Lisson Gallery

Dana Awartani

Dana Awartani engages in critical and contemporary reinterpretations of the forms, techniques, concepts and spatial constructs that shape Middle Eastern culture. Steeped in a multitude of historical references, especially Islamic and Arab art-making traditions, Awartani’s practice straddles continuity and innovation, aesthetic experimentation and social relevance. Spanning painting, sculpture, performance and installation, Awartani’s commitment to historically situated and locally sourced materials lends a rare sensitivity to urgent political concerns of gender, healing, cultural destruction and sustainability. Consistent throughout the artist’s work has been her philosophical elaboration of geometric patterns as an alternative genealogy of abstraction.

In her ongoing series, Come, let me heal your wounds. Let me mend your broken bones (2019-2024) Awartani meditates on themes of sustainability and cultural destruction. The work is composed of naturally dyed silk fabrics, handmade in Kerala in south India, which have been stretched onto frames or draped in a serial manner. The fabrics are saturated with a multitude of natural herbs and spices with specific medicinal functions, but are also spliced and disrupted by tears and holes, which correspond to buildings or locations that have been subjected to sustained violence or outright destruction through war, colonialism or acts of terror. Mending these punctures through a process of darning, Awartani’s work metaphorises possibilities of collective healing while recalling a venerable tradition of repairing and revering objects. Her material choices speak to the ethical and ecological terms of production and embody acts of resistance through the dual emphasis on artisanal production and indigenous knowledges. This approach can be seen in an earlier performative work, I went away and forgot you. A while ago I remembered. I remembered I’d forgotten you. I was dreaming (2017), in which she sweeps away a pattern painstakingly created from hand-dyed sand to resemble a traditional tiled floor, seemingly in the name of progress.

Other recent works, including Where Dwellers Lay (2022) and When the Dust of Conflict Settles (2023), employ the languages of traditional crafts and architecture, revivifying decorative elements and skills considered either lost to time, conflict or technological innovation. Rather than consigning history to ruin or rumour, Awartani restores and conserves it by suggesting future pathways that traverse the same timeless journeys taken by ancestors and artisans past, despite many of those voices having long since been silenced.

Born in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia in 1987 and of Palestinian descent, Dana Awartani lives and works in between New York and Jeddah. She has a BA in Fine Art from Central St Martin's College of Art and Design Fine Art, London and a Master's degree in Traditional Arts from The Prince's School of Traditional Arts, London. Dana Awartani has held solo exhibitions at the Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide, Australia (2024); the Maraya Art Centre, Sharjah, UAE (2018); Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, Detroit, USA (2017) and Athr Gallery, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (2015). Her works have also been featured in numerous group exhibitions, including Venice Biennale, Italy (2024); Sharjah Biennale 15, Sharjah, UAE (2023); Louvre Abu Dhabi, UAE (2022); Lyon Biennale, Lyon, France (2022); Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC, USA (2022); Desert X Al-Ula, Al-Ula, Saudi Arabia (2022); C3A Centro de Creación Contemporánea de Andalucía, Córdoba, Spain (2022); Diriyah Biennale, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (2021); BNKR, Munich, Germany (2021); British Museum, London, UK (2021); NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore, Singapore (2020); Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid, Spain (2020); Pera Museum, Istanbul, Turkey (2020); Contemporary Art Biennial Sesc_Videobrasil, Sao Paulo, Brazil (2019); Rabat Biennale, Rabat, Morocco (2019);  Cambridge Arts Gallery, Cambridge, USA (2018); Monash University Museum of Art, Melbourne, Australia (2018); Selma Feriani Gallery, Tunisia (2017); Jakarta Biennale, Jakarta, Indonesia (2017); United Nations, New York, USA (2017); Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, Salt Lake City, USA (2017); The Mosaic Rooms, London, UK (2017); Institute of Arab and Islamic Art, New York, United States (2017); Minnesota Street Project, San Francisco, USA (2016); Kochi-Muziris Biennale, Kochi, India (2016); Yinchuan Biennale, Museum of Contemporary Art, Yinchuan, China (2016); Jewish Museum, New York, USA (2016); US Embassy, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (2015); Moallaqat, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (2014); Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy (2013).

Dana Awartani has been shortlisted for the the High Line Plinth Commission, New York (2024), Richard Mille Prize, Louvre Abu Dhabi (2022) and was the recipient of the National Cultural Award by the Ministry of Culture of Saudi Arabia (2021); the Instituto Sacatar Residency Award, Sesc_Videobrasil (2020); and has been an artist in residence at NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore (2020) and at Delfina Foundation, London, UK (2015).

 

Recent, current and forthcoming projects

'Foreigners Everywhere', La Biennale di Venezia, Venice, Italy (20 April - 24 November 2024) (group)

'The High Line Plinth', New York, USA (19 March - 30 June 2024)

'Dana Awartani', Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide, Australia (1 March - 10 May 2024)

Come, let me heal your wounds. Let me mend your broken bones

Dana Awartani
Come, let me heal your wounds. Let me mend your broken bones

2024
Darning on medicinally dyed silk
520 x 1250 x 297 cm
204 3/4 x 492 1/8 x 116 7/8 in

Come, let me heal your wounds. Let me mend your broken bones

Dana Awartani
Come, let me heal your wounds. Let me mend your broken bones

2024
Darning on medicinally dyed silk
520 x 1250 x 297 cm
204 3/4 x 492 1/8 x 116 7/8 in

Let me mend your broken bones 6

Dana Awartani
Let me mend your broken bones 6

2023
Darning on medicinally dyed silk and paper
8 parts, each: 27 x 36 cm
8 parts, each: 10 5/8 x 14 1/8 in

Let me mend your broken bones 3

Dana Awartani
Let me mend your broken bones 3

2023
Darning on medicinally dyed silk and paper
8 parts, each: 27 x 36 cm
8 parts, each: 10 5/8 x 14 1/8 in
 

Let me mend your broken bones 2

Dana Awartani
Let me mend your broken bones 2

2023
Darning on medicinally dyed silk and paper
16 parts, each: 27 x 38 cm
16 parts, each: 10 5/8 x 15 in
 

Let me mend your broken bones 2

Dana Awartani
Let me mend your broken bones 2

2023
Darning on medicinally dyed silk and paper
16 parts, each: 27 x 38 cm
16 parts, each: 10 5/8 x 15 in
 

Let me mend your broken bones 1

Dana Awartani
Let me mend your broken bones 1

2023
Darning on medicinally dyed silk and paper
16 parts, each: 27 x 36 cm
16 parts, each: 10 5/8 x 14 1/8 in
 

Let me mend your broken bones 1

Dana Awartani
Let me mend your broken bones 1

2023
Darning on medicinally dyed silk and paper
16 parts, each: 27 x 36 cm
16 parts, each: 10 5/8 x 14 1/8 in
 

When The Dust of Conflict Settles

Dana Awartani
When The Dust of Conflict Settles

2023
Hand carving on griesa, jerashi, madaba, hoota and qassimi stone
Dimensions Variable

When The Dust of Conflict Settles

Dana Awartani
When The Dust of Conflict Settles

2023
Hand carving on griesa, jerashi, madaba, hoota and qassimi stone
Dimensions Variable

Where the Dwellers Lay

Dana Awartani
Where the Dwellers Lay

2022
Sandstone and Oxidised Steel
315 x 315 x 223 cm
124 x 124 x 87 3/4 in
 

Where the Dwellers Lay

Dana Awartani
Where the Dwellers Lay

2022
Sandstone and Oxidised Steel
315 x 315 x 223 cm
124 x 124 x 87 3/4 in
 

Where The Dwellers Lay 3

Dana Awartani
Where The Dwellers Lay 3

2023
Gouache on hand made cotton paper
86.5 x 86.5 cm
34 x 34 in
 

Where The Dwellers Lay 4

Dana Awartani
Where The Dwellers Lay 4

2023
Gouache on hand made cotton paper
86.5 x 86.5 cm
34 x 34 in

Standing by the Ruins of Aleppo

Dana Awartani
Standing by the Ruins of Aleppo

2021
Clay earth
2277 x 1300 cm
896 1/2 x 511 3/4 in

Standing by the Ruins of Aleppo

Dana Awartani
Standing by the Ruins of Aleppo

2021
Clay earth
2277 x 1300 cm
896 1/2 x 511 3/4 in

Standing by the Ruins

Dana Awartani
Standing by the Ruins

2019
Compressed earth
450 x 1130 cm
177 1/8 x 444 7/8 in
 

Standing by the Ruins

Dana Awartani
Standing by the Ruins

2019
Compressed earth
450 x 1130 cm
177 1/8 x 444 7/8 in
 

I Went Away and Forgot You. A While Ago I Remembered. I Remembered I’d Forgotten You. I Was Dreaming.

Dana Awartani
I Went Away and Forgot You. A While Ago I Remembered. I Remembered I’d Forgotten You. I Was Dreaming.

2019
Mixed media installation with sand and natural pigment, single-channel video, with no sound

I Went Away and Forgot You. A While Ago I Remembered. I Remembered I’d Forgotten You. I Was Dreaming.

Dana Awartani
I Went Away and Forgot You. A While Ago I Remembered. I Remembered I’d Forgotten You. I Was Dreaming.

2019
Mixed media installation with sand and natural pigment, single-channel video, with no sound

The Five Stages of Grief

Dana Awartani
The Five Stages of Grief

2015
Antique textile and embroidery on cotton
85 x 144 cm
33 1/2 x 56 3/4 in

Love Is My Law, Love Is My Faith

Dana Awartani
Love Is My Law, Love Is My Faith

2016
Hand embroidery on fabric
200 x 200 x 200 cm
78 3/4 x 78 3/4 x 78 3/4 in

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