NEW YORK, NY.- Almine Rech New York, Upper East Side is presenting 'MIRACLE,' Joël Andrianomearisoa's third solo exhibition with the gallery, on view from March 6 to April 19, 2025. The exhibition is exemplary of Joël Andrianomearisoa's practice which has evolved to emotions and materiality: drawing, raphia, textile, and other techniques.
Poetic Materiality
Joël Andrianomearisoas artistic practice is defined by physical and conceptual movement. Shuttling between his studios in Antananarivo and Paris, he generates a dynamic third space of creativity that transcends geographical and cultural boundaries. These two locationsone embedded in the pulse of a global art capital, the other deeply rooted in the rhythms of Madagascarare not merely physical sites of production but resonant landscapes of memory, material, and making. His practice is an act of translation, not between languages, but between textures, histories, and emotional registers.
Joël Andrianomearisoa MIRACLE ACT V, 2025. Textile, raffia, 130.2 x 90.2 x 16.5 cm. 51 1/4 x 35 1/2 x 6 1/2 in.
Andrianomearisoas studios in Antananarivo, Madagascar, and Paris, France, have a maison-meets-atelier feel that functions as interconnected laboratories of creativity, where ideas move fluidly across mediumstextiles, paper, sculpture, and installation. Each informs the other through an intricate dialogue of materiality and methodology, yielding works that are at once profoundly personal and expansively universal. "The movement between these spaces is not just about geography," Andrianomearisoa explains. Its about creating a language that exists between cultures, between moments of making."
This interstitial language begins with writinga generative act that serves as a conceptual framework for his objects. For Andrianomearisoa, words are not mere inscriptions but the raw material from which his visual language unfolds. They serve as blueprints, structuring a practice that resists easy categorization and transcends the limitations of single geographical or cultural narratives.
Joël Andrianomearisoa HANDS, FIGURES AND MIRACLE ACT I, 2025. Textile, raffia, 195.6 x 135.3 x 5.1 cm. 77 x 53 1/4 x 2 in
Born 1977 in Antananarivo, Andrianomearisoa represents a generation of postcolonial artists who navigate complex cultural landscapes with extraordinary sensitivity. Trained as an architect at the École Spéciale d'Architecture in Paris, his work seamlessly integrates spatial awareness with material intelligence, collapsing distinctions between visual art, architecture, textile design, and conceptual exploration.
'MIRACLE' at Almine Rech: A Meditation on the Hand and the Unseen
His upcoming exhibition, 'MIRACLE,' at Almine Rech in New Yorkhis first solo commercial gallery show in the United Statesmarks a significant moment in his trajectory. Structured in three distinct movements, "Hands," "Figures and fiestures," and "Miracle," the exhibition is not merely a presentation of objects but an invitation into an immersive choreography of touch, form, and presence.
"The word is quite interesting, actuallythis word 'miracle,'" he muses. "I think Ive had it in mind for two or three years. I have architecture; I have Madagascar; I have many things around." This meditation unfolds as a layered exploration of material, memory, and the unseen forces that shape our existence.
Joël Andrianomearisoa MIRACLE ACT XIV, 2024. Textile, raffia, 50.2 x 40.3 x 2.9 cm. 19 3/4 x 15 7/8 x 1 1/8 in
At the heart of 'MIRACLE' is raphiaa material that transcends its function as fiber to become a carrier of history, labor, and cultural resonance. 'The material speaks,' Andrianomearisoa explains. 'It carries the whispers of Madagascar, the touch of generations, the complexity of cultural memory.' Raphia is not merely woven but charged with the weight of hands that have worked it for centuries, connecting past to present, tradition to contemporary expression.
The Power of the Hand: Creation, Resistance, and Ritual
The hand emerges as the exhibitions central motifan instrument of creation, destruction, healing, and resistance. "Its really the power of the handthe way it engages with material," Andrianomearisoa reflects. "Its highly technical, but also deeply symbolic. It carries history, ritual, and memory." Some works evoke the delicate precision of braiding and weaving, while others channel the raw urgency of political gesturesthe raised fist, the grasp of loss, the tender touch of care.
By foregrounding the hand, Andrianomearisoa collapses the boundaries between craft and contemporary art, labor and gesture, intimacy and monumentality. His practice expands the notion of materiality, revealing its poetic dimensionswhere the sensation of touch becomes a language and material a vessel for memory. The hand inscribes history onto the present through each gesture, transforming tradition into an ever-evolving dialogue.
Installation view.
More than a tool, the hand in Andrianomearisoas work is a site of negotiation between past and future, individual and collective, rooted practice and radical reinvention. Through the hand, ancestral techniques are preserved and reimagined, and the ephemeral gains weight and presence. Whether shaping raphia into intricate forms or tracing the echoes of bodies in motion, his works remind us that every gestureno matter how smallcarries the gravity of cultural inheritance and the potential for transformation.
Beyond Boundaries: A Universal Poetics
"Of course, Im from Madagascarmy blood, my name, everything," he acknowledges. "But being Malagasy is only the opening chapter. There are many chapterson life, work, death, joy, pain." This refusal to be bound by singular definitions is at the core of his practice. While deeply informed by his Malagasy heritage, his work is not an ethnographic study but a contemporary poeticsone that speaks across cultures and histories, dissolving rigid boundaries between the local and the global, the personal and the collective.
Visitors are invited into what Andrianomearisoa calls "the playground of all possibilities"an ephemeral space where light, wind, and human presence animate the work. "Sometimes I try to create an alphabetone without words, without language," he says. Meaning is not imposed but felt, shifting with the movement of bodies, the passage of time, and the play of light.
Having represented Madagascar at the 2019 Venice Biennale and exhibited at institutions such as the Centre Pompidou and Palais de Tokyo, Andrianomearisoa has established himself as a defining voice in contemporary art. 'MIRACLE' is not simply an exhibitionit is a sensory and conceptual experience that challenges viewers to reconsider the boundaries between material, memory, and artistic expression.
In a world where touch has become politicized and material histories are often erased or overlooked, 'MIRACLE' asks us to see, feel, and recognize the quiet revolutions embedded in the everyday. Through his deft manipulation of form and deep engagement with craft, Andrianomearisoa transforms the ordinary into the extraordinary, reminding us that there is always the potential for something miraculous within the act of making.
Larry Ossei-Mensah, Curator and Co-founder of ARTNOIR