ONE DAY, ONE VERY SIMPLE DAY...
Ghazaleh Baniahmad
May 01 - September 30, 2017
Opening: Monday May 1st, 5.30-7pm
Artist Talk: 6 pmCWSE Hallway GalleryOpening: Monday May 1st, 5.30-7pm
2nd Floor OISE
252 Bloor Street West
Toronto, ON
10am - 8pm daily
Free & accessible
Four years ago, I moved with my family to Canada.
At that time, my mother had her first stroke. Since then my life – as artist
and daughter - has shifted. I focus my attention now on my daily struggle as a
woman and on being a daughter of a sick mother and an immigrant. My creative
work addresses three themes: mother, immigration and dreams.
I reflect on my, and my mother’s, personal
journeys. The process I use requires me to excavate thoughts and emotions, and
in analyzing these and by making art, I experience a healing. I focus on the
love among women in our family: how my mother’s love shaped me and my sister
and made us strong. My mother’s stroke has made it difficult for her to hide
her emotions and now her daughters ponder whether we need to substantively show
and share our own emotions to support her.
As an immigrant, I connect my personal life
experiences and my Iranian heritage to my understanding of Canadian culture. My
work reflects my immigration story within the context of my mother’s illness.
My intention is to facilitate a dialogue with my viewers, inviting a resonance
among our potentially similar stories.
I have researched dreams, symbols, and dream
talismans and have created an index of dream symbols which I draw upon. I
sometimes feel as if I am living in two worlds: in Canada and, in my dreams, in
the country of my childhood. My dreams have been predominately located in my
childhood homes but now, after living in Canada for four years, my Canadian
experiences are becoming incorporated into my dream narratives.
I experiment and work intuitively with materials
and processes using drawing, painting, photo-collage, sculpture and mixed
media. I also use photography and found images and work primarily in black and
white. This palette acts as a rich metaphor for memory.
My new research addresses my growing self-awareness
of the unconscious. And, as my practice develops, I continue to find diverse
ways to incorporate and manipulate materials to communicate my experiences to
audiences.
Ghazaleh Baniahmad completed a BFA in Graphic Design in
Tehran and moved to Canada in 2011. This new Canadian environment and her subsequent
BFA in Fine Arts at OCAD University, assisted her in uniquely melding Iranian and
contemporary Western styles. The result is an inclusive and accessible visual language.
She uses this language to communicate with, and draw empathy from, a broad audience.
Ghazaleh focuses on her personal life experiences which can be shared and open possibilities
for a universal artistic dialogue.