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By Nigar Orujova
YAY gallery is participating in Art Dubai 2015 showing works from Azerbaijani artists Rashad Alakbarov and Huseyn Hagverdi.
The gallery is showing art from Azerbaijan at stand J10, on March 18-21.
Yay Gallery is the leading contemporary art gallery in the Land of Fire, representing pioneering Azerbaijani artists across several generations and genres. The gallery was founded by YARAT, a non-profit contemporary art organisation, as part of their commitment to supporting the art infrastructure of Azerbaijan.
Since being founded in Baku in 2012, it has championed the careers of key Azerbaijani artists who have gained international recognition in recent years, including Farid Rasulov, Aida Mahmudova, Faig Ahmed, Orkhan Huseynov and Reza Hazare.
Yay Gallery’s exhibition program also brings work by some of the most innovative artists from across the world to Baku, including solo exhibitions by French experimental performance artists Les Gens d’Uterpan and prominent Iranian artist Mahmoud Bakhshi.
One of the main Azerbaijani artists to come to international attention in recent years, Rashad Alakbarov’s installation-based works play with our sensory experience by arranging objects before a light-source to create surprising shadows.
These ‘shadow works’ draw upon a myriad of languages and cultural symbols to question reality and perception; the latent duality between installation and creation, light and dark, and reality and perception, is central to his art.
Rashad’s new commissions for Art Dubai 2015 are on a more intimate scale, exploring fresh intricacies in the ‘shadow works’. The pieces use text, calligraphy and language to question the relationship between sign and meaning, analyzing the inconsistencies inherent within communication.
Chaotic assemblages give light to clear shadow messages, playing on the relationship between the abstract and the representational and drawing meaning from apparent disorder.
Huseyn Hagverdi is most prominently known for his sculpture works, which populate the Sangachal oil and gas terminal and Catholic Church in Baku. Hagverdi’s laconic style focuses on the imposing expressions of his subjects, working to reveal the innate essence of his material.
His works for Art Dubai 2015 unite the natural and human worlds, presenting raw materials sculpted by human hands. Geometric and linear shapes create fault lines across his totemic sculptures, fracturing the material in a way, which seems simultaneously forced and organic.
Huseyn sees his practice as an on-going dialogue between the artist and the material world; his work seeks to understand and formalize the endless journey of transformation that both nature and the human undertake.
The artist works across painting, photography, and video and has been exhibited in group and solo shows across Europe, India, the UAE and the USA.