The artists on view supposedly, "take part in dexterous manipulations of artistic modes and materials as they engage with diverse personal, social, and intellectual contexts...[walking] the line between assimilation and dissent...uniquely capable of critiquing their native country as well as their adopted ones."
While a number of the pieces impressed me, what stood out the most were a couple rooms devoted to Pakistan/Brooklyn's Seher Shah. Her Black Cube and Jihad Pop series both overlay Western architectural perspectives of Islamic buildings (real or imagined) with dynamic imagery to create realms at once utopian and nostalgic."
Interior Courtyard 2, 2006, from the series Jihad Pop Progression 5
You can read an interview with Shah here, where she talks about her background, architectural and other inspirations, and perceptions of 1.5ers.
Image Play 1
Visiting her web site, her other works hold the same appeal for me, like the one above that incorporates color as well as photography to create a striking collage composition.
Jihad Pop Progression 3, detail
From the artist's statement:
"Jihad Pop exists as a means to explore how issues of identity and associations define themselves. Where do I belong when past associations of both family and lifestyle breakdown and begin to form new negotiations based on personal values. The personal symbols that I have acquired through my own values play out simultaneously with symbols of Islamic religion and death as a symbol of struggle. The meeting of these two words ‘jihad’ and ‘pop’ is the marriage of this exploration of identity and the simultaneous broadcast of imagery of violence, conflict and migration."
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