White Grounds 14

2019 - Installation (Installation)

258 x 210 cm

Mandy El-Sayegh


Mandy El Sayegh grew up in a medicalized environment, surrounded by anatomy, biology and psychology publications; these books inspire the figures that appear throughout her work. The work White Grounds 12 offers a bird’s eye view of a skull open from the front, belonging to a patient diagnosed with dementia who is suffering from self-inflicted wounds. White Grounds 10 depicts the body of an injured worker in China. What takes center stage in this work is not the political subtext, but the representation of flesh, turning blue, like death. At the opening of the exhibition “White Grounds” at Betonsalon in Paris, where this work was first exhibited, visitors were invited to walk across the latex canvasses that carpeted the ground. The odor of paint, the feeling of moving across the sticky surface added something organic and visceral to the experience. El-Sayegh cites the artist Kader Attia and his artistic ambition to “repair the world” as integral to her practice. She also notes her father’s native Gaza as an unresolved trauma transmitted through generations. For the artist, painting becomes a material for exchange through which sensitivity becomes a register of intelligibility, inciting the viewer to reconstruct the fragments of the exhibition and the world themself.


Beginning with rigorous research and resulting in a wide range of media, from layered paintings, to installation, diagram, sculpture, sound and video, El-Sayegh’s work is about systems of bodily, linguistic and political order among others, and their disintegration. This gives way to an exploration of the poetry that emerges from a reworking of such codes, and the new meanings that are created. Her work is both personal and political, often merging found references from the media, as well as intimate details, such as her father’s calligraphy work within the same space. In an interview with The Guardian, the artist describes her work as “a forensic thing. I’m laying it all out. I want everything in there, the political, the sexual… there is a terror in excess.” These fragmented units are then reconsidered as a coherent whole.


Colors:



Related works sharing similar palette  
» see more

What We Lose When Curating Follows the Money
© » HYPERALLERGIC

What We Lose When Curating Follows the Money Skip to content Gerhard Richter, "Tante Marianne" (1965), oil on canvas (all photos Olivia McEwan/ Hyperallergic ) LONDON — Something feels off from the introductory lines of the exhibition booklet for Tate Modern’s Capturing the Moment ...

Restaurant Tramo in Madrid embraces a more responsible future, bite by bite
© » WALLPAPER*

Restaurant Tramo embraces a responsible future, bite by bite | Wallpaper (Image credit: Photography by Juan Baraja...

Friction / Where Is Lavatory?
© » KADIST

Taiyo Kimura

The wall installation Friction/Where is Lavatory (2005) plays off anxieties about time but utilizes sound to create a disconcerting experience of viewership: comprised of dozens of wall clocks sutured together, the work presents a monstrous vision of time at its most monumental...

Conceito abstrato
© » KADIST

Rodrigo Torres

2016

In his Conceito abstrato series, however, Rodrigo Torres turns to the abstract, using the shapes, numbers, lines, and subtle colors of international currencies to create non-representational forms with lavish geometries and baroque curving forms....

Related works found in the same semantic group  
» see more

Untitled 2
© » KADIST

Pratchaya Phinthong

Phinthong made four photographs depicting fragments of meteorites of which the faces have been polished to reflect the sky...

Untitled 1
© » KADIST

Pratchaya Phinthong

2009

Phinthong made four photographs depicting fragments of meteorites of which the faces have been polished to reflect the sky...

African American Art Collector Couple Became Patrons of a Solo Show by DEO Projects Just Opened in Chios, Greece - via DEO Projects
© » LARRY'S LIST

Commission Series 2022 — DEO projects ︎ PROJECTS ABOUT PARTNERS PUBLIC PROGRAMME PRESS ROOM PLATFORM CONTACT Commission Series x 2022 Commission Series x Dominique White (Under) studies in Non-Description 2022 Traditional geographies did, and arguably still do, require black displacement, black placelessness, black labour, and a black population that submissively stays “in place”...

Women making history: Snow Whitening Revisited
© » ARTS EQUATOR

Women making history: Snow Whitening Revisited | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Anders Jiras February 10, 2021 By Brian Toh (814 words, 4-minute read) Snow Whitening Revisited presents an allegory on being a female artist in Cambodia, playing with imagery that evokes visceral feelings of clinging, and a sense of embodied helplessness that pays tribute to both cultural heritage and a deep historical trauma...