Presentation House Gallery
Vancouver
333 Chesterfield Avenue
604 9861351 FAX 604 9865380
WEB
Slavs and Tatars
dal 10/4/2013 al 25/5/2013

Segnalato da

Jonah Gray



 
calendario eventi  :: 




10/4/2013

Slavs and Tatars

Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver

Friendship of Nations: Polish Shi'ite Showbiz. Presented in varying forms that range from a complimentary newspaper to a public artwork, the elements brought together for this exhibition include pajaki (originally, Polish folk objects constructed from found materials), banners, a mirror mosaic, a book archive, a photomural, and a fountain at the plaza of the Sheraton Wall Centre.


comunicato stampa

Curator: Babak Golkar

This exhibition traces the shared points of convergence in Iran and Poland’s respective economic, political and cultural histories. The project draws on research that stretches from the seventeenth-century Sarmatism movement of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth to the recent Green movement in Iran. It is an investigation into the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the Solidarność (Solidarity) Movement of 1980s Poland – two key moments that bookend the stories of twenty-first century political Islam and twentieth-century communism respectively. Channeling the folklore and artisanal crafts of both cultures, Slavs and Tatars examine the potential for these modes of production to present and redeem hospitality between ideas, faiths, cultures and languages.

Presented in varying forms that range from a complimentary newspaper to a public artwork, the elements brought together for this exhibition include pająki (originally, Polish folk objects constructed from found materials to give thanks for the year’s harvest), banners, a mirror mosaic, a book archive, a photomural, and a fountain at the plaza of the Sheraton Wall Centre in downtown Vancouver.

Dear 1979, Meet 1989 (2011) is an installation of traditional vernacular Persian riverbeds (takhts) with stands, originally used for holy books (rahlé), to display books and printed ephemera from Slavs and Tatars’ archive on the Iranian Revolution and Poland’s Solidarność. Historically used across Central Asia and Iran as collective seating, the riverbeds allows for public seating in a place sorely lacking in public space. They provide a place where workers or groups of young men and women can meet, share a meal, tea, hooka (ghalyian) and discuss political views. Here, the riverbeds serve as a resting area in the exhibition that double as a platform for reading, viewing, reflection and discussion.

Resist Resisting God (2009) is a mirror mosaic wall piece inspired by the geometric arrangements of mosaics used in Islamic interior architecture that have become increasingly politically instrumentalized since 1979. The mirror mosaics found in Shi’ite shrines and across the former royal residencies of Iran are examples of the various religious, such as Shi’a and Sunni, and cultural means employed historically by Iranians to distinguish themselves from Arabs. The Arab conquests of the seventh century brought not only Islam but also the highly geometric patterns of Islamic decorative art to the region. The Persians, however, insisted on executing mosaics in a more peculiar, precious manner, employing mirrors instead of wood or ceramics. As Slavs and Tatars have described, “Resist Resisting God extols mysticism as a resolutely progressive and polyphonic voice at the origins of 1979’s promise and all revolutions since.”

Slavs and Tatars is an artist collective devoted to exploring the cultures of Eurasia, which extends roughly from the former Berlin Wall to the Great Wall of China. Their artwork spans several media, disciplines, and a broad spectrum of cultural forms, focusing on an oft-forgotten sphere of influence between Slavs, Caucasians and Central Asians. Their internationally acclaimed projects have been exhibited at the 10th Sharjah, 8th Mercosul, 3rd Thessaloniki, and 9th Gwangju Biennials and Museum of Modern Art, New York.

Image: Lahestan Nesfeh Jahan (Poland, Half of the World), silk-screen, cross-stitching, cotton, 200 x 120 cm, 2011

Presentation House Gallery has a mandate to exhibit and disseminate photography and media art, emphasizing contemporary Canadian work within a context of historical and international art. In addition to the exhibition program, we organize national and international tours of exhibitions, produce publications, and offer public events and art education programs.

OPENING RECEPTION, ARTISTS TOUR AND BOOK LAUNCH THURSDAY APRIL 11, 7PM

Presentation House Gallery
333 Chesterfield Avenue North Vancouver BC V7M 3G9 Canada
Gallery Hours:
Wednesday to Sunday, 12–5 pm
Entrance by Donation

IN ARCHIVIO [14]
Images That Speak
dal 1/4/2015 al 15/5/2015

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