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Caligraffitti: 1984-2013

September 5 – October 5, 2013

Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013
Caligraffitti: 1984-2013

Press Release

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“A calligraphic impulse has been behind some of the greatest works of Modern Art.” -- Jeffrey Deitch

 

"This show makes connections between pivotal artistic movements across cultures that have informed each other's creative processes. Just as the graffiti movement emerged from the economic and social turmoil of the 1970s in New York, it is now no surprise that some of the most groundbreaking street art is burgeoning all across the Middle East. Calligraphy as an art form is part of a Middle Eastern collective memory and as it continues to evolve, we are now witnessing a kinetic dialogue between these movements that will no doubt leave their mark on history." -- Leila Heller

 

 

Leila Heller is pleased to announce Calligraffiti 1984/2013, on view from September 5 – October 5, 2013. Originally curated in 1984 by Jeffrey Deitch (Director, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles) at Leila Heller’s former uptown gallery, Calligraffiti explored a myriad of possible connections shared between the seemingly disparate styles of select mid-century abstract, U.S. graffiti, and calligraphic artists from the Middle East and its diaspora.

 

By presenting an expanded and updated roster of artists including site-specific installations by emerging and established artists 30 years later, Calligraffiti 1984/2013 re-examines the global impact of street art and calligraphy as converging modes of personal expression, popular culture, and political dissent mutually grounded in arrogating the systems of language. Featuring more than 50 works by artists ranging from Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner; Hans Hartung and Cy Twombly; Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat; and Hossein Zenderoudi and Pouran Jinchi, the exhibition will also include site-specific installations by emerging and established artists. LA2 will be creating an installation in Leila Heller Gallery’s front room visible from 25th street, while Tunisian/French artist eL Seed will be painting a mural in the 11th Avenue windows. An illustrated catalogue with an introductory text by Jeffrey Deitch will accompany the exhibition.

 

Brief Background

For centuries, calligraphers from the Middle East have visually transcribed verses from the Ayah and concepts surrounding Divine Infinity on public buildings and mosques by presenting the written word as art. In modern times, movements ranging from Dada, Surrealism, Tachism, and Abstract Expressionism have all incorporated elements of writing and language into their abstractions. Most recently, contemporary artists such as Hossein Zenderoudi, Parviz Tanavoli, Hadieh Shafie, and Pouran Jinchi, whose work will be on view, have transformed traditional Arabic script in order to create new abstract shapes and gestural marks, augmented by color, poetry, or rhyme which bridge distinctions between nationalities, generations, and beliefs.

 

As a means of political and social commentary and through name bombing, graffiti and street art exploded in the 1960s throughout North American cities. During the early 1970s in New York, the arrival of aerosol spray paint solidified graffiti’s impact on the urban landscape with words and tags accompanied by elaborate cartooninspired images seen throughout the city and particularly on subway trains. By the 1980s, elimination efforts by local city councils and transit authorities proved futile as graffiti writers began actively working in London, Berlin, Paris, and beyond. During the early 1980s, the development of a definitive graffiti style by New York artists such as Keith Haring led to its rapid acceptance within the art world via exhibitions at galleries and museums. Closely tied to hip hop’s popularity, graffiti continued its global expansion throughout the 1990s, though more as a commercial phenomenon. From December 2010 onwards, graffiti has swept across North Africa and the Middle East as a highly visible means of political protest, attracting a new wave of interest and reclaiming its importance as an unconventional, revolutionary art form. 

 

Featured Artists:

Carla Accardi

Etel Adnan

Yasmina Alaoui

Ayad Alkadhi

Massoud Arabshahi

L’ATLAS

Assurbanipal Babilla

Ben

Zigi Ben-Haim

Jean-Michael Basquiat

Julien Breton & David Gallard

Jean Degottex

Jean Dubuffet

Mohammed Ehsai

eL Seed

Keith Haring

Keith Haring and LA2

Hans Hartung

Nir Hod

Shirazeh Houshiary

Isidore Isou

Bill Jensen

Pouran Jinchi

Franz Kline

Rachid Koraichi

Lee Krasner

LA2 (Angel Ortiz)

Farideh Lashai

Maurice Lemaitre

Eugene Lemay

Reza Mafi

Hassan Massoudy

Farhad Moshiri

Shirin Neshat

Alfonso Ossorio

Faramarz Pilaram

Leila Pazooki

Jackson Pollock

Mehdi Qotbi

ROSTARR

Hadieh Shafie

Niels “Shoe” Meulman

Ramellzee

Retna

Roland Sabatier

Alain Satie

Behjat Sadr

Nasser Al-Salem

Esrafil Shirchi

Pierre Soulages

Pat Steir

Parviz Tanavoli

Tee Bee

Mark Tobey

Cy Twombly

Rob Wynne

Hossein Zenderoudi