An hour before the Devil fell
Oct 17 - Nov 16, 2019
Press release for exhibition An hour before the Devil fell
An hour before the Devil fell
October 17 – November 16, 2019
Opening Reception: October 17, 6-8 PM
P·P·O·W
In addition to her painting and
drawing, Khatibi intuitively utilizes multiple mediums such as sculpture,
ceramics, and embroidery to create and inform her work. Describing the dialogue
intrinsically created between her sculptural and painterly objects Khatibi says
“I tend to sacralise objects, and by doing so, I create an interaction with all
things I collect and make. It’s like creating a language of my own, and I have
always considered this inherent ability as part of my practice.”
Employing her own visual vocabulary
as well as a broad range of influences including Northern Renaissance painting,
Pre-Columbian art, and Flemish and Bayeux tapestries, Khatibi turns her gaze
for the first time towards American traditions, mythologies and underlying,
harsh realities. Taking its title from a line in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, which was written in the
wake of McCarthyism, An hour before the
Devil fell calls into question the puritanical power structures that define
the proverbial person. Sanam Khatibi’s work both exalts and cautions against
the fine line between triumph and failure, peace and brutality, and ultimately,
civilization and destruction.
Sanam
Khatibi (b. 1979)
was born in Tehran, Iran and lives and works in Brussels, Belgium. She is
self-taught and has been featured in exhibitions around the world, including
group exhibitions in Paris, Florence, Los Angeles, Mexico City, New York,
Marseille, Vienna, and Warsaw, among others. Khatibi’s work is currently on
view in The Seventh Continent, the 16th
edition of the Istanbul Biennial curated by Nicolas Bourriaud. Recent
institutional shows include De ta salive
qui mord, BPS22 (Belgium), Mademoiselle
at the Regional Centre of Contemporary Art of Occitan (France), Quel Amour!? at the Museum of
Contemporary Art of Marseille (France), and The
Biennial of Painting at the Museum of Deinze (Belgium).