Lotfi's "Circles" includes recent paintings, sculptures and drawings. Gibisser's "The Motive Power series" is comprised of four films, each confined to a single street address.
Nazafarin Lotfi
Circles
“The new continents are built out of the ruins of an old planet....”
Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1841
Tony Wight Gallery is pleased to present the gallery’s first solo exhibition of work by Nazafarin Lotfi.
The exhibition includes recent paintings, sculptures and drawings.
Lotfi’s most recent work employs a minimized color palette and uses everyday structural materials, such as
staples, fishing line, vinyl, and fencing. Her materials often do double-duty: a metal utility fense used as a
stencil for spray painting will also become the support for a free-standing sculpture. In her process, even
finished works can become the basis for another painting or sculpture. As Lotfi described, “Painting are the
world for the sculptures to exist in.”
Lotfi previously embedded narrative into her objects, but more recently she has been working in the oppo-
site way, pushing her surfaces and objects until they let go of their stories. From her earlier study of architec-
ture, she hs a continued interest in doorways and passageways as markers of distance. These spaces are
invitations towards an unknown and their position is evident in the transitivity of her materials, mediums, and
processes, where one begins to behave line another.
Nazafarin Lotfi (Iranian, b. 1984) received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2011
and her BA from the University of Tehran in 2007. Lotfi’s work has been included in group exhibitions nation-
ally and internationally, including South Korea, Hungary, and Iran. Recent exhibitions include Cloud Gate at
Monya Rowe Gallery, New York, NY; Untitled Document at Tony Wight Gallery, Chicago, IL; In Between at
Autumn Space, Chicago, IL; Faux-Cult at NoGlobe, Brooklyn, NY; Into the Surface at Brand New Gallery,
Milan; and The Question of Their Content at Zolla/Lieberman Gallery, Chicago.
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Mike Gibisser
The Motive Power Series
The Motive Power series is comprised of four films, each confined to a
single street address, each a meditation on one of the thermodynamic laws.
Viewed together, the films become chapters in an extended rumination on
the metaphors embedded in the laws, or those that gave rise to the laws in
the first place. Gibisser has described the series as "movies made of
still images," where focus held on details like two clocks with second
hands just out of synch, or a curtained window frame conveys inquiry into
both the properties of the physical laws and the image properties of 16mm
film. Formally these films are as much about sound as they are about
image, from the Third Law chapter's acute manipulation of the sound of
cicadas, to the playful use of a film clapboard in the final chapter for
the Zeroeth Law. Parts historical essay, parts personal documentary, and
parts lyrical expression, the films put pressure on the points where
spiritualism bleeds into science, and affect invades empiricism.
Sections of The Motive Power Series have screened at the New York Film
Festival and the Chicago Underground Film Festival, where Gibisser
received Honorable Mention for Second Law: S. Leh St. This is the first
public showing of the entire series in Chicago.
The films have a combined duration of 50 minutes, and will be screening at
the gallery on the hour from 11–4 pm daily.
Mike Gibisser (b. 1981) lives and makes films in Chicago largely about
people who do not. His films navigate the indefinite lines between essay,
experimental, and documentary work, often drawing together disparate
subjects or time periods. He received his MFA in Moving Image from
University of Illinois at Chicago in 2011, and an MA in Visual and
Critical Studies from the School of the Art Institute in 2009.
Image: Nazafarin Lotfi, Untitled, 2012, Acrylic and spray paint on unstreched canvas, 12 x 9 inches
Opening friday, 2 March, 6-8 pm
Tony Wight Gallery
845 West Washington Boulevard Chicago
Tues - Sat 11am - 5 pm
Admission free