Between Daylights. With her photographic works, Shahbazi moves beyond artificial unity and hoped-for definitude. In another room of the gallery "Amid Serene Rooms", the artist Schnider presents his figurative as well as abstract paper works.
Shirana Shahbazi
Between Daylights
Let us focus on the vague feeling that there could be something exactly where there is
nothing. Let us consider the possibility that where non-knowing reigns there is always an
opportunity. With her photographic works, Shirana Shahbazi moves beyond artificial unity
and hoped-for definitude. Her pictures are characterised by a simultaneity and an inte-
grity of explicit depiction and abstract form. Her art is no completed synthesis, but a
synthesis as endless task – a hybrid entity. Colour fields of a spatial nature form the
background to fruits in all their unfathomable corporeality. Other works draw on a jux-
taposition of images, where we suspect a true connection will never result in a unity.
Shahbazi’s pictures transform naive hope into the realisation that an undisguised gaze
always entails holding out.
Just like her depictions, the production of her artworks is informed by processes of
interaction. Photography and painting both have been constants throughout her artistic
career. Especially in her early works photographs are turned into paintings and back
again into photographic depictions. Photographs she has had woven into carpets, which she
has used as negatives for silk screens or turned into lithographic wallpapers. The exhi-
bition room too has on occasion become an element in her work. And abstract compositions
of planes have sometimes been given a new level in the form of a wall priming serving as
a backdrop.
Time is not a sequence of images here, such as film would have it, but all of time is
concentrated in every single picture. The finished object is the process, which it makes
visible. The observer of Shahbazi’s art is confronted with such movement in stasis. She
presents us with fruits, flowers, animals, skulls, or bead chains as still lives, which
indeed are deprived of all movement, so that something shines through that evades all
meaningful description, or duration.
In her 4th solo-exhibition at the Bob van Orsouw Gallery, Shirana Shahbazi
continues on her way towards abstraction, without getting anywhere near two-dimensiona-
lity. As in all her other works, analogue photography is the artistic medium that stands
at the end of the production process. Her depictions possess a genuine topography that
is based on the portrayal of real bodies. Thus two black spheres, for instance, sit on a
black surface and only a shimmer of light makes them appear and stand out. Or the artist
arranges monochrome polyhedrons and planes, so that we observe them not as an illusion,
but as a game of perspective. In spite of, or indeed because of, the sharp contours in
her pictures we suspect that there is no juxtaposition, but only an interplay, no matter
how much the transition looks like a borderline.
Whereas the abstract often appears as the anti-subjective, as the impersonal that is,
Shirana Shahbazi maximally condenses the subjective to a point close to its disappearance
and thus achieves an extraordinary degree of personality.
The French philosopher and Nobel laureate Henri Bergson aimed to define a correlati-
on between materiality and life in human existence that also becomes visible in Shirana
Shahbazi’s art – the relationship between intelligence (materiality, abstraction,
geometry) and instinct (life):
“There are things that intelligence alone is able to seek, but which, by itself, it will
never find. These things instinct alone could find; but it will never seek them.”
The living synthesis of intelligence and instinct Bergson called intuition. Shirana
Shahbazi’s pictures stand for a striving of this kind.
Shirana Shahbazi was born 1974 in Teheran, Iran. At the age of eleven, she moved to
Germany. She studied photography, first in Dortmund and then in Zurich, where she also
lives today and has her studio. For her works she has received prestigious prizes, such
as the Citigroup Private Bank Photography Prize (2002). She took part in the 50th Venice
Biennale (2003) and has had exhibitions in notable museums e.g.:
Museum of Modern Art, New York (2012/2013), Fotomuseum Winterthur (2011), New Museum, New
York (2011), The Hammer Museum, UCLA, Los Angeles (2008), Museum Boijmans van Beuningen,
Rotterdam (2008), Barbican Art Gallery, London (2007), Centre d’Art Contemporain, Genf
(2005), Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago (2003).
Stefan Pabst
Project - Albrecht Schnider
Amid Serene Rooms
In another room of the gallery, the artist Albrecht Schnider (CH, b. 1958) presents his
figurative as well as abstract paper works, meticulously crafted line drawings, as e.g.
portrait studies, landscape drafts, or his latest typographical sketches. These, part-
ly older, but also newly reworked sheets often help the artist in generating ideas, in
clearing the way to and directly implementing his precise paintings in oil or acrylics
on canvas. Albrecht Schnider has exhibited and has a permanent representation in many
renowned private and museum collections. He has been living and working in Berlin since
1998.
Opening: Saturday, 8 June 2013 6 - 8 pm
Galerie Bob van Orsouw
Limmatstrasse 270, CH–8005 Zürich
Tue–Fri 12am–6pm, Sat 11am–5pm