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Saturday, February 28, 2026 |
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| Black gold, deep time: Alexandra Karakashian's oil-based inquiry at Sabrina Amrani |
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Alexandra Karakashian, Close to hand II, 2025. Used engine oil on sized paper, 100 × 70 cm.
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MADRID.- These exhibitions present a body of work by Alexandra Karakashian, centred on a long-term engagement with a single material: oil. More precisely, engine oil black oil, greasy oil, and slippery oil. Across installation, textile, and works on paper, her practice unfolds as an inquiry in which oil becomes her primary medium and feeds geopolitical questions. Oil is a material inhabited by deep time, it is an ecosystem originating from prehistoric marine life, transformed by human intervention into a substance that fuels contemporary life while bearing the trace of environmental violence. It is a matter that exceeds us, in its scale, and imperial symbolism.
By working with one of the most powerful resources on earth, Karakashians practice exposes the contradictions embedded in oils omnipresence. While it structures everyday consumption, it also underlies systems of extraction, environmental injustice, and power. This material engagement resonates with broader histories of displacement and loss that inform Karakashians ongoing research. Drawing from her family history with an Armenian heritage, her work reflects on what it means to be un-homed, historically and geographically. The artists relationship to this material is tense, shaped by its malleability in spite of allowing so little control. Oil holds a life on its own, moving across surfaces and operating on temporalities that resist immediate visibility.
Her process is grounded in an attentive resonance to the materials behaviour. She is loyal to its texture, she allows oil to dictate rhythm and pace. The slow movement of oil demands that she pauses and these moments of stillness require observation. The oil becomes alive beyond her and she acts with it. Each encounter is a corps à corps with the material it is absorbent, resistant, and often blended with pigments and oil paint. What emerges is often a dense black surface shaped by movement, where her gestures recall dance she becomes one with the material across paper, textile and installation.
Moving between monumentality and silence, softness and movements, Karakashians practice holds space for violence and sensitivity. By committing to a single, contested material, that is alive, unstable and largely unknown in its physicality, she invites the audience back into sensory engagement and critical awareness about its symbolism. It is a form of resistance that counteracts and complicates our relationships to power. It offers a way to sit with it through attention, through not knowing and through the act of holding onto something as we gaze into it.
Extract of text by Cindy Sissokho
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