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Y.Z. Kami: White Domes

DUBAI

March 9 – April 25, 2016

Y.Z. Kami, Rumi, The Book of Shams e Tabrizi (In Memory of Mahin Tajadod), 2005

Y.Z. Kami

Rumi, The Book of Shams e Tabrizi (In Memory of Mahin Tajadod), 2005

Soap stone, salt and lithography ink

Dimensions variable

Y.Z. Kami, White Dome I, 2011-2013

Y.Z. Kami

White Dome I, 2011-2013

Acrylic on linen

124 x 137 in / 315 x 348 cm

Y.Z Kami, White Dome IV, 2014

Y.Z Kami

White Dome IV, 2014

Acrylic on linen

72 x 79 in / 182.9 x 200.7 cm

Y.Z. Kami, White Dome I, 2014

Y.Z. Kami

White Dome I, 2014

Block ink and acrylic on linen

90 x 99 in / 228.6 x 251.5 cm

Y.Z. Kami, White Dome, 2014-2015

Y.Z. Kami

White Dome, 2014-2015

Block ink and acrylic on linen

90 x 99 in / 228.6 x 251.5 cm

Y.Z. Kami, White Dome IV, 2013

Y.Z. Kami

White Dome IV, 2013

Acrylic on linen

54 x 59 in / 137.2 x 149.9 cm

Y.Z. Kami, White Dome II, 2014

Y.Z. Kami

White Dome II, 2014

Block ink and acrylic on linen

90 x 99 in / 228.6 x 251.5 cm

Y.Z. Kami, White Dome III, 2014

Y.Z. Kami

White Dome III, 2014

Block ink and acylic on linen

90 x 99 in / 228.6 x 251.5 cm

Y.Z. Kami, White Dome, 2013-2014

Y.Z. Kami

White Dome, 2013-2014

Block ink and acrylic on linen

108 x 117 in / 274.3 x 297.2 cm

Y.Z. Kami, White Dome IV, 2012-2013

Y.Z. Kami

White Dome IV, 2012-2013

Dye and acrylic on linen

54 x 63 in / 137.2 x 160 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Black Dome, 2015

Y.Z. Kami

Black Dome, 2015

Black gesso on linen

70 x 77 in / 177.8 x 195.6 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Gold Dome I, 2015

Y.Z. Kami

Gold Dome I, 2015

Gold leaf on linen

41 x 45 in / 104.1 x 114.3 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Endless Prayers I, 2015

Y.Z. Kami

Endless Prayers I, 2015

Mixed media on paper

30 x 22 1/2 in / 76.2 x 57.2 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Endless Prayers II, 2015

Y.Z. Kami

Endless Prayers II, 2015

Mixed media on paper

30 x 22 1/2 in / 76.2 x 57.2 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Endless Prayers III, 2015

Y.Z. Kami

Endless Prayers III, 2015

Mixed media on paper

30 x 22 1/2 in / 76.2 x 57.2 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Endless Prayers IV, 2015

Y.Z. Kami

Endless Prayers IV, 2015

Mixed media on paper

30 x 22 1/2 in / 76.2 x 57.2 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Endless Prayers IX, 2015

Y.Z. Kami

Endless Prayers IX, 2015

Mixed Media on Paper

62.5 x 49 in / 158.8 x 124.5 cm

Endless Prayers V, 2015, Mixed Media On Paper

Endless Prayers V, 2015

Mixed Media On Paper

30 x 22.5 in / 76.2 x 57.2 cm

Endless Prayers VI, 2015, Mixed Media On Paper

Endless Prayers VI, 2015

Mixed Media On Paper

30 x 22.5 in / 76.2 x 57.2 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Endless Prayers VII, 2015

Y.Z. Kami

Endless Prayers VII, 2015

Mixed Media on Paper

30 x 22.5 in / 76.2 x 57.2 cm

Endless Prayers VIII, 2015, Mixed Media On Paper

Endless Prayers VIII, 2015

Mixed Media On Paper

30 x 22.5 in / 76.2 x 57.2 cm

Endless Prayers X, 2015, Mixed Media On Paper

Endless Prayers X, 2015

Mixed Media On Paper

52 x 48 in / 132.1 x 121.9 cm

Endless Prayers XI, 2015, Mixed Media on Paper

Endless Prayers XI, 2015

Mixed Media on Paper

52 x 48 in / 132.1 x 121.9 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Endless Prayers, 2015

Y.Z. Kami

Endless Prayers, 2015

Mixed media on paper

30 x 22 1/2 in / 76.2 x 57.2 cm

Y.Z Kami, Untitled, 2011-2012

Y.Z Kami

Untitled, 2011-2012

Oil on linen

118 x 70 in / 299.7 x 177.8 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Paul, 2014

Y.Z. Kami

Paul, 2014

Oil on linen

90 x 54 in / 228.6 x 137.2 cm

Y.Z Kami, Untitled, 2011-2012

Y.Z Kami

Untitled, 2011-2012

Oil on linen

99 x 72 in / 251.5 x 182.9 cm

Y.Z. Kami, Untitled (Hands) III, 2013

Y.Z. Kami

Untitled (Hands) III, 2013

Oil on linen

87 x 47 in / 221 x 119.4 cm

Press Release

Leila Heller Gallery Dubai is pleased to present a solo exhibition by Iranian-American artist Y.Z. Kami, White Domes, on view from March 9th to April 25th.  Best known for his large–scale, seemingly floating, otherworldly portraits, Kami’s oeuvre has been described by Homi Bhabha as a "mediated transmission across materials, genres, and time exposures", or a quotidian mystical.  In this sprawling installation over the gallery’s three exhibition spaces, the artist extends his gaze further, towards an evermore transcendental materiality with paintings, works on paper, and a sculptural intervention.

Anonymity is not a condition of, but indeed a trait of Kami’s practice of portraiture, which allows the artist to render tableaux of archetypal but concrete humanity: images of individuals un-idealized but none the less sublime.  Each of the portraits of monumental scale presented for this exhibition project an ethereal air, not so much anachronistic as atemporal—defying as well as uniting time.  Indeed, these portraits owe an inspiration, according to the artist, to the celebrated ancient Egyptian Fayoum paintings, whose encaustic funerary renderings to this day still evoke a fleshy, saturated semblance of an individual deceased over 2500 years ago.  Likewise, for Untitled (2011-12) the image of a young woman with dark locks is obscured by the soft gauze of Kami’s exalting use of the apotheosizing Sfumato painting style, typical of all of his figurative oeuvre.  She, as a figure, is foreclosed, turned inward.  Reminscent, even a vestige, of Byzantine portrayals of the Madonna, in this image the mother—her head slightly, her eyes not closed, but averted—stares in loving embrace towards a now absent child. This is a portrait which allows no access to the viewer, refusing to return the gaze.  The result is a painting verging on paradox: withdrawal and exposure at once.  “The inifinite that is accessible,” states the artist, “lies within.” 

Y.Z. Kami’s oeuvre represents an inquiry on the infinite.  The artist’s methodical Dome series, whose minimalist abstraction deeply relates the possibility of the infinite or spiritual transcendence and from which the exhibition takes its name, are the met in this installation by a singular iteration of his floor based sculptural work, previously presented at the Istanbul Biennale, based on a love poem contained in Rumi’s The Book of Shams-e Tabrizi. At the center of the latter orbital and ever embedded sculptural presentation of uniformly sized inscribed bricks lies a singular and evocative salt element.  Flanking the sculpture’s central position, on one side is White Dome, composed in ink and acrylic on raw linen, and facing its other over the vast expanse of incantation, Black Dome, composed in gesso, also on raw linen.  Each work employs a mandala-like circular structure originally derived from the artist’s Endless Prayers series of works on paper, themselves evoking Arabic and Persian prayers and mystical verse. 

“Consider the act of transformation as a journey toward light”, the artist offers.  He continues “The whole process requires purification, and the journey is not possible without passing through a phase that is called nigredo…The alchemist in his laboratory would encounter dark states of being… also called blacker than black. You cannot go toward the light without first passing through darkness, through the ‘Dark Night of the Soul.’ The Black Domes are that moment.”