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Almine Rech now represent Lebanese artist Ali Cherri

Almine Rech is pleased to announce the representation of Lebanese artist Ali Cherri, in collaboration with Galerie Imane Farès, Paris. The gallery will feature his work at Art Basel in June 2024 and will organize a solo exhibition in New York in 2025.

Portrait of Ali Cherri, 2023 © Ali Cherri – Courtesy of the Artist and Almine Rech Photo: Boris Camaca

Working with natural materials such as mud in his sculptural practice, Ali Cherri’s work is rooted in ancient art. I was very impressed by this aspect during my first visit to his studio, as artists working with this most elemental media, earth, have been integral to the gallery’s program and history – Picasso, to name only one.

As Stefanie Hessler, Director of the Swiss Institute, describes,

From ancient Sumerian mythology to Jewish, Maori and Chinese creation myths to Hindu and Yoruba cosmogony, humankind has time and again been narrativized as originating from mud.

Another focus of Ali Cherri’s practice involves contemporary media: moving image, film, and video. I admire that his work addresses our world that has always existed and the one of today at the same time: allowing us to simultaneously feel a sense of the eternal and the temporal, which I think is a unique achievement.’

— Almine Rech

About the artist

Exploring different geographies of violence in his native Lebanon but also in the broader region, Ali Cherri (b. 1976, Beirut) is a Paris-based artist with three decades of artistic practice spanning across film, performance, sculpture – in terra and bronze -, drawing, and installations, interrogating the ways in which political violence disseminates into people’s bodies and the physical and cultural landscape. Shaped by the vibrant artistic scene of postwar Beirut in the 1990s, Cherri began to investigate the sensorial coproduction of reality between images of conflict, the urban fabric and his own body.

Through the moving image and the accidented journeys of cultural artifacts, the artist discovered in the visual analysis of the political construction of history, the underlying intimate relationship between narratives of cultural value, the configuration of the past and violence itself. In a series of interventions on archaeological collections, Cherri sets out to confront the traditional signifiers of value in the museum by reintroducing fragments and artifacts that had been otherwise discarded in the form of hybrid creatures that embody the history of archaeology as a tale of colonial violence.

His film tetralogy, The Disquiet (2013), The Digger (2015), The Dam (2022), and The Watchman (2023), the subject of accolades and presentations in institutions as well as film festivals, is an extended meditation on political landscapes, from Lebanon to Cyprus and Sudan, imprinted with the traces of past events. Cherri is the recipient of the Silver Lion Award at the 59th Venice Biennale. In Venice, the video installation Of Men and Gods and Mud (2022) brings together our current predicament at the intersection of ecological disaster and the search for new grand narratives.

Mud, the primeval matter of our creation stories, both resilient and fragile, signals a new sculptural direction for the artist. In his most recent institutional exhibitions, Humble and quiet and soothing as mud (2023) at Swiss Institute and Dreamless Night (2023) at GAMeC, Cherri brings mud to life with monumental eagles, soldiers or the transtemporal history of mankind, blurring chronologies and alerting us to the latent dangers of civilization as an inherently destructive process. The telluric movements of history in Cherri’s work draw us towards a cartography of impermanence.

The artist’s expanded dialogue between art, archaeology and the fabric of historical time brought him recently in conversation with the work of modernist sculptor and painter Alberto Giacometti, around the representation of the human face in the exhibition Envisagement (2024) at the Institut Giacometti in Paris. The interposition with Giacometti’s sculptures and paintings brings to the fore not only Cherri’s interest in the body and history, but also on the afterlife of artifacts and museological narratives. Ali Cherri’s exhibition Dreamless Night opened in Frac Bretagne in February 2024.
— Ari Akkermans, writer and art critic

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