Leila Heller Gallery Presents: Pouran Jinchi, Black & Blue

Hanged Series
Hanged Series, 2015 (All Photos By Gail)

Leila Heller Gallery is currently hosting an exhibition of recent works by Persian artist Pouran Jinchi. Drawing on diverse cultural sources including literature, history, Folk art and religion, Jinchi has developed a visual vocabulary that inhabits the space between abstraction and calligraphy.

Stitched
Stitched

Working in a realm that is defined by the overlapping fields of painting, sculpture, drawing, and writing, her art practice entails a conversation between the materials she uses and he subjects she addresses. Inscription in her art becomes a visual apparatus beyond meaning. Jinchi produces textual landscapes that are recognizable yet illegible.

Left: Sores 3: Right Bruised 1
Left: Sores 3, Right: Bruised 1

Jinchi’s new body of work is an artistic response to pervasive social and political violence. Revisiting Sadegh Hedayat’s modernist classic, The Blind Owl, Jinchi explores the universal tropes of pain and violence threaded throughout the novel. One particular passage Is explored repeatedly across various mediums

“I write only for my shadow, which is cast on the wall in front of the light. I Must introduce myself to it.”

Slashed
Slashed

Jinchi dismantles the text, drawing fragments of the letters onto patches of paper That are then stitched together with copper thread into quilts. She paints the sentence onto raw canvases where the characters evoke a battlefield strewn with the wounded.

Hanged Series Detail
Hanged Series Detail

Each line of the first page of the book is rendered into sculptural form; the artist painstakingly cuts each letter from a sheet of copper, forming it into abstract shapes by hand, and stringing it onto a chain fabricated from copper safety pins.

Hacked
Hacked

Hedayat’s text is compulsively altered, distorted and reassembled into artworks that are intricate, ornate and vibrant. Jinchi draws her palate from the colors of a bruise as it heals — blue, fuchsia, red, purple, and black. By making utterly beautiful pieces in rich hues to represent pain and violence, she disrupts visual perception. Only by looking beyond the surface, can one see the complex interrelations between divergent elements across the exhibit.

Wound
Wound

Pouran Jinchi’s Black & Blue will be on exhibit through October 24th, 2015 at Leila Heller Gallery, Located at 568 West 25th Street (Corner of 11th Avenue) in the Chelsea Gallery District.

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