Sunday 9 July 2017

Reviewing: Fahrelnissa Zeid

This week I took in a double bill of Tate Modern shows: Giacometti and Fahrelnissa Zeid. Of the two, Zeid's work was the most surprising, as she was a completely new artist to me - I got a ticket for her show on a whim when I went to see Giacomettii - but she proved to be a marvellous discovery.
Of Zeid, the Tate Modern say:
Trained in both Paris and Istanbul, Fahrelnissa Zeid was an important figure in the Turkish avant-garde d Group in the early 1940s and the Ă‰cole de Paris (School of Paris) in the 1950s. Her vibrant abstract paintings are a synthesis of Islamic, Byzantine, Arab and Persian influences fused with European approaches to abstraction. Many of her abstract works are monumental and demand attention.
Zeid’s reputation as an artist was cemented in the 1950s when she was living between London and Paris and exhibiting extensively internationally. The artist also began experimenting with painting on turkey and chicken bones, which she later cast in polyester resin panels evocative of stained-glass windows. In the later years of her life she unexpectedly returned to figurative painting, creating stylised portraits of her friends and family.
Indulge in Zeid’s obsession with line and dazzling colour in this exhibition. Rediscover one of the greatest female artists of the 20th century in this first major retrospective.​
Internationally trained and widely recognised in her contemporary moment, Zeid has since - as the exhibition points out - fallen from view. I, for one, am glad the Tate Modern has decided to take steps to bring her work out of obscurity, as I was stunned by the power of her painting, and want to see more of her.

Aside from exploring her fascinating life story,  the show charts her artistic development and showcases the raw emotion and scale of her work. Though there are some smaller works, a lot of what she paints is dramatic in size, and her use of colour, line, and pattern is nothing short of striking.

The huge abstract canvases draw you in, and it feels like there is something recognisable hidden in the patterns, if only you could stare at them for long enough. Her portraiture does nothing for me, but her use of colour across everything in the show is pure magic.

Overall, Zeid's retrospective is well worth catching.

4/5:Vibrant and hypnotic
Tate Modern
Until 8th October

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