Pace opens a pop-up exhibition of nine new paintings by Maysha Mohamedi
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, November 22, 2024


Pace opens a pop-up exhibition of nine new paintings by Maysha Mohamedi
Installation view, Maysha Mohamedi: Mute Counsel, Berlin, photo by Roman März © Pace Gallery.



BERLIN.- On the occasion of Berlin Gallery Weekend, Pace presents Maysha Mohamedi: Mute Counsel, a pop-up exhibition of nine new paintings by the Los Angeles-based artist.

Running from April 27 to June 26, this marks the artist’s first show in Germany, and her second presentation with Pace since joining the gallery’s program in 2022. In these paintings, Mohamedi continues her exploration of fundamental relationships between colour and shape, language, matter, and being.

Invention and discovery lie at the centre of Mohamedi’s approach to mark making, posing a paradoxically simple question: What is shape? Her works suggest that shape is more process than product. Shape begins when emptiness is interrupted: when two points coalesce into a line so that the solidity of colour is birthed as form. The paintings in Mute Counsel unfold slowly, spooling and unspooling time. Investing form with an almost animistic vivacity, it is as if each shape in Mohamedi’s paintings were possessed of an individual spirit or personality. Like people, her shapes seem at first to belong to types, yet, on closer inspection, each is emphatically unique.

Mohamedi’s compositions suggest fields of irruption. Like lunar surfaces—which bear the history of innumerable collisions with celestial bodies inscribed over millennia—her paintings record the many soft and sensuous collisions between her own body and the surface of the canvas. The act of painting becomes an act of touch, a series of moments of rupture or embrace. Like ever-extending ripples, she sets into motion a process through which form takes shape.

The artist’s fascination with the brain’s processing of visual information, stemming from her academic background in neuroscience, drives her to question how reality is deconstructed and reconstructed through infinitesimal differences, yet perceived as a seamless whole. “All visual processing is about calculating difference,” Mohamedi has explained, “How do you determine and locate edges? Everything depends on the edge.”

Canvases of varying scales orient us toward the world and its edges. In particular, they investigate the edges between language, desire, and selfhood. In Mohamedi’s work, visual form testifies to an encounter with the aesthetic and formal resonance of writing. Composed from a personal lexicon of geometric inventions, Mohamedi’s linear forms have their origin in her intuitive contemplation of the look, feel, or sound of certain words. Through acts of performative transformation, Mohamedi’s paintings subsume signification into a new visual language of shape and rhythm, colour and contour, that is both radically specific and emphatically universal.

Colour, for Mohamedi, serves two essential purposes. First, the chromatic story of a painting grounds it in the world and in the artist’s own life. Originating in her daily existence, Mohamedi ‘collects’ colours in an archive of material encounters: sea glass gathered on a beach, for example, a half-burnt candle from her son’s birthday cake; the marigold eyeball of a pigeon who jumped onto her lap; or the quality of red ink on a love note remembered in a diary. Mohamedi equally utilises colour as a tool for producing a sense of harmony. Balancing the asymmetry of the composition, colour accords the painting’s solicitation to the world, and to us. The seduction of abstraction, for Mohamedi, exists to confirm our aliveness.

Yet a paradox persists: the paintings originate in Mohamedi’s internal world while, at the same time, requiring her to “empty out” her sense of herself in order to make them. As Mohamedi has explained, she herself disappears when she paints. What results are objects both of her and not of her. This contradiction rests at the heart of Mohamedi’s work, which seems to originate in nature while remaining radically human.

In 2023, Pace established a private office in Berlin helmed by Laura Attanasio, with a focus on supporting the gallery’s expanding vision in Europe and contributing to Berlin’s vibrant art scene. This exhibition is being presented in a gallery space located in the Mercator Höfe on Potsdamer Straße in Berlin-Tiergarten.










Today's News

April 29, 2024

Arlene Shechet's 'Girl Group' nudges heavy metal men at Storm King

Bioluminescence first evolved in animals at least 540 million years ago

Exhibition presents recent sculptures in bronze, wood, stone, and steel, and works on paper by Tony Cragg

Hoping art can strike a balance on the U.S.-Mexico border

Exhibition positions Andean textiles as conduits between the precolonial past and our postcolonial present

Pace opens a pop-up exhibition of nine new paintings by Maysha Mohamedi

Copenhagen Contemporary opens a unique group show redefining collaborative art practice

Mike Pinder, founding keyboardist of the Moody Blues, dies at 82

Chargesheimer presentation opens in the Photography Room at Museum Ludwig

Showcase for Antebellum Homes displays their finery. But what about the history?

Unique, poem-dispensing wood gumball machine comes to Museum for Art in Wood

Collezione Maramotti opens the first solo show in an Italian art institution by Silvia Rosi

Welcome to Venice. That'll be 5 euros, please.

A remote island draws thousands of turtles each year. Could it attract tourists?

Exhibition draws on ideas of myths and monsters in the representation of women to reflect on womanhood

Artist Mario Moore bridges untold stories of America's past and present

DAM Projects opens "Between control and autonomy - areas of tension in AI"

New Cleveland Museum of Art exhibition offers a unique exploration juxtaposing 17th century and contemporary fashion

Xippas Paris opens second solo exhibition of American painter John Phillip Abbott

A city scarred by terrorism prepares an Olympic opening without walls

What directors love about Nicole Kidman

What's so funny about a dead comedian?

Fossils take form at the Whatcom Museum

Raymond Briggs returns home with posthumous personal show at Ditchling Museum of Art + Craft

How to Transfer Website Hosting Services: a Step-By-Step Guide

Taking Control After a Personal Injury: Your Path to Recovery

The importance of interior design in Dubai RadyInterior




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful