On this time of a number of world wars, genocides, and pressure displacements, artwork has a very essential position to play in serving to us be current with unspeakable violence. What’s much less seen is the long-lasting trauma that individuals and households carry by way of the generations. Peeling the Onion: Visible Reminders at Elza Kayal Gallery goals to just do that, peeling again the layers of reminiscence by that includes 4 artists who interact with intergenerational trauma by way of portray, images, drawings, and video.
Once I entered the present, my eyes had been drawn instantly to work by Anoushka Bhalla, wealthy in crimson and burgundy and alive with texture. “Portraits from the misplaced homeland” depicts two figures in an embrace. One appears sorrowfully on the viewer, whereas the opposite has a plaintive expression. Subsequent to this are extra summary representations, akin to “Hope of the forgotten,” portraying eyeballs gazing upward, and “Night time burning,” a singular hand that appears as if it’s holding a wound or a spot of sunshine. Bhalla, a New York-based artist born in India, works with archives of the British Empire to discover its painful legacy of colonialism in South Asia.
Equally arresting are Marsha Nouritza Odabashian’s work made with onionskin dye, akin to “Homecoming,” by which birdlike figures seem like returning to buildings amid an explosion. In “Counting Sheep,” a blue-clad determine stares outward right into a cloud of sheep and human figures. Born in Boston, Odabashian is the grandchild of Armenian immigrants and genocide survivors. Her works reply to a visit she made to the land of her ancestors, and seize, in my thoughts, the advanced feelings that usually come up when visiting websites of familia trauma.
In an artist’s assertion, Odabashian explains her alternative of fabric, the onions after which the present is called:
Portray for me is magical and my earliest experiences with portray concerned my mom utilizing onionskins to dye Easter Eggs. I used to be all the time fascinated that white or brown eggs thrown right into a pot and boiled with yellow onionskins would come out vivid maroon. I used to be haunted by the historical past of the custom and the ritual …. Once I start the dying course of, I bury the canvas or paper within the onionskins or soak it within the watery dye and let it dry. A number of the onionskin falls off when it dries and a few of it sticks.
New York artist Kevork Mourad, a descendent of Armenian refugees in Syria, presents a collection of Flight sketches, pictures made on aircraft rides. Wealthy with line and texture, many seize human-like figures in a mixture of dancing and writhing, primarily based on his childhood recollections from Armenia and Syria. Finest recognized for dwell drawing in live performance with musicians, he additionally created the enigmatic “Hidden Portal 1” and “Hidden Portal 2,” two acrylic on cotton cloth works that go three layers deep, like a three-dimensional maze set to the tune of a cacophonous chamber orchestra. They replicate on warfare and the resultant refugee crises.
Two photographs by Massachusetts artist Adrienne Der Marderosian, a descendent of survivors of the Armenian Genocide, attain out, nearly actually, from their black and white frames. We can not see their faces, however we will see the palms of their arms, which in some cultures are believed to hold traces of reminiscence and historical past. If the opposite three artists’ works are about remembering throughout generations, these two photographs are about forgetting.
“On my maternal aspect,” writes Der Marderosian in a gallery assertion, “they had been unable to inform their tales and in order that a part of our household historical past is misplaced. Their expertise was too painful to elucidate and so their unstated truths, stay with them.”
“Finally,” she provides,” I discovered the solutions to what I’m looking for lie inside me.”
Peeling the Onion: Visible Reminders continues at Elza Kayal Gallery (368 Broadway, Suite 409, Tribeca, Manhattan) by way of June 15. The exhibition was organized by the gallery.