فير زملر غاليري Sfeir-Semler Gallery

Haig Aivazian
Fugere


Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Hamburg

HAMBURG - Sfeir-Semler Gallery is happy to announce the opening on Friday, the 1st of November, 6-9 pm, of the debut solo show by Lebanese artist Haig Aivazian.

Haig Aivazian (b. 1980, Beirut, Lebanon) is an artist, curator and writer. Using performance, video, drawing, installation and sculpture, his work weaves together personal and geo-political, micro and macro narratives in its search for ideological loopholes and short circuits.

Exhibition view, Fugere, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2013

Aivazian holds an MFA from Northwestern University and is a Skowhegan alumni (2011).  His work has been exhibited in Europe, the Americas and the Middle East including the Sharjah Biennial 9 (2009) and Videobrasil (2013).

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Haig Aivazian, Parting Kisses (United Center), 2013
bronze, marble, copper, 3.5 ⁠× ⁠14 ⁠× ⁠14 ⁠⁠cm, Ed. 5 + 2 AP
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Haig Aivazian, Parting Kisses (muntadhar Al-Zaidi's first then second shoe), 2013
bronze, marble, copper, 30 ⁠× ⁠42 ⁠× ⁠20 ⁠⁠cm, Ed. 5 + 2 AP

Parting Kisses, presents a set of hand crafted bronze sculptures of petrified historical gestures, monumentalized and reduced. Icons of the conquered and conquering come together, blurring the notions of the heroic and finally the arena itself.

2013 . 1992 . 2003 . 2005 . 2006 . 2012

A statue is toppled. An event staged and a flag covers a face. Fixed firmly on the pedestal, the feet still stand as a petrified image. 12 heroes rise to the Gold. An event on the world stage and a flag covers the logo on their tracksuits. Don’t ask what bullets we have in our guns they say.

History as sport, complete with freeze-frames, instant replays and reverse angles: time feels like forever. The decades separating the release of Air Jordan sneakers, the frantic instant where two shoes become projectiles aimed at an occupying president:  flying kisses from a people to a hound.

The company that illuminates stadiums also floods the prisons and the migrant detention centres. The drone of an electric charge, lights on fields, lights that surveil. Look at the lights. A child over a fence: a spark then a flame. A strange portal to another dimension is opened where all of the children are electrified. All of them, past and future.

Words are sometimes harsher than acts. You hear them once, you hear them twice, and when you hear them a third time…

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Haig Aivazian, Parting Kisses (Firdous Square), 2013
bronze, marble, copper, 3.5 ⁠× ⁠14 ⁠× ⁠14 ⁠⁠cm, Ed. 5 + 2 AP
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Haig Aivazian, Parting Kisses (Air Jordan #VII & #XIX), 2013
bronze, marble, copper, 3.5 ⁠× ⁠14 ⁠× ⁠14 ⁠⁠cm, Ed. 5 + 2 AP
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Haig Aivazian, Partinng Kisses (Air Jordan VII & XIX) (detail), 2013

For this exhibition, Aivazian presents new sculptures, drawings and videos from his ongoing series Fugere, where the artist layers various histories of violence: from a highly televised rebuttal in response to racist insults on the pitch, to the occupation of inner-city neighbourhoods by police; and from the ascension onto an Olympic podium in the first post Soviet Games, to the weight of a dictator’s body as the trap door is released under his feet.

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Haig Aivazian, Parting Kisses (Fence), 2013
video, color, mute, film still, 1:15 min, loop, Ed. 5 + 2 AP
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Haig Aivazian, Parting Kisses (Fence), 2013
video, color, mute, film still, 1:15 min, loop, Ed. 5 + 2 AP
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Haig Aivazian, Parting Kisses (Fence), 2013
video, color, mute, film still, 1:15 min, loop, Ed. 5 + 2 AP
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Haig Aivazian, Parting Kisses (Fence), 2013
video, color, mute, film still, 1:15 min, loop, Ed. 5 + 2 AP

History is not just entangled in sports, but also treated like a match, with freeze frames, replays and reverse angles. Here, the notion of time is malleable: the decades separating the release of two models of coveted basketball sneakers can be condensed into a frantic instant where two shoes are hurriedly thrown at an occupying president.

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Haig Aivazian, Rags (Flags of New Participants of the 1992 Olympic Games), 2013
archival inkjet print, 120 ⁠× ⁠80 ⁠⁠cm, Ed. 5 + 2 AP
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Haig Aivazian, Parting Kisses (The Moment Could Not Last), 2013
marble, 120 ⁠× ⁠80 ⁠⁠cm, Ed. 5 + 2 AP

These captured moments mark points of analysis that activate the spectator and hero alike, bringing the previously anonymous to the fore and making intimate the distant landscapes of spectacle often utilized in both the political and sports arenas. These arenas serve as a theater – a space where desires, violence, escapism, and the human condition are endlessly played out without the pretense of imaginary consequences. This landscape is where the works take their evocative form, revealing fleeting lapses in the standard perception of events and forming new investigative relationships.

Oversize charcoal drawings of stadium lights intensify the eerie charge of the unknown and the latent in night, sport and surveillance.

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Haig Aivazian, At every sunset, I think of you. Not because of some sense of beauty, but simply because I become actuely aware of how much time has past since I last saw you, 2013, installation view, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2013
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Haig Aivazian, At every sunset, I think of you...(1), 2013
charcoal and pastel on paper, 200 ⁠× ⁠130 ⁠⁠cm
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Haig Aivazian, At every sunset, I think of you...(3), 2013
charcoal and pastel on paper, 200 ⁠× ⁠130 ⁠⁠cm

In an Iteration of the ongoing video project How Great You Are O Son of the Desert!  the infamous headbutt of Zinedine Zidane of the Italian defender Marco Materazzi in the World Cup final in 2006 becomes a time portal into systemic social transgression, class warfare, and violence across histories both intimate and regional.

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Haig Aivazian, How Great You Are O Son of the Desert! Part I, 2013, installation view, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2013
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Haig Aivazian, How Great You Are O Son of the Desert! Part I, 2013
video, color, sound, film still, 26 min, Ed. 5 + 2 AP
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Haig Aivazian, How Great You Are O Son of the Desert! Part I, 2013
video, color, sound, film still, 23 min, Ed. 5 + 2 AP

The exhibition runs from the 2nd of November until the 5th of January 2014. For more information, please contact galerie@sfeir-semler.com

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Haig Aivazian, How Great You Are O Son of the Desert! Part I, 2013
video, color, sound, film still, 23 min, Ed. 5 + 2 AP