ART

01

art

01:09

MAFF Loves Armenia: Larisa Safaryan

02

art

02:18

Missing: You so much a letter to all the dreamers

Missing: You so much a letter to all the dreamers Creative director/producer: Your friend, daao Director/DOP/edit: Naran Evdeev 1AC: Edward Kurginyan Music/sound design: Shhau & Your friend, daao Color: Tigran Aghajanyan

03

art

01:52

MAFF Loves Armenia: David Sahakyan - Woozy Tunes

04

art

00:10

MAFF Loves Armenia: Yeranuhi Nersisyan

05

art

00:17

MAFF Loves Armenia: ԿԱՊ Kap Community

If you want to know whats going on: https://t.me/s/kapcommunity

06

art

00:36

MAFF Loves Armenia: Khoren Matevosyan

07

art

00:41

MAFF Loves Armenia: Victor Zatikyan

This is what happens when the Cinebox 250D, a Nikon f4, and photographer, Victor Zatikyan come together

08

art

02:00

Egypt's ancient zar ritual

At Cairo's Makan Cultural Centre, the Mazaher ensemble performs a lighter version of "zar", an music and dance ritual with centuries-old roots, that aims to ward off or exorcise jinn, or evil spirits.

09

art

00:16

Mahmoud Khattab somewhereincairo

10

art

00:33

Mohamed El-Masry films Hurghada, Egypt

Cinematographer based in Cairo, Egypt Mohamed El-Masry films Hurghada.

11

art

02:00

From Cairo Streets To The World

Coddiwomple a word that means “to travel in a purposeful manner towards a vague destination” We think that through the journey of every creator in Cairo there’s a lot of rage, wars and doubts within the process of expressing yourself to the world, but they still do it anyways.

12

art

03:16

Ghada Amer, My body, My choice

Ghada Amer’s garden installation takes up the well-known battle cry promoted by the women’s and gender equality movement since the 1970s “my body my choice” and spells each of its letters in a red resin box filled with plants. While over the past fifty years, this tagline has been co-opted by a number of groups around the world with entirely contradictory agendas, Ghada Amer’s garden, like her art in general, reminds us of the early intent of the mantra, that of promoting women’s rights and equality. In an interview with Sahar Amer in April 2022, Ghada Amer states: “In Western societies, there is an assumption, especially among the younger generations, that the battle of the sexes has been won, that women have been liberated, and that their rights are secure. And yet, we are witnessing today a sharp regression of women’s rights and a stark rise of violence against women. However, in countries where one assumes women’s rights to be limited or absent, such as in Egypt, Iran, Afghanistan, or Mexico, women of the younger generation know they have a lot to gain from fighting for those very same rights that are eroding in the West. So they are not letting down their guard and they are continuing to fight fiercely.” The phrases that Ghada Amer sculpts for her garden architecture are similar in that regard to the sentences that she embroiders on her canvases. These sentences are taken from a number of male and female authors from different backgrounds and they are intended to remind us of central teachings and wisdom related to women’s rights. Amer says that “by reading and repeating these sentences, they will hopefully become mantras, incantations that the viewer will end up remembering.” She adds that “women’s rights can never be taken for granted. Women must continuously mobilize, fight, and never let their arduously acquired rights decline, fade away and vanish.”

Load More

art

Inside the Studio: Kasper Sonne on his new paintings in 'Last Goodbye'

Youtube

We are pleased to present Last Goodbye, the debut solo exhibition of our newly represented artist Kasper Sonne. From his Brooklyn studio of ten years to his childhood home that he lived in again upon returning to Denmark, the paintings in Last Goodbye depict physical places that carry a meaningful significance to Kasper Sonne. Whether these places are attached to emotions that are positive, melancholic, or somewhere in between, the works immortalize evocative memories wherein he also seeks closure. The cathartic process of painting them presented a salutary last goodbye, and, similarly to the nature of the eponymous song by Jeff Buckley which inspired the exhibition’s title, there remains a nostalgic affinity for these places. The source materials used in the paintings are comprised of personal images from his archive from the last 15 years. Like a collage, he pieces together various fragments to create a single image, and never paints directly from a photograph. He writes, “I’m not interested in depicting reality - I’m interested in visualizing a mood…to me there’s obviously a clear connection between all my works. I don’t wish to reveal too much about my personal motivations, as I want the viewer to be able to make their own interpretations - but perhaps my interests can be identified as a fascination with the destructive elements in man and nature, combined with an overall feeling of displacement and melancholy.” Kasper Sonne (b. 1974 Copenhagen, Denmark) graduated from The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, Schools of Architecture, Design and Conservation in 2000 and has for the past fifteen years been living and working between Copenhagen and New York. With roots in design and graffiti, Kasper Sonne spent years making large, bold figurative paintings, before turning to abstraction to fully explore the qualities of medium, without being beholden to narrative. Throughout his practice, Sonne has continuously investigated the way we interpret our surroundings and make sense of the world we live in by purposefully constructing and deconstructing reality. His works are included in several public collections such as Fuban Art Foundations in Taiwan, David Roberts Art Foundation in London and HEART Museum in Herning, Denmark.

This website uses cookies.
By using this website and it's content, you accept these cookies.
Learn More