|
03/01/2005
NYC art exhibition:
Emily Jacir: accumulations
February 26 - April 9, 2005
Alexander and Bonin
132 Tenth Avenue Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
Alexander and Bonin is pleased to announce
accumulations, Emily Jacir's first exhibition with the
gallery. Presented in formats that range from poetic
to documentary, recurrent themes addressed by Jacir
are borders, issues of movement, dislocation, radical
displacement and resistance. The works in her new
exhibition can be seen as ruminations on borderless
formats and performative actions.
Included in the forthcoming exhibition will be Inbox
(2004-05) a single work comprised of approximately
forty paintings, each the size of a standard, 11 x 8
1?2 inch, sheet of paper. Using oil paint, Jacir
painstakingly transcribed selected email
correspondence she has collected since 1998 onto
individual wood panels. Collectively, these selections
from her archive represent an expanded moment in time
as well as a narrative of world events, both cultural
and political. A diary written by others, Inbox,
ranges from serious to humorous and is ultimately
autobiographical. This work was originally
commissioned by Kunstraum, Innsbruck.
Ramallah/New York, a two channel video, was shot in
2004 and is informed by the artist's experience of
living in Ramallah and New York for the past six
years. The video, a kind of experimental documentary,
interweaves images of travel agencies, hairdressers,
delis, shwarma shops, and arghile bars in both sites,
whilst recording the movement of people to and from
these two locales. Collectively, they record the
spaces between war, exile and destruction, and
preserve an account of steadfastness. It is a record
of local, public and daily exchange in both sites and
between them. In this work, Jacir documents a specific
time which takes place in daily life as opposed to the
official representations and narratives of history,
CNN or Al-Jazeera. Ramallah/New York examines both the
safety and familiarity of interiors as well as their
entrapment and claustrophobia and is an homage to the
transcendence of spaces beyond official borders and
actual sites.
In 2003, Jacir exhibited Where We Come From, a series
of text and photo works that documented the response
and action generated by the question to fellow
Palestinians: "If I could do anything for you,
anywhere in Palestine, what would it be?" Nearly 30
requests were completed and are visually demonstrated
in photographs exhibited alongside the request and
origins of each individual. First exhibited at Debs &
Co., New York, Where We Come From, has subsequently
been shown in Ramallah, Istanbul, Oxford and Bremen. A
portion of the work was included in the 2004 Whitney
Biennial. The complete series is on view at the Ulrich
Museum of Art, Wichita through March 6th.
Emily Jacir works in a wide variety of mediums which
have included video, photography, drawing and
sculpture. Born in Bethlehem in 1970, she studied at
University of Dallas at Irving, Memphis College of Art
and the Whitney Independent Study Program. She lives
and works in New York and Ramallah. Her work will be
included in the forthcoming Sharjah International
Biennial- Session 7.
|