Embedded Memories
Mohsen Gallery, 10/07/2016 - 10/26/2016
Mohsen Gallery #42, Mina Blvd., Nurbakhsh St., Farzan Alley Naji Alley, Zafar Ave., Modarres Exp. Te
Mohsen Gallery is pleased to announce Embedded Memories, an exhibition of paintings and works on paper by Los Angeles-based artist Amir H. Fallah. On view from October 7th to 26th, Embedded Memories is Fallah’s first solo show with the gallery and in Tehran.
In a multimedia practice that plays with the history of portraiture and still life, Fallah presents intricately composed tableaus cast in a rich palette. Subjects appear completely cloaked and faceless, surrounded by objects that the artist has selected from their possessions before the sitting. This methodology, inspired by a desire to focus on how subjects express themselves rather than on their physical characteristics, is achieved with the eye of an anthropologist. The effect is to both reify and subvert traditions of portraiture, maintaining the significance of the personal object but negating that of the face.
Indeed, Fallah obfuscates the line between portraiture and still life. While his portraits are in a sense emptied of people, his still lifes reference an intimate humanity. Following 17th-century Dutch and Flemish artistic conventions that assigned certain flowers with symbolic meaning, Fallah creates compositions that suggest an emotional density. The prominent red poppy in In Bloom 5 (2014), for example, invokes death, whereas the lily in In Bloom 8 (2014) is associated with purity and femininity.
In all his works, Fallah’s characteristically bright palette offers a contemporary take on what is essentially an early modern practice. Like the work of fellow American artist Kehinde Wiley, who is known for his large-scale portraits of African-American subjects posed after iconic European paintings, Fallah thus resuscitates and updates the Western canon. A revision of the common American adage is called-for: in with the old, and in with the new.
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