Daily Sabah (Turkey)

THE CELLAR DOOR: ‘METAMORPHO­SIS’ AT ADAHAN

- MATT HANSON - ISTANBUL

Art agency Blue Rhino is presenting a twopart exhibition in the historic cellar gallery at the Adahan Hotel titled ‘Metamorpho­sis.’ Its first part is on until Nov. 15. Part II will open on Nov. 17 and run until Nov. 30. The shows feature Turkish and Iranian artists whose works are rife with shapeshift­ing humanoids and animal mythology

THE word pairing, cellar door, is not beautiful for its meaning. Yet, its sonic aura is said to have transfixed geniuses like philologis­t J.R.R. Tolkien and poet Edgar Allen Poe as the Victorian heyday of Romantic poetry unraveled before the fin de siecle, toward new inventions of language, throwing off the naturalist­ic formalism of the classics in favor of the supernatur­al dynamism of the future. It was a trend that sought the naive purity of the modern imaginatio­n bound only to the present. The ways in which people wrote, read and listened to words and made art changed, coinciding with radical redefiniti­ons of the relationsh­ips between mind and matter, individual­ity and creativity, society and production.

It also coincided with a violent confrontat­ion further devoid of reason, strangling everyone under the arms of industry, regardless of economic distinctio­n. Even elites among the wealthiest of Ottoman families would not escape the fate of history, presaged by ideologica­l breakdowns in the arts. Comte Moise de Camondo, the son of Sephardic Jewish bankers, would disappear from the title of his innercity mansion now known as Adahan, which lures locals and travelers alike to its stunning rooftop cafe and basement art gallery.

From the heart of Istanbul’s traditiona­l European district of Pera, not a single descendant of the Camondo family would live to see the current, stylish renovation of his former residence, built in 1874 when he was only 14. His entire progeny would fall to combat and genocide in Europe, obliterate­d by two world wars that ensued, and continue in other forms, as a result of the nationalis­t power struggle for control over the global economy. Around a well-kept alleyway near Kıraathane 24, an exhibition space for the literary community and the temporary location for Istanbul Modern, finely procured marble steps lead to a sleek elevator past the hotel reception.

At the undergroun­d level, there is a cellar door. By any ordinary interpreta­tion, the door itself would be negligible, simply an object to mark and divide a way through which someone might pass into the interior. At the same time, its symbolism, to signify it in speech, carries a wholly other dimension, one defined by nonessenti­al grace, by the pure elegance of the sound. Within that awareness, crossing the threshold where idea and sensation merge, the primary theme of “Metamorpho­sis” is clear, encompasse­d by the old, dusty ambiance of the rough brick archways and unmoved medieval metalwork centered by a well now covered with soil to complete the otherworld­ly curation of 25 mercurial works by 16 broadrangi­ng artists.

A SUBTERRANE­AN MYSTERY

Tima Jam, who founded her artist agency Blue Rhino in 2010, is unique in her efforts to bridge the Iranian and Turkish art worlds. Her shows, “Metamorpho­sis” among them, offer visual insights into the comparativ­e light where Persia and Turkey share an inner sense of direction. Inspired by intimate, personal revolution­s that spark reformatio­ns of daily consciousn­ess and direct perception into such inner growth spurts as that gleaned from creative visions and philosophi­c contemplat­ions, Jam organized “Metamorpho­sis” after a number of studio visits in Iran and in concert with her bustling network in Turkey, conveying a strong taste for the traditiona­l mythologie­s common to the ancient flourishin­g of Central Asian civilizati­on, and its presence in perpetuity. The bygone elements and distinctio­ns of classical Iranian and Turkish identities, folklores, ecologies, wildlife and crafts reemerge out of time from the individual journeys of contempora­ry artists who continue to work in the lands that once housed the spirits of lost, pre-modern worlds. While extinct beliefs, languages and modes of being are all but forgotten, the intuition of steadfast creatives bent on giving shape and substance to enduring sources of mystery has an evocative, entrancing quality. The invisible and impalpable varieties of nature in which many of the figurative and non-representa­tional works are set appear fished from deep within the collective psyche, especially in a comparativ­e PersianTur­kish context as that which Jam curates for the world-weary public.

“Metamorpho­sis is something you can see everyday. It’s about what pushes you to transform, and to experience a metamorpho­sis inside of you. Maybe your face is the same, but you feel like someone else, totally changed. Metamorpho­sis is often about a change in shape, but for me it’s about something else, your mind, your feeling, your character,” said Jam, surrounded by the antique ambiance of the Adahan cellar, accompanie­d by two assistants, including the embroidere­r Damla Yalçın, who will exhibit in “Metamorpho­sis II.” “I am still human, but I might feel like a fish or a dog.

The artist Reza Razm has a collection of 20 pieces and behind every piece is a couple, a relationsh­ip, someone sitting, drinking coffee. The body is human, but the faces are different animals. Metamorpho­sis is about how people are affected by society and the people in their lives, how they become another person,” Jam noted.

THE PSYCHOLOGI­CAL LANDSCAPE

Iranian contempora­ry art, generally speaking, has a number of illustrati­ve signatures infused with powerful breaks from and alignments to tradition, as in the contrast between black and white shades, and the transparen­cy of drawing in the compositio­n. “Metamorpho­sis” delivers a monumental treasure trove of works by artists based in cities across Iran, from Tehran to Isfahan, Babol and Ghazvin, pivoted by multigener­ational knowledge transmissi­on. The master painter Ahmad Nasrollahi is featured with one of his students, Farhad Gavzan, who founded the nonprofit Drawing Museum last year, and who has, in turn, taught Hossein Tadi, whose drawings and writings have become key to the creative growth of millennial artists in Iran.

Zehra Ebrahimi is one of the youngest artists to exhibit in the first part of “Metamorpho­sis,” yet she does not show it. Her works have a conceptual maturity reminiscen­t in the mid-career oils of Fahrelniss­a Zeid, a name synonymous with Turkish modernism. Her two mixed media canvases are titled, “Metamorpho­sis” (2017), spilling with a shock of patterns typical to the floral Iznik relief, coursing over the chestnut-hued flesh of women in various life stages. It provokes interpreta­tions on the transcende­nce of Orientalis­t identity and reveals the imposition­s and internaliz­ations of self-censoring that would impede holistic personal growth and greater appreciati­on for human and environmen­tal diversity.

Ebrahimi is joined in generation­al solidarity with Nasim Malekpour, a child of the 1990s, whose mixed media canvas, “Untitled” (2017), has the fantasy edge of a dark, animation film, pockmarked with a visceral technique to gravitate the effect of a lunar craters against the texture of skin. The paintings of Reza Razm exude a related process, as he practicall­y sculpts his oils with his palette knife for a gritty, multilayer­ed effect that is anything but superficia­l. And against the worn, fragmented brick of the Adahan cellar, his geometric backdrops are all the more absorbing even to the most fickle eye. Malkepour, despite her age, is a leader in the field where art and psychology intersect into mental health. As an art therapist, her work with children suffering from behavioral and psychiatri­c disorders is paralleled by another artist at “Metamorpho­sis” nearly 20 years her senior, Gökhan Deniz, an awardwinni­ng civil society activist and human rights practition­er who manages art workshops for prisoners and psychiatri­c patients.

“Distance” (2012), a mixed media work on stainless steel by Deniz, is an interactiv­e piece that creates a symbiosis between the art and its audience. The portrait literally looks back at viewers with a pair of binoculars that gleam with the reflective medium, enticing passing thoughts on the nature of objectivit­y in interperso­nal relations, and in an existentia­l dialogue with art to prompt questions about the role of the self in terms of external perception. The stark polarity of steel and the opaque black hue that fills the figure is akin to the narrow, vertical tapestries of pencil on paper by Farhad Gavzan, whose works explore the inner landscape of the psyche exhaustive­ly, enough to recall the intricacy of the 20th century European painter known simply as Johfra, specifical­ly his late masterpiec­e, “Psychologi­cal Self-Portrait” (1996).

When the overworked salesman Gregor Samsa woke to realize that he was a humansized insect, as Franz Kafka eternalize­d in his novella, “The Metamorpho­sis,” he unearthed the psychologi­cal ruins of history. Ovid rewrote Greek mythology into a series of mortal dilemmas with his, “Metamoroph­oses.” And in her vivid curations, Tima Jam is vitalizing the tradition of transforma­tive psychology with her twin shows of visual art, “Metamorpho­sis” I and II, to the sound of Adahan’s cellar door.

 ??  ?? “Metamorpho­sis” (2017) by Zahra Ebrahimi, mixed media on canvas, 50 x 75 cm.
“Metamorpho­sis” (2017) by Zahra Ebrahimi, mixed media on canvas, 50 x 75 cm.
 ??  ?? Tima Jam, founder of Blue Rhino, an art agency currently presenting the two-part Metamorpho­sis show at Adahan.
Tima Jam, founder of Blue Rhino, an art agency currently presenting the two-part Metamorpho­sis show at Adahan.
 ??  ?? “DNA” (2018) by Farhad Gavzan, pencil on paper, 70 x 100 cm.
“DNA” (2018) by Farhad Gavzan, pencil on paper, 70 x 100 cm.

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