Saad Qureshi: Other Crescents Other Moons

Gazelli Art House, 39 Dover Street, London
Saad Qureshi: Other Crescents Other Moons image
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Event has ended
This event ended on Saturday 22nd of December 2012
Admission
Free
Location

Gazelli Art House, 39 Dover Street, London

Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Green Park 0.11 miles

Other crescents other moons is an exploration of memories – the desire to keep one’s interpretation of a specific place alive, transcending time and change. Qureshi depicts ‘mindscapes’ based on recollections of the people he interviews. Often desolate and abstract they capture the detailed essence of one’s emotional, spiritual and/or mental associations to a given place. Subconsciously, the artist weaves his own vision onto the memory without interfering with its content thereby questioning its ownership and the origins. The viewer is invited to explore the nature of perception and reality, completing personal tales and insights of one’s memory according to their own vision.
In this inaugural solo exhibition, Saad Qureshi brings the concept of belonging and being part of a certain form of identity to the forefront. Drawing on the inspiration from the biblical story ‘The Tower of Babel’, the body of work epitomizes universal individualism, striking on psychological, cultural, social, religious and historical levels. The centrepiece of the exhibition for example, other crescents other moons, depicts a continuum of islands of memories – linked to each other, sharing the same ground of an abstract structure, reminiscent of a never-­‐ending spiral, removed from its larger self. The memories appear more contained in Qureshi’s smaller sculptural works whereby reclaimed furniture such as drawers and cupboards provide the setting for the landscapes to comfortably rest on.
The work presents and represents Qureshi and his world. Through his observations, past the intricate demonstration of the various aforementioned layers, we come across a land, a desolate land, which often appears in the artist’s multi-­‐medium oeuvre. Melancholic to some, radiating of hope and positivity to others, the open land can be perceived as a playground for our ideas and thoughts on topics Qureshi raises. It gives us time to reflect, to silently agree or actively disagree with the artist’s remarks, with our own or our neighbour’s interpretations. The discourse that ensues, which may continue endlessly and lose its purpose and direction, is grounded by the very nature of these lands. As such, Qureshi pulls the viewer into a playful interaction where the mind loses control and the imagination takes over, which in turn succumbs to the conscience and then reigns free again.

Tags: Exhibition

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