LONDON.- Taymour Grahne Projects is presenting Swimming Lessons, a solo exhibition by London-based artist Cara Nahaul.
Text by Allie Biswas. A UK-based writer and editor for projects such as The Soul of a Nation Reader: Writings by and about Black American Artists, 1960-1980 with Mark Godfrey, published in June 2021.
In the book (*1) that accompanies this exhibition, Cara Nahaul writes: My childhood is flooded with memories of the sea
a body of water that sits between Malaysia and Mauritiusthe islands of my parents. Since her earliest explorations as an artist, the Indian Ocean has been vital to Nahaul, forming an integral framework for her vivid paintings of white-hued houses and lavish greenerycrisp compositions constructed from minimal componentsas well as her hazier pencil-and-pastel drawings of the same verdant landscape. Memory functions in tandem: the recollections cited by the artist relate to trips she took as a young child to her grandparents house in Mauritius. Although intermittent, lasting the duration of a school holiday (Nahaul was raised in St. Albans, England), the vibrant terrains she encountered, belonging to her forebears, left an indelible impression. The works in Swimming Lessons evolved after the artist returned to Mauritius in 2020, following an absence of over ten years.
As an inbetween space that connects the homelands of her Chinese-Malaysian mother and Mauritian father, the seascape is a device that has allowed Nahaul to anchor her own intermediary position, as someone who is used to navigating the contradictions and joys that come with inheriting cultures from ones parents. The physical sensation of being in the seaa quality that undulates throughout the artists picturesoffers a counterpart to this notion. As she has said, when youre in the water, your senses are heightened and you look at the landscape, which is now far away from you, very differently. The scenes in Swimming Lessons are depicted from the perspective of a subject who appears to be situated within the sea itself, perhaps on a boat (Origami Castles), or who is otherwise surrounded by vast expanses of water which separate the subject from the distinct buildings that loom in the distance (Prelude to a Rainstorm). In presenting this stance of relative remoteness, the artist acknowledges the cultural and geographical dislocation of her position, while pointing to an underlying sadness that shrouds her vision, as she attempts to reconcile the memories of her youth with the present-day.
The drawings that feature in the exhibitions eponymously titled publication are intended to provide insights into what the artist describes as the most personal aspect of her practice. Most of the paintings are arrived upon once charcoal sketches have been made by Nahaul, who will refer to photographs that she has taken. This exercise of working rapidly on paper in the first instance, as she explains, allows me to break down the image. Similarly, the development of each painting involves various levels of removal. The place Im portraying doesnt become unrecognisable, but its very much my take on it, Nahaul explains. Through the act of remembrance, Im turning a place into something that is mythical to some extent, anyway. And I think thats what the painting becomes, in the enda place that exists outside of a given timeframe.
While precise references may be abandoned, Nahauls compositions are frequently grounded by the appearance of a single white housea motif that appears throughout the Swimming Pool works. The structure replicates the home that was once occupied by the artists grandparents (later renovated by Nahauls father) an is still in existence. Depicted as a somewhat ghostly form, which embodies the unsettling ambiance that often permeates the artists images, the property is nonetheless as tangible as the ocean with which Nahaul yearns to reconnect.
Cara Nahaul (b. 1987, London, UK) is an artist living and working in London. She received a BA from Goldsmiths University, London and an MFA from Parsons The New School for Design, New York. Her recent solo exhibition was the inaugural show at Taymour Grahne Projects, 2020, and she has since shown with gallery again in 2021. Nahaul has previously exhibited at Trade Gallery and Christine Park Gallery. She has been selected for the John Moores prize twice, the inaugural Jerwood Painting Fellowship, nominated for the Contemporary British Painting Prize and completed a yearlong studio residency at the Florence Trust.
(*1) Book: The artist is also launching a monograph, produced in collaboration with Cactus Moon Studio. 'Swimming Lessons' compiles Nahaul's pencil, pastel, and charcoal drawings together with written texts plus a small limited-edition lithographic print, and will be available to purchase online the day of the exhibition opening. info@cactusmoon.studio address for monograph enquiries only.