38 1/2 x 30 in
97.8 x 76.2 cm
Framed 39 x 30 1/2 in.
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This work was created in collaboration with craftswomen living and working in Ramallah, juxtaposing local traditions with Nassar’s contemporary aesthetic. Beginning with a color palette of their own choosing on...
This work was created in collaboration with craftswomen living and working in Ramallah, juxtaposing local traditions with Nassar’s contemporary aesthetic. Beginning with a color palette of their own choosing on areas of the canvas predetermined by the artist, the craftswomen lay the foundations of his panoramas. Nassar then embroiders multicolored landscapes within the intricate geometric grids sewn by these women.
The artist says of his landscapes, “I like to discuss these landscapes as versions of Palestine as they exist in the minds of the diaspora, who have never been there and can never go there. They are the Palestine I heard stories about growing up, half-made of imagination. They are dreamlands and utopias that are colorful and fantastical—beautiful and romantic, but bittersweet.”
Jordan Nassar, "I Cut The Sky In Two", 291 Grand Street, James Cohan, New York, October 23- Nov 21, 2020 Jordan Nassar, "The Field Is Infinite," KMAC Museum, Louisville, Kentucky, December 5, 2020 - April 4, 2021