WASHINGTON, DC.- Through its 20202022 Contemporaries Acquisition Fund,
The Phillips Collection has recently acquired a work by DC-based artist Hedieh Javanshir Ilchi (b. 1981, Tehran, Iran). Created with acrylic on individual Masonite panels and incased together as a floor-piece, Ilchis work (to be completed in spring 2022) fluctuates between abstraction and representation, depth and flatness, evoking unknown landscapes and inner psychological spaces. While her paintings merge fluid layers of poured paint with imagery derived from old Persian paintings and illuminated manuscripts, Ilchis intricately executed tile worksincluding the Phillips piecejoin geometric patterns taken from Islamic architecture with the modernist grid, bridging distinct cultural traditions, explains Vesela Sretenović, Cross-departmental Director for Contemporary Art Initiatives and Partnerships.
The artist describes her work as the product of my multifaceted experience as an Iranian-American immigrant. It provides a space where my two disparate histories come together to reflect on cultural traditions and notions of belonging. By combining conventions of Western abstraction with conventions of Persian art, I explore contradictory painting processes and the ways in which they can be melded into a hybrid visual language.
Hedieh Javanshir Ilchis artwork eloquently speaks to the environment and honoring diverse cultures. Moreover, the selection of her work demonstrates our commitment to acquiring art by female artists, says Vradenburg Director and CEO Dorothy Kosinski. These are all issues that The Phillips Collection has been engaging with for many years and especially during our 100th anniversary.
Ilchis artwork was selected by the Phillipss Contemporaries Steering Committee (CSC), a young professionals membership group invited to deepen their connection to the Phillips through cultural and social events, including the Art Acquisition. The group has previously acquired works by Nara Park and Ellington Robinson in 2018, and Zoë Charlton in 2019.
Led by Vesela Sretenović and with close participation of CSC members, the program enriches the museums permanent collection with annual acquisitions by emerging artists of diverse backgrounds and practices.
HEDIEH JAVANSHIR ILCHI
Born in Tehran, Iran, in 1981, Hedieh Javanshir Ilchi moved to the US when she was 18 and studied art first at the Corcoran College of Art + Design in 2006 and then at American University, where she received an MFA. Her work embraces the notion of duality, formally and conceptually. It stands in-between abstraction and representation, geometric patterns and gestural expression, depth and flatness, as well as in-between different histories, cultures, and art traditions. The resulting images echo unknown topographic and cosmic spaces, mixing galaxies with land, earth with dark matter.
Ilchi's work has been exhibited in New York, Switzerland, Washington, DC, and Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and is included in several private and public collections. She has been awarded numerous residencies, including the Ucross Foundation, Vermont Studio Center, The Jentel Foundation, and the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts. Her work has been featured in Hyperallergic, Blouin ArtInfo, The Washington Post, Washington City Paper, and DC Modern Luxury. She is represented by Hemphill Artworks in Washington, DC.