used TV
monitors facing outwards, with each one showing the expressive face of a
villager from Eastern Turkey, all of whom are completely and decidedly
silent. It is an attempt by the artist to tell a story without any
narration as well as a tribute to the history of Anatolian peoples
silenced in political, economical and cultural oppression throughout the
entire history of the region. Ataman was nominated for the Turner Prize
in 2004, the same year he won the Carnegie International Prize.
Recipient of the Abraaj Capital Art Prize in 2009 and European Cultural
Foundation's Princess Margriet Award in 2011, Ataman's works have been
shown in Istanbul (1997, 2003, 2007), Venice (1999), Sao Paulo (2002,
2010) and Berlin (2001) Biennales, as well as in Documenta (2002).
Recent solo exhibitions include ARTER, Istanbul (2011); Istanbul Modern,
Istanbul (2010); MAXXI - National Museum of 21st Century Arts, Rome
(2010); Museum Ludwig, Cologne (2009) and Lentos Kunstmuseum, Linz
(2009). His upcoming exhibitions include Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada
(2013) and Galeri Mana, Istanbul (2013).
Kutlug Ataman lives and works in Istanbul, Islamabad and London
Shoja Azari (b. 1958) is a visual artist/filmmaker
who uses film, painting and photography to create striking and
culturally referenced works. In 1998, Shoja met the renowned visual
artist Shirin Neshat and together they started a close collaboration
still continuing today. Amongst their most famous projects was Turbulent
a double screen film installation, which won the Golden Lion in Venice
in1998 and Rapture (1999) which was acclaimed as "a masterpiece" by
Arthur Danto. In the following years, Shoja and Shirin produced more
than 15 film/art installations that have been exhibited widely in
museums and art festivals around the globe. In 2000, Shoja adapted three
short stories of Kafka into a trilogy and presented it as his first
feature film K which premiered at the Venice film festival in 2002.
Women Without Men, a feature film written and directed in collaboration
with Neshat won the Silver Lion in Venice in 2010. Based on the
controversial novel by Shahrnoush Parsipour the film interweaved the
lives of four Iranian women in the summer of 1953 - a pivotal moment in
Iranian history during an American-led coup d'etat. For the 55th Venice
Art Biennale Azari is doing his most ambitious project to date, a 25
minutes video projection which will tell the story of the Black dome, or
King of Benighted from the romantic epic poem of the 12th century poet
Nezami Ganjavi's "Haft Paykar" or "Seven Beauties". Completed in 1197 by
the poet Nizami of Ganja, it is an allegorical romance of great beauty
and depth, and its central theme of self-knowledge as the path to human
perfection is conveyed in rich and vivid imagery and complex symbolism.
Shoja is using contemporary actors set within the background of Persian
miniature to tell his story.
Selected exhibitions include: Solo Exhibition, Leila Heller Gallery,
New York (forthcoming 2013); VIP Art Fair, New York (2012), The Elephant
in the Dark, Devi Art Foundation, New Delhi, India (2012); Live
Art/Expanded, Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, UK; Special
Project, Marco Noire Contemporary Arts, Basel Art Fair, Switzerland
(2007); Project Rooms, ARCO, Madrid, Spain (2006). Shoja Azari lives and
works in New York City.
Rashad Babayev (b. 1979) is a painter and
installation maker who works in a variety of ways, calling upon beliefs
and symbols to create works, or simply using abstract compositions to
explore colour. For the 55th Venice Biennale, Babayev plans to bring a
real fig tree to recreate the symbolic attachment many have to "the Tree
of Wishes." On this tree in Ashperon, Azerbaijan, many hundreds of
scarves representing individual wishes are secured each year. Babayev's
installation however, critiques this ritual through attaching scarves
that include, for example, designer brands, to imply the materialist
wishes increasingly prevalent in the country.
Selected exhibitions include: Fly To Baku, London, Paris, Berlin,
Moscow, Rome (2012-2013), Commonist YARAT Contemporary Art Organisation,
Baku, Azerbaijan, Merging Bridges, MOMA, Baku, Azerbajian (2012).
Rashad Babayev lives and works in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Mahmoud Bakhshi (b. 1977) creates remarkably
subversive work, commenting on the hypocrisy he sees around him. In
Verdicts of Looking (2008) mannequins wearing the hijab have
hollowed-out plastic eyes with explicit videos showing inside them,
aimed at confronting the hypocritical modesty imposed on the public
sphere. For Air Pollution of Iran (2004 -2006), he framed Iranian flags
stained by the capital city's pollution of the atmosphere. For this
year's Venice Biennale he will parody the oil wealth of the region by
creating a fountain of oil that flows down a stepped, tin-plate pyramid.
Mahmoud's work is included in the permanent collection of the Tate
Modern. His exhibitions have included: Art Gwangju, South Korea (2012);
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris (2011); Delfina Foundation (2010); the
Barbican, London (2008). Prizes include the Magic of Persia Contemporary
Art Prize, which enabled him to have a solo show at the Saatchi Gallery
in London in September 2010. Mahmoud Bakhshi lives and works in Tehran.
Ali Banisadr (b. 1976). Through effective use of
colour and painterly control, Banisadr translates the imagery of his
childhood, his extensive understanding of art history, and his sharp
observations of everyday life onto canvas, capture insightful details of
humanity with movement, energy, and abstraction. For Banisadr, painting
is his means of visually understanding the world, and is a medium
through which emotions, ideas, and sensations successfully come
together. Banisadr's works are housed in prestigious public collections
worldwide including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Museum
of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, the Saatchi Gallery, the British
Museum in London and the Museum der Moderne Salzburg amongst others.
Selected Exhibitions include: Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Salzburg (2012);
Green Art Gallery, Dubai (2012); Leslie Tonkonow Artworks, New York
(2011); Gemeente Museum, The Hague (2011); the Saatchi Gallery, London
(2009).
Ali Banisadr was born in Tehran, Iran and currently lives and works in New York.
Ali Hasanov (b. 1976) is an artist, musician and
filmmaker. His works have explored media in all three areas, with a
notable project Arsenium (performed in 2012) inspired by the landmark
performance of Symphony of Sirens by a Soviet Avant Garde composer
Arseni Avraamov, in Azerbaijan in 1923. Creating an animation and
musical score to commemorate this, a performance took place on the
docks, with full choir and brass band to accompany it.
Hasanov graduated from the Azerbaijani State University of Culture
and the Arts and received a degree in Filmmaking from Baku International
Film School. He represented Azerbaijan at the 52nd Venice Biennale and
selected exhibitions include: Fly To Baku, London, Paris, Berlin,
Moscow, Rome (2012-2013) Museum of Contemporary Art, Perm, Russia
(2011); Dep0, Istanbul (2009); Mars Gallery, Moscow (2009); National
Centre for Contemporary Art, Moscow (2006). Ali is also the founder and
leader of a musical collective called PG Large Used Project.
He lives and works between Moscow and Baku, Azerbaijan.
Orkhan Huseynov (b. 1978) creates work that is
playful and peculiar, in media including video, computer prints and
plastic sculptures. With plexi-glass and computer imaging he creates
child-like images that at first seem innocuous but may refer to oil
wealth, political power, or religious space travel.
Orkhan Huseynov graduated from the Azimzadeh State Art College (1995)
and the Azerbaijan State University of Culture and Art (1999), before
going on to complete his Master's degree at the Azerbaijan State Academy
of Fine Art in Baku. He represented Azerbaijan at the 52nd Venice
Biennale in 2007. He works in a variety of media from painting to
installation but his works are united by their celebration of Azeri
customs and history Selected exhibitions include: Fly To Baku, London,
Paris, Berlin, Moscow, Rome (2012-2013), Commonist YARAT Contemporary
Art Organisation, Baku, Azerbaijan, Merging Bridges, MOMA, Baku,
Azerbajian (2012). He lives and works in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Sitara Ibrahimova (b. 1984) creates work that is
largely photographic, with some recorded performance work. She looks at
many subjects, from everyday domestic spaces to memorabilia of people
who left for war and never returned. Varying from emotive portraits to
images of deserted areas and abandoned objects, each project sets out
new questions for the viewer. In her work titled The Edge Ibrahimova's
photographs capture the human experience beyond political or
geographical borders, often alluding to forms of historical and
collective memory. Her images focus on emotive instances conveyed
through an individual's facial expression or pose, or expressed by a
fragment or an absence. The compositions capture the poignant moments
that characterize the everyday and encourage viewers to construct a
narrative around each dramatic composition. The series of photos
collected for this exhibition similarly seeks to both capture and convey
the challenges and complications associated with historical and
collective memory in the Karabakh region. The project consists of scenes
of a now abandoned town that exists on the border of multiple
political, cultural, and social groups. Sitara Ibrahimova completed her
first degree in Psychology at Baku State University (2004), before
graduating in Still Photography from the Famu University in Prague
(2010). Selected exhibitions include: Commonist, YARAT Contemporary Art
Organisation, Baku, Azerbaijan (2012), USSR Remix, Prague, Czech
Republic (2011), 7, Photo Festival, Tbilisi, Georgia (2010). She lives
and works in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Aida Mahmudova (b. 1982) is both an artist and the
founder and director of YARAT Contemporary Art Organisation. She creates
multimedia sculpture, paintings and installations; many of which recall
memories of specific places or a sense of place. One of Mahmudova's
concerns is the rapid modernisation of Azerbaijan since the republic
gained independence from the Soviet Union; this fuels her paintings of
what she calls 'untouched places' that are often barren or featureless
locations outside of the city. Her public art work Recycled, which now
stands by the site of an old puppet theatre in Baku, uses windows from a
beautiful building that once stood opposite her home. When it was
knocked down she felt she had to acquire the windows, several years
later she was able to make an art piece out of them.
Aida Mahmudova graduated with a degree in Fine Art from Central Saint
Martins, London. She has solo upcoming exhibitions in Zurich and Baku
and has exhibited in numerous galleries in Baku including Philips de
Pury (2012). In 2011, Mahmudova founded YARAT contemporary art
organisation. Selected Exhibitions include: Fly To Baku, London, Paris,
Berlin, Moscow, Rome (2012-2013), Commonist YARAT Contemporary Art
Organisation, Baku, Azerbaijan, Merging Bridges, MOMA, Baku, Azerbajian
(2012).
YARAT
She lives and works in Baku and London.
Taus Makhacheva (b. 1983) is an artist exploring her
nascent regions (Dagestan, the Russian Caucasus Mountains) and the
people, places and behaviours that are significant in it. Makhacheva's
work is often imbued with nostalgia and loneliness and in others with
critical themes, such as masculinity, or ideas of luxury in USSR.
Previous works have included a set of films exposing games of
masculinity in her local region, such as dog fighting and car racing;
for the 55th Venice Biennale she will re-produce a film about an
abandoned silk-road city Gamsutl through a young male protagonist who
"dances" to re-enact the fragmented and largely forgotten history of the
settlement.
Exhibitions include: the Liverpool Biennial (2012); Aluminium at the
Baku IV International Biennale, Milan, Impronte Contemporary Art (2011);
Moscow Museum of Modern Art (2010). She was educated at Goldsmiths
College in London and later studied at the RCA.
Taus Makhacheva lives and works between Moscow and Makhachkala.
Farhad Moshiri (b. 1963) is known for his satirical
depictions of consumerist culture in Iran and abroad. He uses unusual
materials and his play on iconic images, be they of popular or
traditional figures. Using objects from knives and icing dispensers to
Swarovski crystals, he offers a novel and boundary-pushing
interpretation of culture in Iran. Fusing religious imagery with
childish cartoons, using weapons to spell-out statements or imitation
cupcakes to mark out a chalk silhouette, he employs the playful to spell
out the sinister and satirize the iconic.
Group Exhibitions include: ARTandPRESS, Martin Gropius-Bau Museum,
Berlin (2012), The World Belongs to You, Francois Pinault Collection,
Palazzo Grassi, Venice, Italy (2011), Raad O Bargh, Galerie Thaddaeus
Ropac, Paris, France, Iran Inside Out, Chelsea Art Museum, New York
(2009). Solo Exhibitions include: The Fire of Joy, Galerie Perrotin,
Paris 2012; Shukran, The Third Line Gallery, Dubai; Love is not
Everything, Farjam Collection, Dubai, 2011.
He lives and works between Tehran and Paris.
Farid Rasulov (b. 1985) produces installations,
sculptures, photographs and paintings that play upon modernity and its
relation to visual elements of the past. He denies symbolic meanings in
his work, which are piqued with humour and often relate to the rapid
modernisation of Azerbaijan by calling upon familiar Azerbaijani visual
elements. His installation for the 55th Venice Biennale will combine
concrete and "Shebeke" (stained-glass window frames and gratings
assembled from standard wooden components held together only by dowels
and frequently ornamented with pieces of varicoloured glass and they
were in wide use in the 18th and 19th century Azerbaijani architecture.
They can only be found in the city of Shaki). By combining simple cement
with this ornamented stained glass, the artist shows the contrast
between the old and the new, past and present, evolution of a nation
from tradition to modernization and globalization.
Farid Rasulov originally trained as a Doctor at the Azerbaijan State
Medical University. Since becoming an artist, he has represented
Azerbaijan at the 53rd Venice Biennale, 2009 and selected exhibitions
include: Selected exhibitions include Fly To Baku, London, Paris,
Berlin, Moscow, Rome (2012- 2013), Sharjah Islamic Art Festival,
Sharjah, UAE (2012); Commonist YARAT Contemporary Art Organisation,
Baku, Azerbaijan (2012); 012 Baku Public Art Festival (2012); 53rd
Venice Biennale, Azerbaijan pavilion (2009). He lives and works in
Azerbaijan.
Slavs and Tatars (est. 2006) is a faction of
polemics and intimacies devoted to an area east of the former Berlin
Wall and west of the Great Wall of China known as Eurasia. The
collective's work spans several media, disciplines, and a broad spectrum
of cultural registers (high and low) focusing on an oft-forgotten
sphere of influence between Slavs, Caucasians and Central Asians. The
piece Molla Nasreddin The Antimodernist (2012) was produced by Slavs and
Tatars into a life-size sculpture as a playground "ride" for adults and
children alike. Molla Nasreddin The Antimodernist also refers to the
legendary Azerbaijani satirical periodical Molla Nasreddin of the early
20th century, which not only contributed to a crucial understanding of
national identity in the case study of the complexity called the
Caucasus, but offered a momentous example of the powers of the press
both then and today.
Recently published works include Molla Nasreddin: the magazine that
would've, could've, should've (2011), Love Me, Love Me Not: Changed
Names (2010) and Kidnapping Mountains (2009), Not Moscow Not Mecca
(2012) and Khhhhhh (2012), Their forthcoming book is titled: Friendship
of Nations: Polish Shi'ite Showbiz. Selected solo exhibitions include:
the Dallas Museum of Art, USA, (2014 - forthcoming); GfZK, Leipzig and
Arsenal (2014-forthcoming); REDCAT, Los Angeles (2013); Kunstlerhaus,
Stuttgart (2013); Museum Of Modern Art New York (2012); Selected Group
shows include: participation in the 9th Gwangju Biennale (2012),
Secession, Vienna (2012) New Museum Triennial (2012), Koninklijke
Academie voor Schone Kunsten Gent (2011); and a group exhibition at Tate
Modern (2011) the 10th Sharjah Biennale and 3rd Thessaloniki Biennials
(2011).
The collective live and work in 'Eurasia.'
Iliko Zautashvili (b.1952) is an artist and
professor of Art History at the Tbilisi State Academy of Arts. A regular
speaker at conferences he has participated in many exhibitions as a
visual artist, but also as a director of video and cinema. He has
founded several important centres and initiatives in Tbilisi such as the
National Art Center and the "Artactive Evolution".
Selected exhibitions include: Nampo Art Museum (2012); Atlantis,
Palazzo Zenobio, Collateral Event at the 54th Venice Biennale (2011);
Museum of Georgian Literature (2010); Born in Georgia, Cobra Museum,
Netherlands (2009); Emergency Biennale in Chechnya Artisterium (2009),
Art Center Zamok, Uyezdovski, Warsaw, (2009); Voyage a Tbilisi, Musee
des Beaux-Arts de Nantes, France (2009); 2nd Asian Contemporary Art
Fair, New York (2008); Beyond Stereotypes, Art Caucasus, Tbilisi,
Georgia (2005); Aspect de la Photographie Contemporaine du Caucase du
Sud, Centre d'Art Contemporain, Brussels, Belgium (2004).
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