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De(re)constructed Utopias is an ambitious presentation of new & recent works by Marlon de Azambuja + Arash Hanaei.

De(re)constructed Utopias Marlon de Azambuja and Arash Hanaei 4 Cromwell Place Pavilion Gallery 3rd May – 15th May Installation shot Photo Pedro Lima Courtesy the artist and gallery

De(re)constructed Utopias is an ambitious presentation of new and recent works by Marlon de Azambuja and Arash Hanaei. Both artists have gained a substantial international reputation for their multifaceted work, spanning sculpture, photography, and installation – often exploring themes including urban architecture and ideas of utopia expressed in experimental urban planning. De(re)constructed Utopias will be the first dual presentation by de Azambuja and Hanaei and marks their London debut.

De(re)constructed Utopias Marlon de Azambuja and Arash Hanaei 4 Cromwell Place Pavilion Gallery 3rd May – 15th May Installation shot Photo Pedro Lima Courtesy the artist and gallery

Both de Azambuja and Hanaei are fascinated by the universal language of modern architecture and urban planning. In their own ways, they try to reconstruct and deconstruct this universality to reveal a hidden subjectivity within the built environments they come from. In de Azambuja’s works, a site-specific spatial identity is defined through the medium of concrete. This process resembles a long history in non-European countries such as Brazil and Japan where ‘concrete’ architecture emerged from the presence of a global and universal discourse but turned into an attempt to escape the restrictions of this discourse by adapting it. In all his works, de Azambuja engages with pre-existing things and transforms them into memorable settings of future by the association of a relevant story or a noteworthy past: the previous life of a concrete block, a monument or a host of industrial elements.

De(re)constructed Utopias Marlon de Azambuja and Arash Hanaei 4 Cromwell Place Pavilion Gallery 3rd May – 15th May Installation shot Photo Pedro Lima Courtesy the artist and gallery

Similarly, Hanaei also deals with the past. In his works, the suburbs of Paris become the realisation of Derrida’s theory of ‘hauntology’. The present is historicised and it is the past that haunts it in the form of the future-to-come. The cities of future are ideas from our past, and the futures that haunt our now were once promised in the past. Nonetheless, the bio-colonisation of Hanaei’s specific housing project on an outskirt of Paris frames a rebirth and hence, the latent but suppressed life in abandoned built forms. This biological uprising goes hand in hand with de Azambuja’s reconstruction of buildings where,

‘An imaginary city grows up from scratch in London where Brutalism once emerged in the 1950s
as a promise for future cities.’

Marlon de Azambuja.
De(re)constructed Utopias Marlon de Azambuja and Arash Hanaei 4 Cromwell Place Pavilion Gallery 3rd May – 15th May Installation shot Photo Pedro Lima Courtesy the artist and gallery

What might these future cities look like? In de Azambuja’s work we are presented with multiple possibilities and opportunities for the architectural spaces he imagines, depicted both as highly detailed architectural drawings and constructed in three dimensions, using brick, concrete and steel. For De(re)constructed Utopias he will create Brutalismo (2022) monumental site-specific work in London brick – spanning the length of the main Pavilion Gallery space. In this work we are confronted with the bare DNA of modern construction, materials which are prosaic but also fundamental, essential and enduring – providing the kernel from which aspirations for future cities might emerge.

De(re)constructed Utopias Marlon de Azambuja and Arash Hanaei 4 Cromwell Place Pavilion Gallery 3rd May – 15th May Installation shot Photo Pedro Lima Courtesy the artist and gallery

Hanaei’s work is inspired by a different kind of ‘future city’ – a built environment which is both humane and ecological. Constructed predominantly in wood, the Pierre-Semmard Housing estate in Paris, is a unique ‘back to the future’ development which reimagines the best societal and functional aspects of the medieval town with its organic flow of streets and communal open spaces but incorporated with a modern eye to ecology and sustainability. The architect, Iwona Buczkowska, was fascinated by the relationships of scale and connection in the natural and built environment, stating (a) “tree is leaf and a leaf is tree –– a city is not a city unless it is also a huge house – a house is a house only if it is also a tiny city.”

De(re)constructed Utopias Marlon de Azambuja and Arash Hanaei 4 Cromwell Place Pavilion Gallery 3rd May – 15th May Installation shot Photo Pedro Lima Courtesy the artist and gallery

Following the fate of so many pioneering architectural projects, the Pierre-Semmard has also fallen into neglect and been reclaimed by the natural world it emulates – echoing the scenarios created by writers such as JG Ballard who have imagined our futuristic urban landscapes, recolonized by nature distorted by global warming. Hanaei takes these rich and evocative ideas as his starting point for a sequence of work in video and photographic still which examine the relationship between architecture and public/private spaces – natural and manmade – and how architecture might transport us into future spaces.

Arash Hanaei [In the Night Garden] Light a Fire Under Your Skin, 2022 (AH22 7) Courtesy the artist and Ab-Anbar Gallery

This is a world in a constant Escher-like pathway of de(re)construction, conceived during an unprecedented period in modern times where the enforced constraints of the pandemic have made us more acutely aware of personal and public spaces.

AB-ANBAR Gallery presents De(re)constructed Utopias Marlon de Azambuja and Arash Hanaei 4 Cromwell Place Pavilion Gallery 3rd May – 15th May

De(re)constructed Utopias Marlon de Azambuja and Arash Hanaei 4 Cromwell Place Pavilion Gallery 3rd May – 15th May Installation shot Photo Pedro Lima Courtesy the artist and gallery

About the artists

Marlon de Azambuja (B. 1978 Brazil) is interested in architecture. Even though his work is based on photographs, drawings, installations, sculptures, performances, and collages, a commentary on the built world always emerges. With the idea of understanding our cities, he invents new ways of observing our immediate environment. His work has been shown in numerous solo exhibitions internationally, most recently including: Fundação, Hangar, Lisbon (2020). Nocturna. Revolver Galería, Buenos Aires (2019) Campo,Tasman Projects, Madrid (2018) Brutalismo Americano. Kadist Art Foundation, San Francisco, US (2017).

De Azambuja work is held in prominent public and private collections including: Kadist Art Foundation, San Francisco (US). Itaú collection, São Paulo (BR) Helga de Alvear Museum, Cáceres (ES). CAAM – Atlantic Center of Modern Art, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (ES). CGAC – Galician Center for Contemporary Art, Santiago de Compostela (ES). CA2M – Dos de Mayo Art Center, Móstoles (ES). FolaLatin American Photo Library, Buenos Aires (AR). Nomas Foundation, Rome (IT) and OTR Collection, Madrid (ES) and others. Awards include, Special Award, 2nd Iranian Contemporary Drawing Festival, Museum of Contemporary Art, Tehran. De Azambuja currently lives and works between Paris and Madrid.

Arash Hanaei (b. 1978. Iran) studied photography at Azad University, Tehran where he focussed on the work produced during the Iranian Revolution and Iran-Iraq War. Hanaei currently lives and works between Paris and Tehran.

His practice combines mediums and techniques, in addition to amateur photography, to create a ‘vernacular’ of image-making in the tradition of photo documentary. The subject of numerous international solo exhibitions internationally, he was recently awarded the prestigious BMW Art Makers prize, alongside his frequent collaborator, the curator and writer Morad Montazami. Recent solo exhibitions include An archaeological study of a star, POUSH Manifesto gallery, Clichy, France (2021) and Pop-up Clouds, Yassi Foundation, Tehran, Iran (2019).

Hanaei’s work is held in prominent collections including, Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris, Centre National des Arts Plastiques, Paris, Peters-Messer Collection, Berlin/Viersen, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) and Salsali Private Museum, Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Awards include, Special Award, 2nd Iranian Contemporary Drawing Festival, Museum of Contemporary Art, Tehran.

AB-ANBAR is an independent gallery, founded in 2014 The gallery’s program is centred on promotion of thought-provoking artists from the Middle East and other latitudes both locally and internationally, including Douglas Abdell, Ghazaleh Avarzamani, Sonia Balassanian, Majid Fathizadeh, Mohammad Ghazali, Arash Hanaei, Taha Heydari, Y.Z Kami, Avish Khebrehzadeh, Sirak Melkonian, Mohsen Vaziri Moghaddam, Timo Nasseri, Raha Raissnia and Hessam Samavatian The program is committed to discovery and experimentation, with a mission to strengthen the position of contemporary art in Iran and abroad.
ab-anbar.com

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