“I set out to capture my breath, to find the essence of my own experience, transcending
name, nationality, cultures.” Shirazeh Houshiary
Lisson Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new paintings by Shirazeh
Houshiary. This will be her sixth solo exhibition with the gallery, her first since
2000, and will include a 4-screen animation work.
Breath has occupied a central position in Houshiary’s entire oeuvre. The sense
of expansion and contraction characterising inhalation and exhalation is evident
from her early sculptures of 1992-93. Later, in paintings such as Presence, 2000,
breath leaves its mark as an elusive presence, a form that vanishes as soon as it
enters visibility. Its absence begs for presence. She continues this theme in a
new animated work not previously shown in the UK.
Read moreHoushiary’s paintings are monochromatic. She restricts her palette to mostly
black and shades of white, only to negate such dualities. By drawing light into
darkness and casting shadows on the pristine whiteness of her canvases, she
affirms their interdependence, removes the distance between opposites, and
points to a world far more complex than black or white. By creating
abstractions she treads into a territory dominated by Western artists such as
Kazimir Malevich, Ad Reinhardt and Mark Rothko to name a few. But Houshiary
gets there with the tools of a calligrapher, the patience of a miniature painter,
and the mindset of a mystic. Her goal is nothing less than capturing and
visualising what is ghostly, invisible, fugitive, impossible to freeze, something like
the very essence of life as manifested in breath.
Born in Iran in 1955, Houshiary has lived in Britain since the mid-1970s. Refusing
to inhabit a ghetto either Western or Islamic, instead, she invents a new order
alien to both. Her work suggests a stage prior to and beyond differences, in
which everyone finds something they can recognise- the pulse of life, the trace of
a self, something akin to the visualisation of human presence.
Shirazeh Houshiary lives and works in London. Recent projects include a
commission for Art For the World entitled “Playground” by Houshiary and Pip
Horne, at Gloucester Primary School, Peckham in 2004, Another collaboration
Breath, 2004 is on show in Battery Park, New York City until April 2005. The
project, organised by Creative Time, is a ‘tower’ structure made in white glazed
bricks and sounds emanating from its core.