Thank you for shopping through Home Bunch. The resulting works are meant to reflect the chaos and uncertainty of our contemporary world.JavaScript is currently disabled in this browser. The paintings also change color depending on where the viewer is standing. The pieces are full of bright colors and swirling marks that seem to come to life as visitors move around the space. Instead, they are more abstract and expressive. These works are different from the other paintings in the exhibition because they don’t refer to specific images or events. The third and final part of the exhibition is a series of paintings called Femenine in nine. This creates a shimmering effect and makes the images seem to move as you walk around the gallery. TRANSpaintings are made of translucent material, which allows light to pass through them. The frames and scaffolds are also part of an ongoing conversation between Mehretu and Nairy Baghramian. These are hung on aluminum frames and scaffolds, which are designed to support them and allow them to stand upright. In the same gallery, Julie Mehretu has installed a new group of works called TRANSpaintings. She uses her process to break down these images and create new ones that reflect the impact of violence and the way that people respond to it. Mehretu’s paintings are based on images of geopolitical violence and the struggles of nations to maintain their identity. Julie Mehretu’s series of ‘classic’ paintings are displayed in the South Gallery II at White Cube Bermondsey. To create them, she uses a special process, which involves digitally obscuring the original images and adding layers of paint and other materials to create a sense of chaos and confusion. Julie Mehretu’s Vision of Our Chaotic World Julie Mehretu pairs her paintings with the sculptural works of Nairy Baghramian In tandem, both the painting and sculpture share a vitality born out of erasure and fragmentation, compelling one another to embody their respective imperfection and the ‘liberation of the figure, or of representation itself.’ In contrast to Mehretu’s gestural dynamism, Baghramian’s sculpture’s materiality acts as a mooring in the space. Baghramian’s work expresses a cogent presence in the space, perceived by Mehretu as ‘the impression of a body that has gotten up and walked away, or detritus after a tragic event that caused the body to melt and leave behind a scarred impression on rough aluminium.’ Mehretu’s They departed for their own country another way (2023) is displayed alongside Baghramian’s abstract S’asseyant (2022), a three-part slab of cast aluminum and silicon that rests prostrate on the floor. In White Cube Bermondsey’s 9x9x9 gallery, Julie Mehretu, jointly represented by White Cube (find more here) and Marian Goodmn Gallery, pairs her paintings with a sculpture by Nairy Baghramian in response to an ongoing dialogue between the two artists. Julie Mehretu in conversation with Nairy Baghramian Julie Mehretu, They departed for their own country another way, 2023 | all images courtesy of White Cube designboom had the opportunity to visit the exhibition during Frieze Week 2023 (see designboom’s guide here) and view Julie Mehretu’s expressive works. Focused on enduring conflict, widespread displacement, and the asymmetry of power, Mehretu sources images from current affairs media, particularly the ongoing war in Ukraine and the events of the US Capitol insurrection on January 6, 2021. This admonition resonates poignantly with the artist’s new work, which continues her exploration of our discordant contemporary moment. Marking her fifth collaboration with the gallery, the show debuts three new series of nine paintings each.įor this show, Mehretu, who has been announced as the 20th BMW Art Car artist (see designboom’s coverage here), draws inspiration from the biblical verse Matthew 2:12, in which God warns the Magi to return home a different way after paying homage to the infant Jesus. Julie Mehretu’s solo exhibition titled They departed for their own country another way (a 9x9x9 hauntology), is on view at White Cube Gallery in Bermondsey, London, from September 15 to November 5, 2023. White cube presents julie mehretu solo exhibition
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