SHIRAZEH HOUSHIARY AT LEHMANN MAUPIN
By Jeffrey Kastner
Poised between aestheticism and asceticism, Shirazeh Houshiary's delicate,
elusive new canvases are marvels of formal restraint and rigor that manage
to generate extravagantly seductive perceptual effects. Her recent
show—dominated by a suite of large-scale black or white monochromes
illuminated with feathery passages of contrasting pen or pencil—is evidence
of progress in a conceptual program the artist once characterized as
following a trajectory "from form to formlessness."
The Iranian-born, London-based Houshiary is usually associated with the
British "New Object" sculptors (including Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon, and
Anish Kapoor) with whom she emerged during the '80s. Yet over the last
decade, she has increasingly shifted from three-dimensional, floor-based
work—minimalist geometric forms suggestive of both honeycombed organic
structures and the mathematical proliferations of Islamic decorative motifs—
toward two-dimensional wall-based pieces whose light touch and indeterminate
surfaces can evoke the subtle opticality of Robert Irwin's early ovoids.
Throughout her career, Houshiary has often located her practice within the
context of her Sufi beliefs—her previous New York solo exhibition featured
paintings covered with sacred incantations rendered in fine Arabic
calligraphy. As with other artists' work that engages issues of faith,
Houshiary's is vulnerable to the kind of readings where the complex social
and philosophical histories of specific religions are glossed in favor of
easily digestible, generalized rhetoric around "the spiritual." The gallery
announcement for the recent show, for instance, tritely describes
Houshiary's process as a "slow dance around the canvas," with which she
engages "by bending into it as if in prayer." Such treatments have more than
a whiff of exoticizing hokum about them and do no favors for a strong and
serious practice.
A group of small, untitled mixed-media works on paper (all works 2003)
explore basic issues of painting and draftsmanship: figure/ground
relationships, compositional rhythms, even moments of lambent near color.
Yet her large canvases, with their serene white or black Aquacryl grounds,
strive to avoid becoming fully either paintings or drawings, referencing the
artist's roots in sculpture by seeking an emphatic objecthood of their own.
While her black pieces can resolve more readily into the figurative—the band
of graceful white ticking bisecting Outside In reads like an infrared
horizon; the nebulous halo of Iota suggests the galactic—Houshiary's white
canvases remain abstract, achieving an immersive immateriality that in
certain cases produces cognitive destabilizations that border on the
mystical. On one gallery visit, I saw a man physically restrain a companion
about to actually fall into the seductive alabaster expanse of the
six-by-six-foot Deep Sleep; a few moments later, drawing close to examine
the minute graphite cross-hatchings that form a phantom triangle at the
center of Gaze, I nearly toppled into its pearly plane myself as the
painting's edge appeared to melt and spread, merge with the wall, and
swallow the room and everything in it.
Given such profound sensory pleasures, it's surprising to find Breath, the
artist's first video project, so self-conscious and listless. On four small,
dark screens set in wall recesses, an animated blossom of white appears and
disappears in respiratory rhythm; each has its own sound track, ranging from
Buddhist liturgical music to a vocal invocation by Hildegard von Bingen, the
twelfth-century German nun now best known for her work's ubiquity on
relaxation compilations. Though the atmospheric lighting, lulling sounds,
and calming video cadences would seem to represent an attempt at a kind of
Sensurround version of Houshiary's work, it ends up feeling like a wan
simulation of the ecstatic moments to which her best pieces aspire, in which
elemental perceptual experience flowers into a truly numinous state.