Faig Ahmed
Faig Ahmed | |
---|---|
Faiq Əhməd | |
Born | 1982 Sumqayit, Azerbaijan |
Nationality | Azerbaijani |
Occupation | Visual artist |
Website | https://faigahmed.com/ |
Faig Ahmed (Azerbaijani: Faiq Əhməd) (born 1982 in Sumqayit, Azerbaijan) is an Azerbaijani contemporary visual artist who is best known for his surrealist weavings which integrate visual distortions into traditional oriental rugs.[1]
Ahmed graduated from the sculpture program at the Azerbaijan State Academy of Fine Arts in Baku in 2004.[2] In 2007, Ahmed's work was included in the Azerbaijan's first pavilion in the Venice Biennalle[1][3] in 2013 he participated in the show “Love Me, Love Me Not”[4] and the 11th Mercosul Visual Arts Biennial[5] in 2018.
While Ahmed has created artworks in multiple media, including sculpture, video, and installation, he is best known for his surrealist sculptural textiles, which apply optical illusions in the form of often psychedelic visual manipulations (including warping, glitching, melting, pixelating, and unraveling) to traditional Islamic rugs.[6] The textiles are manufactured by a group of skilled weavers who follow Ahmed's designs paying strict attention to traditional Azerbaijani weaving techniques.[7][8]
Exhibitions
[edit]Ahmed has exhibited his works worldwide including group and solo exhibitions in New York, Paris, London, Berlin, Moscow, Dubai, Sharjah, Mumbai, Rome, Venice, Washington D.C., Hong Kong, Mumbai, Moscow, Azerbaijan, Sweden, Norway, Honolulu, Melbourne, and Sydney.
In the past few years, Ahmed's works have been exhibited in several museums including the Museum of Fine Art Boston, Los Angeles County Museum, Bellevue Art Museum, Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design, MOCA Cleveland, Museum of Old and New Art, Tasmania, the Museum of Contemporary Art of Rome (MACRO), Pennsylvania College of Art and Design, Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, NYU Abu Dhabi, the Textile Museum of Sweden, the Projective Eye Gallery at UNC Charlotte, New Tretyakov Gallery, Istanbul Modern and others.
Additionally in 2013, he was nominated for the Jameel Prize 3 at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.
Collections
[edit]Ahmed's rug sculptures are held in notable public collections, including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Seattle Art Museum, RISD Museum,[2] Art Institute of Chicago, Seattle Art Museum, Palm Springs Museum of Art, Chrysler Museum of Art, Currier Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design Museum (RISD), Wake Forest University Museum, George Washington University, Brooks Museum of Art, Currier Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, de Young Museum; Bargoin Museum, France; MOCAK Museum of Contemporary Art, Poland; The National Gallery of Victoria, Australia; Arsenal art contemporain Montréal, Canada; The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Norway; Istanbul Modern, Turkey; Maraya Art Centre, UAE.
His works has also been placed in private collections such as the West Collection, Philadelphia; the collection of Beth Rudin DeWoody, New York City; Galila Barzilaï-Hollander's collection, Brussels, Espacio SOLO, Puerta de Alcalá, Madrid; and the private collection of Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan bin Khalifa al-Nahyan, United Arab Emirates among others.
Collective Pattern. Experimental Project
[edit]Collective Pattern is an ongoing research project by Faig Ahmed, initiated in 2021. The project explores the perception of art by measuring real-time brain and body activity using advanced data-driven equipment, including EEG (electroencephalography) and eye-trackers. It was first introduced in February 2024 as part of Ahmed's solo exhibition, Consciousness in Flux.
Selected exhibitions
[edit]Solo exhibitions
2024
- “Faig Ahmed: Consciousness in Flux”, Maraya Art Centre. Sharjah, United Arab Emirates
2022
- “Faig Ahmed: Collision”, San Luis Obispo Museum of Art. San Luis Obispo, California, USA
2021
- “Faig Ahmed: Pir”, Sapar Contemporary gallery. New York, USA
2020
- “Faig Ahmed: Dissolving Order”, Aga Khan Museum. Toronto, Canada
2019
- “Faig Ahmed” Honolulu Museum of Art. Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
- “Faig Ahmed” Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
2018
- “Faig Ahmed: Nonvisual Language” The George Washington University Museum
- The Textile Museum. Washington, USA
2017
- “Faig Ahmed” Pennsylvania College of Art & Design, Lancaster, USA
- “Equation”. Textile Museum of Sweden, Borås, Sweden
- “10−35”. Kapellhaus Baku, Azerbaijan
2016
- “Source Code”. Sapar Contemporary, New York, USA
- “Ne var, odur”. YARAT Contemporary Art Space, Baku, Azerbaijan
- “Black Sheep”. NYU Abu Dhabi, New York, USA
- “Points of Perception”. MACRO Testaccio, Rome, Italy
2015
- “Omnia Mutantur, Nihil Interit”. Montoro12 Contemporary Art. Rome, Italy
2014
- “Fluid forms”. Cuadro Gallery. Dubai, UAE
2013
- “East in Twist”. Leila Heller Gallery, New York, USA
2012
- “Actual Tradition”. Kicik Qalart Gallery, Baku, Azerbaijan
Group exhibitions
2023
- “Transform Any Room”, Des Moines Art Center. Iowa, USA
- “Core Memory: Encoded”, Newcomb Art Museum of Tulane. New Orleans, LA, USA
- “The Playground”, House of Art Georges & Claude Pompidou. Contemporary Art Center. Cajarc, France
2022
- “Silk”, GAD - Giudecca Art District. Venice, Italy
- “Core Memory: Encoded”, Newcomb Art Museum of Tulane. New Orleans, LA, USA
- “The Playground”, House of Art Georges & Claude Pompidou. Contemporary Art Center. Cajarc, France
2021
- “The Silk Web”, The Dowse Art Museum. Lower Hutt, New Zealand
- “As Precious as Gold, Carpets from the Islamic World”, Currier Museum of Art. Manchester, USA
- EXPO 2020, Azerbaijan Pavilion. Dubai, UAE
- Art Stays Festival of Contemporary Art. Ptuj, Slovenia
2020
- “A Collection in the Making. Art – Architecture – Design”. The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design. Oslo, Norway
- “Guests: Artists and Craftspeople”. Istanbul Modern. Istanbul, Turkey
- “The Russian Fairy Tale. From Vasnetsov to the Present”, New Tretyakov Gallery. Moscow Russia
- “Still Human”, Colección SOLO. Madrid, Spain
- “Future Artifacts”, Projective Eye Gallery at UNC Charlotte Center City. The University of North Carolina, Charlotte, USA
2019
- “Off the Velvet Chest” Triumph gallery. Moscow, Russia
- “Le conseguenze dell’errore” TRA Treviso Ricerca Arte. Treviso, Italy
- “Tommy Cash and Rick Owens. The Pure and the Damned” Kumu Art Museum. Tallinn, Estonia
- "Hannah Ryggen Triennial 2019: New land" Nordenfjeldske Kunstindustrimuseum (National Museum of Decorative Arts) Trondheim, Norway
- “Tradition Interrupted” Bedford Gallery at the Lesher Center for the Arts. Walnut Creek, California, USA
- “Derived from the Decorative: Works by Faig Ahmed, Beth Lipman and Bouke de Vries”
- Cheekwood Estate and Gardens. Nashville, Tennessee, USA
2018
- “The Shapes of Birds: Contemporary Art of the Middle East and North Africa”. Newport Art Museum, Newport, Rhode Island, USA
- “Faig Ahmed” Church Fine Arts, Sheppard Contemporary. Reno, Nevada, USA
- “ The Phantom of Liberty: Contemporary Works in the RISD Museum Collection”. RISD Museum, Rhode Island, USA
- “ .OBJ ”, National Design & Craft Gallery. Castle Yard, Kilkenny, Ireland
- “Nomadic Murals: Contemporary Tapestries and Carpets”, Boca Raton Museum of Art. Boca Raton, USA
- “Tissage Tressage quand la sculpture defile”, Villa Datris Foundation. Paris, France
- “The Atlantic Triangle”, 11th Mercosul Visual Arts Biennial. Porto Alegre, Brazil
- “Long, Winding Journeys: Contemporary Art and The Islamic Tradition”, Katonah Museum of Art. Katonah, USA
2017
- “NGV Triennial”, National Gallery of Victoria. Melbourne, Australia
- “4th Ural Industrial Biennial of Contemporary Art”. Ural region, Russia
- “Contemporary Art in Carpets and Flying Carpet”, Azerbaijan Carpet Museum. Baku, Azerbaijan
- “OSTRALE – Biennale, 11th International Exhibition of Contemporary Art”. Dresden, Germany
2016
- “On The Origin of Art”, MONA - Museum of Old and New Art. Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
- “Out of Hand”, Museum of Applied Arts & Sciences, Powerhouse Museum. Ultimo, Sydney, Australia
- “Wall to Wall. Carpets by Artists”, Museum of Contemporary Art. Cleveland, USA
- “FITE 2016 – REBELS”, Musée Bargoin. Clermont-Ferrand, France
- “Atoms and Bytes: Redefining Craft in the Digital Age”, Bellevue Arts Museum. Bellevue, Washington, USA
- “Repetition- Reticulation” Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design. Milwaukee, USA
- “Islamic Art Now, Part 2. Contemporary Art of the Middle East” The Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Los Angeles, USA
2015
- "Crafted: Object in Flux", Museum of Fine Arts Boston. Boston, USA
- “Exploring Inward”. Louise Blouin Foundation. London, UK
2014
- “Threads”, Museum voor Moderne Kunst Arnhem. Arnhem, Netherlands
- “At the Crossroads 2”, Sotheby's Auction House. London, UK
2013
- “Love me, Love me Not”, 55th Venice Biennale, Yarat Contemporary Art Space Pavilion. Venice, Italy
- “Jameel Prize 3” shortlist nomination, Victoria & Albert Museum. London, UK
2012
- “Fly to Baku. Contemporary Art From Azerbaijan”, Phillips de Pury & Company. London, UK
2011
- “On Soz”, Yarat Contemporary Art Space, Baku
- “Fabulous Four”, Kicik Qalart Gallery, Baku
2008
- “Steps of time”, Kunsthalle im Lipsiusbau, Dresden, Germany
2007
- “Aluminum 3”, International Biennial of Contemporary Art, Baku Azerbaijan
- 52nd Venice Biennale, Azerbaijan pavilion, Venice, Italy
2006
- “Caucasus”, National Center for Contemporary Art, Moscow, Russia
Curatorial projects
[edit]2013
- Zavod, Baku Air Condition Plant building. Baku, Azerbaijan
- Exhibition "World is yours, World is mine". Baku, Azerbaijan
2017
- ARTIM LAB: 24HRS PROJECT-EXHIBITION ZERO. Baku, Azerbaijan
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Faig Ahmed Pulls the Threads of Islamic Tradition with his Rewoven Rugs". Artsy. 2016-03-18. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
- ^ a b "Faig Ahmed". DIALOGIST. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
- ^ Binder, Universes in Universe - Gerhard Haupt & Pat. "Faig Ahmed, Azerbaijan. Venice Biennial 2007". universes-in-universe.de. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
- ^ "Azerbaijani artists to feature at Venice Bienalle in unprecedented Love Me, Love Me Not - YARAT".
- ^ "11th Mercosul Visual Arts Biennial - the Atlantic Triangle | Exhibition".
- ^ Cocozza, Paula (2016-11-13). "Magic carpets: the art of Faig Ahmed's melted and pixellated rugs". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-01-02.
- ^ Williams, Gisela (2016-05-10). "A Rebellious Artist's Psychedelic Rugs". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-01-02.
- ^ Lewis, Danny. "This Artist Makes Traditional Carpets That Look Like They Were hit by a Software Bug". Smithsonian. Retrieved 2019-01-02.