London,
24 Old Gloucester Street Bloomsbury, London WC1N 3AL
8 May - 28 June 2014
October Gallery, London presents Dance Me to the End of Night by Golnaz Fathi comprising large scale canvases, works on paper and video. Dance Me to the End of Night will mark her second solo exhibition at October Gallery.
In her most recent work Fathi develops the technique of Siah Mashgh, a dedicated practice of repeating letters over and over until the ink creates a densely textured solid black impression; for her, the most artistic part of traditional calligraphy. Fathi’s hand movements form uncompromised gestures, emerging out of the deep layers and attempt to capture a thought, word, or sound. Her actions are part of a ritualistic process that allows her to nurture an idea to express a deep intense emotion. Her tangible technique reveals rhythmic movements and the passing of time onto her canvases.
In her most recent work Fathi develops the technique of Siah Mashgh, a dedicated practice of repeating letters over and over until the ink creates a densely textured solid black impression; for her, the most artistic part of traditional calligraphy. Fathi’s hand movements form uncompromised gestures, emerging out of the deep layers and attempt to capture a thought, word, or sound. Her actions are part of a ritualistic process that allows her to nurture an idea to express a deep intense emotion. Her tangible technique reveals rhythmic movements and the passing of time onto her canvases.
Whether opting for small infiltrations or bold swatches of colour, Fathi frequently combines stark blacks and whites with primary colours. Reds, yellows, blues and greens are all deliberately selected to reference a particular mood. Colours and strokes are the response of an urgent feeling that she needs to depict. Emotion permeates from the calm monochromatic canvases with the lines speaking for themselves.
Placing Fathi and her work amongst her peers or against a movement may seem futile, yet artists - Tian Wei, (China), Rachid Koraïchi, (Algeria), etc. - push the boundaries of legibility and intelligibility in their work through amalgamation of traditional and contemporary practice. Fathi further advances this balance with ardent video pieces animating her trademark script. Her simplistic yet complex paintings with their minimalistic facade demand attention however, Fathi wanted to add movement to the lines she formed. Creating video pieces by digitalizing her script, she allows her lines to break the stillness. Acting as choreographer, she creates a dialogue between script line and sound; just as paint is considered and controlled on her canvases, so too is the data imputed.
Undertaken with the same consideration, each work is densely inscribed with potential meanings allowing unrestrained imaginative possibilities. Fathi notes, “Do we have to translate so many things? No, there are some things that can talk for themselves, and we should let them. Why not?”