Nairy Baghramian (born 1971) is an Iranian-born German visual artist.[1] Since 1984, she has lived and worked in Berlin.[1][2]
Nairy Baghramian | |
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Born | 1971 (age 50–51) Isfahan, Iran |
Education | Berlin University of the Arts |
Movement | Modernism, Abstract art, Post-minimalism, Minimalism |
When the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum selected Baghramian as a finalist for the 2020 Hugo Boss Prize, they described Baghramian’s statues as: "...[Exploring] the workings of the body, gender, and public and private space."[3]
Nairy Baghramian was born 1971, in Isfahan, Iran.[1] She relocated to Germany in 1985, as a teenager.[1][4] She attended Berlin University of the Arts (Universität der Künste Berlin).[4]
Baghramian captures fleeting human poses in traditional materials such as marble and steel.[5] Inspired by dance classes she took as a child, Baghramian recalls her teacher speaking of the need to break down human movement into discrete elements.[3][5] Her work depicts abstract forms of bodies or body parts, often contemplating the brokenness or "prosthetic" relationship between the body and its environment.[6][7] In the Guggenheim video, Baghramian explains that sometimes she builds on the idea of "looking at something and feeling pity for it."[3] In addition, her work creates interplay between the work itself and the spaces in which it exists.
For the Berlin Biennial she collaborated with ninety-eight-year-old designer Janette Laverrière to create a set for her furniture design.[8][9]
In 2017, Baghramian's exhibition, Déformation Professionnelle was at display in the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst.[10] This exhibition is culmination of the artist's 18 sets of works from 1999 to 2016.[10] Déformation Professionnelle exhibits the artist's oeuvre while alluding to other existing works in her field. By using sculpture elements and photography in a site-responsive practice she questions the traditional views towards the relationship between the human body's gestures and its functions.[11]
In 2021 it was announced the Baghramian had received the 2022 Nasher Prize presented by the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas.[12]
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