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FROM MIAMI TO DUBAI, FRIENDS UNITE TO EXPLORE IDEAS OF INFINITY (AND BEYOND)

▶ Artists live on different continents but collaborat­e for joint show in Alserkal Avenue,

- writes Maan Jalal

Two artists are using their friendship and shared interests in the notion of infinity for a captivatin­g exhibition in Dubai. Entitled Duality, The Third Line gallery features pieces by Nima Nabavi and Jason Seife, who worked together to create a cohesive body of work despite living halfway around the world from one another.

“We knew what the goal of this exhibition was, but we didn’t know exactly what that was going to look like,” Seife tells The National. “This is very much something that we organicall­y came to do. We’d been talking about our work and taking inspiratio­n from each other for a while.”

Seife, who lives in Miami, was born in the US to parents of Cuban and Syrian heritage. He used the intricate patterns of traditiona­l Persian carpets and arabesque ornamentat­ion in unconventi­onal materials, such as reinforced concrete, and digital works.

His depictions of vegetal ornamentat­ion and intricate details of birds and vases are displayed across four large canvases and some smaller works in the exhibition. The geometric shapes of these four canvases – a triangle, square, diamond and rectangle – are some of the obvious ways his work speaks to Nabavi’s pieces.

Nabavi, an Iranian-American, was raised in the UAE and lives in Dubai. His practice is deeply influenced by a mathematic­al approach where he creates complex and layered geometric drawings using pens, pencils and plenty of colour.

In theory, these works are at opposite ends of the spectrum. But in the space of the gallery, the pictorial foundation and the concepts that connect them are overpoweri­ngly clear. Nabavi’s work is reflected in the geometric counterpar­ts of Seife’s work.

While their works can stand on their own, they come together in one piece called Noon. The hexagon-shaped canvas is made up of different panels that each artist painted. “We’re both really quite meticulous and hardworkin­g and I think maybe even rigid in the way that we work,” Nabavi says. “Despite all that, we were both really easygoing with certain things and that comes from respecting each other’s work.”

The two artists first met in 2018 when they participat­ed at the Sharjah Islamic Arts Festival. Both are self-taught and found themselves at similar stages in their careers as creatives trying to navigate through the art market.

They kept in touch and developed a friendship reinforced by their practices, sharing processes and images of their work. Like studio mates, they developed a strong critical bond when it came to each other’s work, despite living in different parts of the world.

“This show wouldn’t have worked without trust,” says Seife. “There were moments where I had to trust that his approach to the painting was the right one and he needed to trust that mine was too.

“We were doing things that were out of our element because up until this point, we were solo workers.

“But now having done it, it was all very seamless.”

While their works are influenced by the visual language of Islamic art, the artists are keen to stress that is where the similariti­es end.

Both Sefie and Nabavi’s works explore a type of representa­tion of the infinite. It’s the level of extreme and excessive detail that may at first feel chaotic but quickly conveys a sense of order. “There’s a feeling of familiarit­y in both of our work, that these things are of this life, of this universe, that they are a representa­tion of the infinite, of the universe,” Nabavi says.

“For some people that takes a religious direction, for others maybe it’s more spiritual or aesthetic and some people don’t think about what it is. But I believe that both of us are scratching at the surface of that representa­tion.”

Seife agrees, adding that they are both using their own alphabet to have the same conversati­on, which many viewers can chime into by picking at the imagery and shapes that reference their own realities.

While both artists would like audiences to also spend time with the works and see the connection­s and relationsh­ips between the pieces, Seife adds that their exhibition is also about inspiratio­n.

“Being an artist, and an artist who’s a fan of other artists, when I go see an exhibition I want to be inspired,” he says. “So ideally I would want people who come and see our show to feel inspired when they leave.”

This show wouldn’t have worked without trust ... I had to trust that his approach to the painting was the right one

JASON SEIFE

Artist

Duality is running at The Third Line, Alserkal Avenue, until January 5

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 ?? Photos Antonie Robertson / The National ?? Jason Seife, left, and Nima Nabavi at their exhibition Duality
Photos Antonie Robertson / The National Jason Seife, left, and Nima Nabavi at their exhibition Duality

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