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NY | MADISON AVE

Ghiora Aharoni

September 7 – October 2, 2021

Genesis Series 2021-A, 2021, mixed-media, assemblage sculpture with vintage laboratory beakers, flasks and tubes with the Genesis text in Hebrew, antique Torah scroll finials, vintage bronze rhytons and tubular lights with steel base, 44 x 32 x 25 inches/111.8 x 81.3 x 63.5 cm

Genesis Series 2021-A, 2021, mixed-media, assemblage sculpture with vintage laboratory beakers, flasks and tubes with the Genesis text in Hebrew, antique Torah scroll finials, vintage bronze rhytons and tubular lights with steel base, 44 x 32 x 25 inches/111.8 x 81.3 x 63.5 cm

Rondolinear #17, 2012, plaster and wood, 26 x 72 x 22.5 inches/66 x 182.9 x 57.2 cm

Rondolinear #17, 2012, plaster and wood, 26 x 72 x 22.5 inches/66 x 182.9 x 57.2 cm

Lunar Calligraphy (Heavens/Mother), 2010, digital print on fine art archival paper, 80 x 59 inches/203.2 x 149.9 cm (framed)

Lunar Calligraphy (Heavens/Mother), 2010, digital print on fine art archival paper, 80 x 59 inches/203.2 x 149.9 cm (framed)

Make Me a Temple Within (The Ghau Series), 2019, portable vintage Buddhist shrines retrofitted with screens displaying video montages created by the artist, various dimensions (rectangular, square and round)

Make Me a Temple Within (The Ghau Series), 2019, portable vintage Buddhist shrines retrofitted with screens displaying video montages created by the artist, various dimensions (rectangular, square and round)

Lunar Calligraphy (Soil/Year), 2009, digital print on fine art archival paper, 40 x 40 inches/101.6 x 101.6 cm (framed)

Lunar Calligraphy (Soil/Year), 2009, digital print on fine art archival paper, 40 x 40 inches/101.6 x 101.6 cm (framed)

Thank God for Making Me a Woman I, 2017, antique angarkha, hand embroidered with the Hindru© phrase (the artist’s combination of Hindi and Urdu) “Thank God For Making Me a Woman”, 48 x 68 x 3 inches/121.9 x 172.7 x 7.6 cm (framed)

Thank God for Making Me a Woman I, 2017, antique angarkha, hand embroidered with the Hindru© phrase (the artist’s combination of Hindi and Urdu) “Thank God For Making Me a Woman”, 48 x 68 x 3 inches/121.9 x 172.7 x 7.6 cm (framed)

Lunar Calligraphy (Labor/Dream), 2010, digital print on fine art archival paper, 40 x 40 inches/101.6 x 101.6 cm (framed)

Lunar Calligraphy (Labor/Dream), 2010, digital print on fine art archival paper, 40 x 40 inches/101.6 x 101.6 cm (framed)

Inception, 2015, digital print on fine art archival paper, 40 x 40 inches/101.6 x 101.6 cm (framed)

Inception, 2015, digital print on fine art archival paper, 40 x 40 inches/101.6 x 101.6 cm (framed)

Press Release

We are pleased to present sculpture, photography and installations by Israeli-born American artist Ghiora Aharoni. The New York-based artist examines complex dualities—from the intersection of religion and science, to the intertwined relationships among seemingly disparate cultures.

 

Born in Rehovot, Israel, in 1969, Aharoni grew up in a home full of diverse cultures and languages. He was introduced to the central texts of Jewish mysticism at an early age, which he incorporates into his work in abstract and literal ways. He often merges sacred texts of different faiths with traditional objects, such as vintage glass beakers and nineteenth-century Torah finials. By combining these texts and cultural artifacts and imbuing them with new meaning, Aharoni invites us to expand our perceptions of how cultures, religions and genders are interwoven.

 

Aharoni has exhibited his work widely, including at the Rubin Museum, New York, the Jewish Museum Vienna, the Museum of Contemporary Art, London and Dr. Bhau Daji Lad Museum (formerly The Victoria & Albert Museum), Mumbai. His work is in the collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Morgan Library & Museum, Centre Pompidou in Paris, the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, New Delhi, and Washington D.C.’s National Gallery of Art, among others.

 

Aharoni’s work is on view at The Textile Museum in Washington D.C. through April 2022. The exhibition, which explores the metaphysical relationship between text and textiles, is part of a year-long collaboration with the museum, along with a research residency, academic seminars, public programs and another exhibition later this year. 

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