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Loom
Taha Heydari - Solo Show

9 Feb - 5 Mar, 2023

Loom

Statement:

GAVLAK Palm Beach is pleased to announce "Loom", a solo exhibition of new paintings by Taha Heydari. Loom represents the culmination of Heydari’s engagement with Persian rugs as a paradoxical embodiment of transcendental authority and quotidian materiality. Displaced from their conventional settings, Heydari’s ornately painted rugs appear suspended in a dystopian twilight in which they unravel, revealing narratives which had been lost between the fibers. Loom will be on view from February 9 – March 5, 2023 at GAVLAK’s Palm Beach location. 

With the Persian rug, Heydari returns to the site where he spent much of his life as a child and young adult living in Iran. The rug literally grounds the lives of individuals, families, and Iran itself, embedding and sealing these memories within its warps and wefts.///

It is mundane in its ubiquity across all spaces of Iranian life, yet mystified in its status as a historically loaded and culturally revered object. As Heydari learned as a young student of classical Persian miniature painting, traditional crafts are performed under highly structured processes. These objects transcend their own materiality and become sacred and impenetrable. Heydari understands this transcendence as a product of ideology, which conceals its own construction in the overlooked details of the everyday.

In Loom, interwoven threads of meticulously painted rugs emulate the texture of the canvas itself, insisting on the rugs’ fragile materiality in spite of their storied cultural history and enduring presence in Iran. But the detailed quality of these surfaces also evokes the immaterial. Aligning weaving with coding, their geometric patterns and grids—typical of traditional gabbeh textiles—recall eight-bit video game graphics. Warps and wefts operate like zeroes and ones. Still, in keeping with the “glitched” imagery that is the consistent hallmark of Heydari’s painting practice, these codes seem to break down, producing tatters and loose threads which take on an uncanny bodiliness.

By performing an “autopsy” on the Persian rug, Heydari reveals its internal structure and breaks the illusion of wholeness which similarly enshrines ideology. In his paintings, some rugs appear partially intact while others have been reduced to shreds. Bodies begin to emerge from behind these fragments, in some instances becoming entangled in their sinewy fibers. The flatness of the painted rugs interrupts the nebulous depth which envelopes the figures and drags them downward. These scenes seem to pour out from the splintering threads, much like dust and detritus beaten out from rugs that have been strung up for cleaning. The obscured yet recurring motif of crawling infants signals a new, constantly unfolding present and a critical shift in perspective. Under the looming weight of time, Heydari’s painted rugs crumble and unravel.

 

In this show

Taha Heydari, Baby's day out, 2022, 0
2022 | Baby's day out

Taha Heydari

218.4 × 162.6cm

Taha Heydari, Spring Cleaning, 2022, 0
2022 | Spring Cleaning

Taha Heydari

182.9 × 162.6cm

Taha Heydari, Loom, 2022, 0
2022 | Loom

Taha Heydari

223.5 × 193cm

Taha Heydari, After Party, 2022, 0
2022 | After Party

Taha Heydari

218.4 × 162.6cm

Taha Heydari, Rug Beater, 2023, 0
2023 | Rug Beater

Taha Heydari

152.4 × 132.1cm

Taha Heydari, Caspian Beach, 2022, 0
2022 | Caspian Beach

Taha Heydari

132.1 × 111.8cm

Taha Heydari, Twilight, 2022, 0
2022 | Twilight

Taha Heydari

182.9 × 203.2cm

Installation view

bktop