Exhibitions
《CONDO London 2024 - Heroes》, 2024.01.20 – 2024.02.17, Project Native Informant (London)
January 15, 2024
Project Native Informant (London)
Installation view © Project
Native Informant
For the exhibition Heroes, P21 presents the works of South Korean
artist Taewon Ahn alongside Gianni Manhattan presenting the works of French
artist Ibrahim Meïté Sikely. What results is an exploration of the interplay of
the contemporary uncanny within the practices of Taewon Ahn and Ibrahim Meïté
Sikely.
In the context of a visual dialectic, Ahn's practice traverses the
liminal spaces of the digital realm, transmuting ephemeral memes into tangible
artworks. The Hiro series becomes a locus of inquiry, a contemplation on the
saturation and transience of digital images, drawing attention to their
ephemeral nature, where the act of distortion becomes a metaphor for the
malleability and impermanence of digital representations.
Sikely’s canvases echo and incorporate art-historical iconography,
comics, manga and video games. The poetic cadence of his works, with their
vibrant compositions suggest a complex negotiation of identity within the
contemporary digital landscape. By appropriating imagery from manga and anime
into traditional oil on canvas, Ibrahim blurs the boundaries between the
digital and the analog, challenging established hierarchies of representation,
navigating the intersections of struggle, justice, trauma and healing.
The central thesis of Heroes lies in the appropriation of digital
imagery by both artists. Ahn’s meticulous contortions of his pet cat, Hiro,
evoke the surrealist tradition through the contemporary lens and Sikely’s
characters, while devoid of capes, subtly allude to superhero archetypes. In
both instances the digital manipulation or translation becomes a form of
revelation, bringing to the surface the hidden potential within the digital
image.
Ahn’s feline muse, Hiro, now adorned with wings, provides a bridge to
Sikely’s domain of characters, gesturing towards the symbiosis of realism and
fantasy. In both practices, vulnerability becomes a unifying force, blurring
the lines between the abject and the empathetic.