ADVOCARTSY now presenting solo exhibition of Iranian born woman artist Samira Abbassy
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ADVOCARTSY now presenting solo exhibition of Iranian born woman artist Samira Abbassy
Samira Abbassy, Diptych of Fractured Selves Fall Away + Silencing Her Polyphony, 2022. oil on canvas on board, 48 x 48 in. Courtesy of ADVOCARTSY & Samira Abbassy.



LOS ANGELES, CA.- Los Angeles-based Iranian contemporary art platform ADVOCARTSY opened Embodied Mythologies, a solo exhibition of works by Iranian born woman artist, Samira Abbassy, on May 11, 2023 at ADVOCARTSY’s West Hollywood gallery in Los Angeles.

In this exhibition, Abbassy’s work grapples with the psychological and metaphysical aspects of selfhood, in which her figures are allegories representing the depths of our subconscious. Leaving Iran as a small child to live in London, Abbassy’s work acts as a bridge between the dichotomy of cultures, both fusing and exploring disparate entities to create an aesthetic synthesis rooted in her own identity. This collection of drawings and paintings creates a surreal realm of figures which allude to the history of proto-Renaissance religious Icons, and ancient manuscripts of the Middle East.

In conjunction, ADVOCARTSY is thrilled to announce the acquisition of two works from Samira Abbassy’s Chemical Hysterical Drawing series by LACMA and Mohammed Afkhami Foundation. LACMA is now exhibiting both drawings at its expansive exhibition of works by women artists in Women Defining Women In Contemporary Art of the Middle East and Beyond which will be on view until September 24, 2023.

This solo show, Embodied Mythologies, includes painting and drawings from two bodies of work. The first of which is the Chemical Hysterical drawing series, which began taking shape in 2009 and is ongoing, consisting of approximately 30 charcoal drawings over time. These drawings were born out of a process of tracing fragments of personal and borrowed images, which are then printed onto transparent paper and projected on an overhead projector. The projector is used like the turntable of a record player to sample and layer fragments to generate virtual collages. This process of unifying fragments is rooted in the Surrealists’ Exquisite Corpse drawing experiments. The series title Chemical Hysterical, is taken from song lyrics by Radio Head’s “OK Computer” album. It’s a poetic interpretation of the body as a biochemical, hormonal system, triggering emotional and psychological states by which we are all overcome at times.

The second body of work grew out of the first, and manifested into larger paintings. The drawings inform the paintings and vice versa. The subject of much of the work evolves out the question: How do I create a figure that embodies the metaphysical aspects of being? The work is an inquiry into how to reveal the figure as a psychological, emotional being, encountering its various internal states: violence, ecstasy, epiphany, emotional disturbance, mental illness, hypnotic/trance-like states, the dream state, mystical, and out of body experiences. To explore these states of being, I looked towards Carl Jung’s theory of “the collective unconscious” to uncover common and divergent ideas instilled in the human psyche.

The key to my approach of the figure lies in an idea taken from Dante’s Inferno: that figures are “contorted according to their sin.” This implies an embodiment of psychological states, where the physical states mirror psychological dilemmas. Rather than portraits, the figures are archetypes, revealing themselves from the inside out; showing how it feels to be human, and each specific identity helps uncover elements of a more universal Self. At times, the figure is represented as many selves, or many aspects of one unified Self, expressing an array of psychodynamic and existential realities. This kind of multiplicity can also be found in ancient ideology and texts like the figure of the Many-Headed Angel in Mohamad's Night Journey manuscript and much of Hindu iconography.

Another central reference for much of my work, for the last three decades, is Qajar Court painting (Iran, 18th/19th c.) The visual language of Qajar Court paintings reveals how the artists were called to translate their visual language, in such a short span of time, and that the slippage of language and ‘misinterpretation’ becomes the key to their intriguing appearance. These artists also had to make an adjustment to the horizontal/ vertical paradigm shift from the manuscript to large scale, wall hung, oil paintings. Just as the Iranian artists were translating into the language of European painting, I find parallels in my own biography and efforts to translate myself back into my indigenous culture, adapting Western painting techniques to the language of Persian painting.

My work describes an allegorical realm, where the events and narratives of our lived experience becomes incorporated into the body, or can cause its fragmentation. By fusing disparate languages, myths and cultural conventions, I’m seeking an iconography that can carry our current hybrid reality.

Born in Ahwaz, Iran, to an Arab minority family, Samira Abbassy moved to London as a toddler in 1967. Abbassy studied at the Canterbury College of Art before moving to New York City to co-found the Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts, and the EFA Studio Center in 1998. Her work responds to this migration and cultural shift by synthesizing Persian art with the Western canon, creating a conversation around where Iranian art belongs in a predominantly Eurocentric history of art. To find her place within the Western canon, Abbassy not only delves into a deep examination of Eastern art history, but the psychological toll of the discourse between East and West, Self and other, and the foreign and familiar.

In her visual lexicon, Abbassy utilizes the language of sacred art across cultures, flattening her figures in a background without perspectival space to create an Iconic and allegorical figure. In this way, the pictorial space reads as a psychological realm rather than a real place, where figures are accompanied by recurring symbols and motifs. The conception and evolution of this work has been shaped by the digital transfer of images globally, and the artist’s formal decision to flatten perspective brings the paint and figure to light on the surface. The result is a strikingly resonant and sometimes unsettling body of work that takes on a life of its own for each viewer.

Abbassy has exhibited internationally and her work has been acquired by institutions and private collections such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the British Museum, LACMA and the Afkhami Collection.










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