JEVNAKER.- For the opening of the 2025 season, Kistefos unveiled the 56th permanent work in the museums sculpture park: Resting Arms by the Iranian-born, German artist Nairy Baghramian (b. 1971). The sculpture, a highly abstracted portrait of primary joints in the body, was made in white Carrara marble and steel. By highlighting the vulnerability of the human form, Baghramian challenged the traditional connotations of durability and monumentality often associated with these sculptural materials.
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The sculptures two blocks of marble are heavily veined and pitted on their surface, suggesting fragility, sensitivity and, in the artists own words, possible collapse. They resemble arms and elbows, which the artist has given respite from centuries of upright poses and postures. Baghramian moves the joints from their typical orientation, allowing them to rest and to recover from the stress and impact of daily use. Sited on Kistefos terrain, the sculpture invites visitors to do the same find a moment of contemplation and pause as the panorama of the landscape unfolds beyond.
This four-metre-tall work marked Baghramians first in Northern Europe and became an important addition to the growing sculpture park at Kistefos. It was installed by the museums south entrance and unveiled during the season opening on 4 May 2025.
Nairy Baghramian was born in 1971 in Isfahn, Iran. She has lived and worked in Berlin since 1984. Baghramian is internationally renowned for her work with large-scale sculpture and installations, which she often makes in reference to architecture and the human body. Her work addresses temporal, spatial and social relationships to language, history, and the present. Recent solo exhibitions include the façade commission Scratching the Back at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2023); Aspen Art Museum, Colorado (2023); Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas, Texas (2022); Galleria d'Arte Moderna (GAM), Milan, Italy (2021); MUDAM Luxembourg, Luxembourg (2019); and Palacio de Cristal, Madrid, Spain (2018). Her many awards include the Nivola Award for Sculpture (2023); and the Nasher Prize Laureate (2022).
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