HOUSTON, TX.- Vian Sora (b. 1976, Baghdad, based in Louisville, Kentucky) creates dazzling, layered abstractions that channel the turbulence of life, ancient Mesopotamian history, and Iraq's diverse natural landscapes including its deserts, rivers, and archeological sites. Outerworlds her first solo museum exhibition in the United States surveys a decade of her most vibrant work, charting her transformation into one of today's most distinctive voices in painting. The exhibition will open with a reception on April 15 from 68 p.m., and remain on view through August 2, 2026. This survey show has traveled to Asia Society Texas from stops at Santa Barbara Museum of Art in California and the Speed Museum of Art in Kentucky.
Sora's practice emerges directly from lived experience. Having grown up amid the Iran-Iraq War, the Gulf War, and the U.S. invasion of Iraq, she witnessed the devastation of her homeland firsthand. She later left Baghdad, sought refugee status for her family in the United Arab Emirates, and then eventually resettled in Louisville, Kentucky. In 2016, Sora realized she needed to use abstraction to process the tumultuous events of her life. Her painting has transformed into a high-powered, bodily, and dynamic practice of controlled chaos. Her canvases reflect an array of radiant paints that are splashed, poured, and sprayed onto the canvas. Pigments run, accumulate, and clash, resulting in upwards of fifty layers of oil and acrylic paint in a single work.
For Sora, the multilayered effects of her paintings give a concrete form to the chaos of life. The paintings reference both the realm of biology with its cycles of growth, decay, and evolution, as well as the tumultuous history of her homeland, and inevitable recurrence of wars, violence, and eventual regeneration. "I hope this exhibition will illuminate the struggle, courage, and dissonance continuously faced by war survivors that exist between worlds," says Sora. "As displaced people and immigrants constantly strive to make sense of our new orbits, these paintings depict a journey through distant time and space in order to reach safety."
At the same time, Sora's paintings offer optimistic, even exuberant, visions of what abstract painting can be. After moving to the United States and confronting numerous biographical upheavals, her work expanded into a kaleidoscopic range of color and technique. The electric spills, pours, and splashes register the newly opened possibilities that followed in the wake of her immigration. "I came to America with an inherited visual language, and through movement, practice, and dialogue here," shares Sora, "the shifting landscape and a fragile sense of safety turned my visual language into pressure, freedom, and the work I make now."
For its expanded display at Asia Society Texas, Outerworlds will feature Sora's paintings in dialogue with works by sculptor John Chamberlain (19272011) and painter Etel Adnan (19252021). Respectively lent by the Menil Collection and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, these works will create a cross-cultural and multi-generational dialogue with Sora's luminous paintings, intertwining themes of war, abstraction, and trauma. The exhibition is accompanied by a full-color catalogue published by Inventory Press.