Chasing Mirrors Portraits of the Unseen
Press Release
13 October 2010
CHASING MIRRORS: PORTRAITS OF THE UNSEEN
15
October 2010 - 9 January 2011
Studio
Gallery
Admission Free
Chasing Mirrors: Portraits of the Unseen is a new installation of work by contemporary artist Alinah Azadeh and a collective of young people from Brent, Barnet and Ealing who share an Islamic heritage. Opening on 15 October 2010, the installation will explore the ‘unseen' inner self through non-figurative portraiture.
British-Iranian artist, Azadeh, has worked extensively with textiles, objects and texts to communicate individual narratives within her large-scale installation work. This new exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery will use objects wrapped in cloth, texts written or spoken by the collective, colour and mirroring as a means of portraying aspects of the inner self. The exhibition is the second of a three-year project at the Gallery made possible through funding from John Lyon's Charity.
The project takes its starting point from the absence of figurative depictions of the human form within religious contexts in Islam and some other religions. This has led to the development of alternative visual forms, including complex calligraphic quotations, geometry and the symbolic use of mirrors. Multilingual texts inscribed onto surfaces, reflected and multiplied will feature in the exhibition, echoing mirroring systems found in some mosques and palaces in the Middle East.
Personal objects belonging to the collective, representing an aspect of their personality or a meaningful experience, have been wrapped in cloth with the artist through a process of ritual and shared reflection. These objects will be suspended in the gallery and mirrored from above and below to create a series of three sculptures. Moving away from the concept of a portrait depicting personality through physical appearance, the exploration of language and the use of personal objects will create a collective portrait of these young people.
Chasing Mirrors: Portraits of the Unseen is the culmination of a collaboration between the artist and three community organisations. The organisations are: An-Nisa, a women-managed organisation established in 1985 to promote a British Muslim identity; Paiwand, an Afghan Community Organisation established to unite and improve the quality of life of the Afghan refugee community in the UK along with their partners Barnet Refugee Service and Barnet Youth and Connexions; and Tallo, a community centre on the South Acton Estate which works with the Somali Community including asylum seekers and refugees mainly from Somalia with the Somali Community including asylum seekers and refugees mainly from Somalia.
Each year, as part of this three-year project made possible with support from John Lyon's Charity, a new lead artist will collaborate with participants on a series of workshops and each autumn an exhibition of their work will take place in the Gallery. The project will vary each year according to the artist's practice, medium and their perspective and response to the National Portrait Gallery's Collection which they will explore with the participants.
This year's lead artist is Alinah Azadeh, a British-Iranian contemporary artist who uses a wide range of media. Azadeh created The Gifts, an installation commission for Bristol Museum and Art Gallery through The Shape of Things national programme, as well as The Bibliomancer's Dream and Dream On at the Southbank Centre with sculptor Willow Winston. The previous year they developed ‘Crafting Space', the first ever interactive commission by the Crafts Council for Origin at Somerset House. For more information on Azadeh please visit http://www.alinahazadeh.com/. Her blog on the project can be read at http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/639134

Portraits of the Unseen (Installation detail). Alinah Azadeh and the Chasing Mirrors Collective. Photograph: National Portrait Gallery, London
EVENTS
Memory
and Identity
Storytelling
and art workshops for families
Monday 25 October - Friday 29 October
2010, 11.30 and 14.30
Suitable
for children aged 5+ and their carers.
Free ticket
required and available one hour before the event at the gallery.
Shappi Khorsandi - A Beginner's Guide to Acting
English
The stand-up
comic reflects on her childhood immigration from Tehran to London.
Thursday 4
November, 19.00
Tickets: £5/£4
Sunday
Session: The Unseen Self
A textile and writing workshop led by
Alinah Azadeh for 14-21 year olds.
Sunday 7 November 13.00 - 16.00
Free. Booking required. Contact youthbookings@npg.org.uk or 020 7312 2483.
Blogistan
How internet
culture is subverting the Islamic Republic in Iran. With Annabelle Sreberny and
Gholam Khiabany. Thursday 18
November 19.00 £5/£4
Meet
the Artist
Alinah Azadeh discusses her work,
including Q&A.
Tuesday 30 November, 11.00 - 12.00
Free. For Secondary and Sixth form students
and teachers.
Booking required, contact education@npg.org.uk
or 020 7312 3483.
Full event details and booking at www.npg.org.uk/chasingmirrors
NOTES TO EDITORS
John Lyon's Charity gives grants to registered charities for the benefit of children and young adults. Grants are restricted to the nine London boroughs of Barnet, Brent, Camden, Ealing, Hammersmith & Fulham, Harrow, Kensington & Chelsea and the Cities of London and Westminster. Since 1992 John Lyon's Charity has distributed over £50 million to a large range of services including youth clubs, arts projects, counselling, child care and parental support schemes, sports programmes and academic bursaries and scholarships.
For further press information and image requests please contact: Eleanor Macnair, Press Office, National Portrait Gallery Tel: 020 7321 6620 (not for publication). Email: emacnair@npg.org.uk
For press images: www.npg.org.uk/press
National Portrait Gallery, St Martin's Place, London, WC2H 0HE. Opening hours Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday: 10am - 6pm (Gallery closure commences at 5.50pm) Late Opening: Thursday, Friday: 10am - 9pm (Gallery closure commences at 8.50pm) Nearest Underground: Leicester Square/Charing Cross Recorded information: 020 7312 2463 General information: 020 7306 0055 Website: www.npg.org.uk

