Art Dubai: Shifting perspectives on Modernism and the body

Museu de Arte de São Paulo
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Art Dubai: Shifting perspectives on Modernism and the body
Sunset in Pink, 2012
Amman limestone
23.0 x 30.0 x 4.5 cm (9.1 x 11.8 x 1.8 in)
Gallery: Lawrie Shabibi
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Mona Saudi is a Jordanian artist, sculptor and poet living in Beirut and one of the few female artists of her generation to pursue sculpture. She grew up in a home in Amman, situated next to an old archaeological site surrounded by ancient ruins from the Nabateans who were stone carvers. This became her playground, leading her to develop a deep connection with stone - primal, ancient and enduring - and which became her long standing material of choice. It is within this material and earth which she feels she's a continuation of, and belongs to. Her sculptures always start with basic shapes: the square, circle, cylinder and rectangle, to which she carves movement into working with the energy of the stone; either repeating their forms, varying their depths or heights, or cutting them across one another to create new, graceful compositions, many of which are inspired by forms and beings found in nature: rivers, seeds, seagulls, as well as the prominent reoccurring theme of Mother Earth itself. Saudi uses of stone that originates from all over the world, the majority being from the Middle East, including Lebanese and Jordanian marble, as well as limestone, emphasizing how the Arab world is united by a common cultural language and history. Sunset in Pink is a thin rectangular form with rounded edges where a precise circular hole has been cut out near the middle of a pink tinted and limestone.
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Sunset in Pink, 2012 | Amman limestone 30 x 23 cm
Mona Saudi is a Jordanian artist, sculptor and poet living in Beirut and one of the few female artists of her generation to pursue sculpture. She grew up in a home in Amman, situated next to an old archaeological site surrounded by ancient ruins from the Nabateans who were stone carvers. This became her playground, leading her to develop a deep connection with stone - primal, ancient and enduring - and which became her long standing material of choice. It is within this material and earth which she feels she's a continuation of, and belongs to. Her sculptures always start with basic shapes: the square, circle, cylinder and rectangle, to which she carves movement into working with the energy of the stone; either repeating their forms, varying their depths or heights, or cutting them across one another to create new, graceful compositions, many of which are inspired by forms and beings found in nature: rivers, seeds, seagulls, as well as the prominent reoccurring theme of Mother Earth itself. Saudi uses of stone that originates from all over the world, the majority being from the Middle East, including Lebanese and Jordanian marble, as well as limestone, emphasizing how the Arab world is united by a common cultural language and history. Sunset in Pink is a thin rectangular form with rounded edges where a precise circular hole has been cut out near the middle of a pink tinted and limestone.
... read more