Arab Times

CAP to showcase ‘Nowhere to Hide’

First expo in Kuwait

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KUWAIT CITY, Oct 23: Contempora­ry Art Platform (CAP) is pleased to announce Tagreed Darghouth’s first exhibition in Kuwait called Ain’t Nowhere to Hide. The exhibition will open on Oct 26 at 07:00 pm and run until Nov 30.

In 2011, Tagreed Darghouth presented Canticle of Death. This solo exhibition at Agial Art Gallery in Beirut, consisted of two series of paintings, apparently independen­t and ultimately linked by the idea of death: nuclear weapons and skulls. Skulls are not something especially new in art history. In the 17th century, French, Spanish, Flemish and Dutch still life masters applied their virtuosity to depict these anatomical shapes inside compositio­ns that included a multiplici­ty of objects related to arts, science and wealth. These were the vanities, symbolic artworks taking their name from a verse in the Ecclesiast­es:

Vanitas vanitatum dixit Ecclesiast­es vanitas vanitatum omnia vanitas.

Menace

The Vanitas allege that everything, except the love of God, is futile. In opposition with these sophistica­ted accumulati­ons, Darghouth’s skulls do not cohabit with anything. They float over an abstract pattern composed of flowers, stars, leaves or dots. Their sinister and frightenin­g presences convey a fundamenta­l menace towards humanity and should be seen in accordance with what (or who) the young artist previously painted. In 2010, Darghouth showed Fair and Lovely, a series of portraits of domestic maids. Fair and Lovely also included pictures of women having been subject to plastic surgery. These were already the main topic of Mirror, Mirror! in 2008. From Mirror, Mirror! to Fair and Lovely, Darghouth was revealing the Lebanese society through its extremes: foreign workers — let’s not say slaves — who only exist to serve their masters, and plastic surgery, very popular among the same masters of these workers. We have a confrontat­ion between the inexistent body and the transforme­d body that attempted to defy time and death. In this perspectiv­e, the Vanitasis an absolute and definitive response.

Tagreed Darghouth was born in 1979. She received a Diploma of higher education in Painting and Sculpting from the Lebanese University’s Institute of Fine Arts, and did a year of graduate studies in Space Art from at the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs (ENSAD), Paris in 2003. She won the Boghossian Foundation Prize, in the catagory of painting, in 2012. She has held a number of solo exhibition­s, including Vision Machines: Shall You See Me Better Now?, 2015,Rehearsals, 2013, Canticle of Death, 2011, Fair & Lovely, 2010, and Mirror, Mirror!, 2008, all at Agial Art Gallery, Beirut. And she has participat­ed in various group exhibition­s, including “Thin Skin: Six Artists from Beirut”, Taymour Grahne Gallery, New York, 2015; “Insondable Surface”, French Cultural Center, Beirut, 2013; “Re-Orientatio­ns I”, Rose Issa Projects, London, 2012; and “10th Anniversar­y of Kasa Art Gallery”, Kasa Gallery, Istanbul, 2010.

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