Ghasemi Brothers | "Red Room II: Migratory Birds": Elga Wimmer PCC Gallery
An exhibition of individual and collaborative works by the Ghasemi Brothers
Curated and Sponsored by Roya Khadjavi at Elga Wimmer PCC Gallery
This exhibition consists of two bodies of work. The first focuses on the Ghasemi brothers' individual paintings, reflecting their personal style, artistic space and subject matter. The second showcases their collaborative paintings and sculptures titled Red Room: Migratory Birds. This essay aims to analyze their collaborative body of work, whereby their subject matter expands from local to global to addresses the perils of forced migration.
With more that 60 million displaced people worldwide, the issue of migration is increasingly shaping today's world. This crisis has impacted elections, reconfigured identities and divided nations. Yet, it has also created art. "In the context of this dehumanizing rhetoric
Red Room 2: Migratory Birds reveals the migrant's nightmare. In this body of work, the Ghasemi brothers beautifully portray the invisibility, displacement, and pain of these "disposable populations". Using a visual vocabulary, they represent the struggle of assimilating to one's unfamiliar surroundings as a nightmare. The human protagonists are shown as giants; naked, obese, lost in thought and transplanted into a surreal and unfamiliar landscape. The bird sculptures in the show look trapped, stuck in place by various forms of thick and heavy glue. The monumentality of the figures are then satirical, drawing on the magnanimity of today's migration crisis, while mitigating the loneliness of those that are displaced. The Ghasemi brothers also allude to both traditional Iranian painting with references such as "Gol va Bolbol"(bird and flower) as well as contemporary art to communicate with their audience in an original and personal manner. Much like how movie director Kubrick refers to the postmodern theory of the death of the author in "The Shinning", the Ghasemi brothers also reference a red room, and subsequently invite their audience to participate in the creative process. In these works, the artists act as "author", and challenge us to enter in dialogue with the spectacle that they create.
Roya Khadjavi