An edited version of the following text accompanies Talar Aghbashian's impressive show 'Transposition'. That's currently on view at Marfa' Projects in the Lebanon, which has an excellent programme. London-based Aghbashian has an Armenian-Lebanese background.
Floating Island, 2018 - 61 x 76cm |
TALAR AGHBASHIAN: Transposition
April-July 2018 at Marfa' Projects, Beirut
Of what does the world consist? According
to the early Wittgenstein in the Tractatus Logico-Philosphicus (1921) ‘the
existence and non-existence of states of affairs is reality’. It’s natural, despite the balance apparent in
that formulation, to focus on what is
the case rather than on what isn’t. Wittgenstein’s balance, however, seems
particularly evident in Talar Aghbashian’s paintings: what’s present crowds in,
yet what’s absent has a palpable force as well. I’m reminded of Arshile Gorky, whose synthesis
of expressive and surreal, abstraction and landscape, personal and symbolic finds definite echoes in
Aghbashian’s work. Perhaps her background - Lebanese of Western Armenian descent – contributes to that affinity as well as to
how those places’ histories inform
paintings which are successively built up and ground down so that, in
her words, ‘some layers remain transparent, others dense, some blur,
expand and shrink, get wiped, ever evolve and coexist’.
Hybrid, 2018 - 95 x 80 cm |
Aghbashian’s most characteristic canvases
mesh aspects of landscape, still life and body to yield psychologically intense
hybrids. Indeed, Hybrid (all paintings oil on canvas, 2018 unless stated) is itself a good
example: a landscape setting, judged by
the chain of distant mountains, is dominated by a structure which might –
depending partly on our reading of scale - be seen as a building; a still life
object; or a sculpture. There’s just
enough detail to suggest all three, but not quite enough to settle on any one
of them. Then again, in the way of the duck-rabbit which flickers between the
interpretations our mind places on it, we can look at Hybrid, encouraged by its portrait proportions, as a head. A rather
empty head, to be sure, but with a good crop of hair, a green tongue and a
notional nose hanging like a grey bag off the underpinning
skeleton-come-scaffold.
Mountain Chain, 2018 - 76 x 61cm |
As its title suggests, the geological landscape is more
prominent in Mountain Chain, but it
remains possible to read all those same elements into what is in other ways a
very different painting. Now the face is craggier, and the architectural aspect
not so obvious unless we know the ‘Park of Memory’ building in the Ukraine (A.
Milteski, 1985), which was one of Aghbashian’s inspirations. The sculptural strand, consistent with her
use of her own clay models as another source, is the most immediate in Untitled, though the way the main form
is propped also suggests a building which has been bombed and then hastily shored
up.
Untitled, 2018 - 102 x 76cm |
Aghbashian’s methods reinforce the
ambiguity and precarity. The limited colour range serves to blend one passage
into another. The flatness of the painted surface in its actual physical
presence is sometimes countered by passages of the perspectival illusion,
sometimes not. Look at Site: the
attempt to unpick ‘what lies in front of what’ draws us in to a claustrophobic
space.
Paper Forest, 2018 - 102 x 76cm |
That seems like a lot to be in the paintings: landscape, still life,
sculpture, bodily presence. An interesting
contrast is with the 1980s ‘dust paintings’ which Carolee Schneemann identified
as her response to the war in Lebanon:
they reduce the painted world to crushed remnants mired in ash. In Aghbashian’s
case, one might rather ask what isn’t
in the paintings, as a means of pinning down their essence. You’d be hard put
to identify the eponymous four woods and one river, though there is a Paper Forest and there are copious
flows: of paint, especially, and the energy of its application. There are no depictions of figures in a
straightforward way, certainly no fully realised people, and few whole things
at all: we’re in a world of breakage.
There are no bright colours: grey, brown, ochre and muted blues are
dominant. There are no expanses of sky: we seem hemmed in despite being out in
the open. None of the still life suggestions look like nourishing fruit.
Indeed, there’s minimal vegetation. It’s all consistent with scarred buildings
in a desert landscape. Even Aghbashian’s tendency to sand down her paint as she
moves between layers has the sound of the desert about it. And what is the
desert if not the landscape of dominant absence.
Perhaps that gives the impression of a
narrowly focused practice, of the kind of artist who ratchets up the intensity
by obsessively revisiting their compulsions. In fact, having set up that
atmospheric backdrop, Aghbashian varies the tone by introducing different
elements.
Untitled, 2015 |
Untitled, 2015 (for which
she was shortlisted for the prestigious John Moores prize in 2016) zooms in on a
hand which seems likely to have broken away from a discredited politician’s
monumental statue.
Afloat, 2018 - 77 x 102cm |
Afloat lightens
the landscape setting, lifts the central sculptural elements into a floating
cloud-come-explosion, and plays with braided hair as the main bodily reference.
Once you look for it, hair becomes a recurring element, as in the pony tail of Floating Island and the curls cascading
from Totem.
Totem, 2018 - 100 x 80cm |
That surreal twist is
most prominent when elongated balloons appear, infusing colour and complicating
the reading of scale. They’re explicit in Lido,
Island and Machine, but can also be
read into Tube City and Ruin Site. Balloons are a double-edged incursion,
however. In summoning the comic tradition of the clown they evoke the cliché of
sadness beneath the knock-about surface, a cliché which has a long art history as
well as a contemporary presence in, say, Bruce Nauman, Cindy Sherman and Ugo
Rondinone. Moreover, these particular
balloon forms suggest intestines, as indicted by the title of Inside Out. And who knows when
everything will go pop?
Inside Out, 2018 - 95 x 95cm |
Aghbashian, then, is a more varied artist
than might at first appear. What is most consistent is her obvious interest in her
medium, the way she develops ambiguity and interest through the unique
opportunity it offers to move us between paint as paint, and paint as what it
represents. Underpinning that, Aghbashian’s images balance trauma with painterliness,
what we can see with what we can’t, with quiet yet penetrating power.
Note: it was too obvious to state to a Lebanese audience, but as Aghbashian was born (in 1981) to Armenian parents, two historic events are bound to be important to her. First, her grandparents fled across the desert to Lebanon to escape the 1915 genocide in which the Ottoman Turks exterminated 1.5m Armenians. Second, she grew up mainly in Beirut during the Lebanese civil war of 1975-90. After studying at the University of Fine Arts in Beirut, Aghbashian moved to London to take an MFA at St Martin’s 2007-08. She stayed, but still goes back to the Lebanon regularly.
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