DUBAI.- Leila Heller Gallery is presenting At 9:15 am Sunday 28 May 1967, Reza Arameshs second solo exhibition with the gallery. In titling this exhibition, Aramesh specifies the time and date of a particular event leaving out the location. His choice of deliberate geographical ambiguity invites the viewer to be part of the intimacy of the scene, searching to acknowledge the commonality of human suffering whilst immortalizing an event or Action, as Aramesh titles them, of unnamed rebellious subjects.
The exhibition features two bodies of sculptural work and continues upon Reza Arameshs interdisciplinary practice of representing the abjection of human bodies sustained during armed conflict and torture. Aramesh blends classical aesthetics with anonymous figures from the contemporary moment, thereby bringing to the fore the victims who have been rendered invisible, yet at the same time questioning the traditional representation of suffering throughout the Western art historical canon. While this reading of history has trained us to translate the suffering of iconic religious figures into martyrdom and therefore a noble calling, the overwhelming volume of mass media images of the everyday victims of war and violence has rendered us immune to these anonymous victims.
A young man stands, barefoot and without a shirt, his top wrapped around his waist. His left hand keeps the clothing in place at the same time, slightly pulls down the tracksuit bottom that creases around his legs. He is otherwise motionless. It is hard to avoid the association with a traditional iconography, that of the Ecce Homo, Behold the Man, the portrayal of Christ as he is presented to the crowds prior to His crucifixion. But unlike Christ in such scenes, this figure is deprived of his ability to act, even of his individuality, due to the paper bag that covers his head. Behold someone that once had the human rights of a man. Images of oppression and violence have been ubiquitous in Reza Arameshs work. This new sculpture, carved in marble, a material commonly reserved for celebratory purposes continues the artists multi-faceted explorations of the human ability to inflict suffering.
In his second installation, Metamorphosis - a study in liberation, Aramesh creates a series of diminutive bronze sculptures of hybrid creatures with human bodies and animal heads. Like the marble sculpture, these figures are borrowed from war reportage but the human dimension in these works are not covered up, instead the human face has been replaced with mythical animals borrowed from Egyptian, Mayan and Persian art. Where the facelessness of the male figure in the previous work spoke to his loss of power, these man-beast hybrid figures draw on the otherworldly or supernatural powers of mythological creatures. The subjected and violated bodies are imbued with symbolic strength, transforming the subjects from victims to studies of liberation.
The deliberate use of bronze, a utilitarian material, combined with the stylized portraiture highlights the contrast between the strength and power of the heads and the weak and defenseless poses of the violated bodies found in war reportage. In this way, imbued with these borrowed mythical powers, the figures become both more human and heroic.