Saturday 16 May 2015

An Iranian-American Artist Uses Tools to Question Social Structures

“Man is a tool-making animal,” wrote Benjamin Franklin in 1778. Philosophers and scientists from Marx to Darwin have elaborated on the definition, and this weekend at NADA New York, the Iranian-American artist Sarah Rahbar explores the theme in a contemporary context.
Trespassers, by Sara Rahbar, 2013. From the series 206 Bones Collected vintage wooden tools, rifles, cross and cruxifix, and bullets 45 × 41 1/2 × 9 in 114.3 × 104.1 × 22.9 cm. Courtesy Carbon 12, Dubai, and Artsy.
by Bridget GleesonArtsy Editorial

Rahbar’s sculptures, composed of vintage tools and objects including pieces of wood, scraps of bronze, wheels, batons, shoe forms, and rifle stocks, are at once familiar and mildly disorienting. One piece in particular, Trespassers (2013), bears a striking resemblance to a standard wall-mounted rack taken from a garage or a tool shed—save for a crucifix planted in the middle. Other sculptures, like The Comfort of Feeling Safe (2015), employ similar materials, but the pieces are arranged in a way that’s illogical, even bewildering. And the title provokes further questions; after all, the concept of “feeling safe” is not typically associated with a range of objects, like axes, saws, and rifles, that could be used as weapons. Unless, of course, those same objects are used to protect you, or to tame and beautify the wild world around you.

Indeed, Rahbar’s works conjure up childhood memories—and intriguing questions about the relationship between child and parent, the vulnerable and the protected, the natural world and the ways we’ve invented to control it. Memory, and basic human needs, are themes that the artist has arrived at partly due to personal circumstance. Rahbar was born in Tehran; amid the turmoil following the Iranian revolution, her family fled the country. Years later, she pieced together Iranian and American flags for her evocative “Flag” textile series. “Years and years of memories, experiences and attachments and what is the work but a direct reflection of my life? What I’m focusing on, and what is boiling, twisting and turning inside of me,” she has said of these collages.

Rahbar’s current exhibition, featured at NADA New York by the Dubai gallery Carbon 12, is a satisfying thematic extension of both the “Flag” series and her later “War” series of sculptures and installations built with military paraphernalia. “In the end we are all just visiting and we all come to this world alone and we leave alone,” she writes in her artist’s statement. “But while we are here we try so desperately to belong to something, to someone and to somewhere.” Life is a battle, Rahbar suggests—but only some of the battlefields are easily recognizable.


Unraveling, by Sara Rahbar, 2013 From the series 206 Bones  Assemblage of Collected vintage objects 33 9/10 × 23 3/5 × 6 7/10 in 86 × 60 × 17 cm. Courtesy  Carbon 12, Dubai, and Artsy.

Unraveling, by Sara Rahbar, 2013 From the series 206 Bones  Assemblage of Collected vintage objects 33 9/10 × 23 3/5 × 6 7/10 in 86 × 60 × 17 cm. Courtesy  Carbon 12, Dubai, and Artsy.

Glory, by Sara Rahbar, 2015 From the series 206 Bones Assemblage of collected vintage wooden structures, casted white bronze, saw, and 36 rifle stocks 27 1/2 × 24 × 12 in 69.9 × 61 × 30.5 cm. Courtesy  Carbon 12, Dubai, and Artsy.

Glory, by Sara Rahbar, 2015 From the series 206 Bones Assemblage of collected vintage wooden structures, casted white bronze, saw, and 36 rifle stocks 27 1/2 × 24 × 12 in 69.9 × 61 × 30.5 cm. Courtesy  Carbon 12, Dubai, and Artsy.

The Comfort of Feeling Safe, by Sara Rahbar, 2015 From the series 206 Bones Assemblage of collected vintage wooden tools, riffle, and Limb 66 × 31 × 9 in 167.6 × 78.7 × 22.9 cm. Courtesy  Carbon 12, Dubai, and Artsy.

The Comfort of Feeling Safe, by Sara Rahbar, 2015 From the series 206 Bones Assemblage of collected vintage wooden tools, riffle, and Limb 66 × 31 × 9 in 167.6 × 78.7 × 22.9 cm. Courtesy  Carbon 12, Dubai, and Artsy.
Trespassers, by Sara Rahbar, 2013. From the series 206 Bones Collected vintage wooden tools, rifles, cross and cruxifix, and bullets 45 × 41 1/2 × 9 in 114.3 × 104.1 × 22.9 cm. Courtesy Carbon 12, Dubai, and Artsy.
In the end we are all just visiting and we all come to this world alone and we leave alone. But while we are here we try so desperately to belong to something, to someone and to somewhere. Metamorphosing and transforming for the means of surviving it all, our foundations lay, but our houses have burned to the ground. Building castles in the sky, for a species that cannot fly, brick by limb we tear it down. 
- See more at: Sara Rahbar


Visit Carbon 12, Dubai at NADA New York 2015, May 14–17, 2015.

Carbon 12, Dubai on Artsy.


Via Artsy Editorial

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