Dahlia Elsayed

Dahlia Elsayed (born 1969) is a New York-based painter, writer, and teaching artist whose work explores the relationships between language and landscape. Her work has won awards and been shown at galleries and art institutions internationally.

Dahlia Elsayed
Born1969 (age 5051)
NationalityAmerican
EducationBarnard College
Columbia University School of the Arts

Early Life and education

Born in New York City, Elsayed grew up in New Jersey. She graduated magna cum laude from Barnard College with a BA degree in English in 1992. In 1994, she received her M.F.A. from Columbia University School of the Arts.[1][2] Elsayed's mother is Armenian and her father is Egyptian. For three generations, her family had to move from continent to continent due to political and religious persecution.[3]

Career

Elsayed uses the process of writing and image-making to create visual narratives through installation and painting.[4] She draws inspiration from conceptual art, comics, cartography and landscape painting.[3] In her work, Elsayed often overlaps maps from the past and the present with people and events, serving as records of internal and external geographies. Her interest in mapping stems from her family's history of migration.[3] "Writing and painting are close processes for me and language is central to my work, both as formal element and subject matter. For over a decade, I have been making text and image based work that synthesizes an internal and external experience of place, connecting the ephemeral to the concrete." – Dahlia Elsayed[5] Elsayed's psychological maps on paper read like ironic, self-deprecating versions of 19th-century phrenology busts.[6]

Elsayed connects the psychological with the topographical. Overlapping symbols of flags, signs, borders, geologic forms with metaphors, lists, and idioms. In her work, images, locations, and language negotiate and continuously reshape each other.[5]

Exhibitions and awards

Elsayed's art has been exhibited at galleries and art institutions internationally and throughout the United States, these include Hunterdon Museum of Art, The New Jersey City Museum, Montclair Art Museum, Morris Museum, The Newark Museum, New Jersey State Museum, The Zimmerli Museum, Johnson & Johnson Corporation, among others. Elsayed has received awards from the Joan Mitchell Foundation, the Edward Albee Foundation, Visual Studies Workshop, Women's Studio Workshop, Headlands Center for the Arts, and The NJ State Council on the Arts.[7] She completed a residency at The Center for Book Arts, NYC, in 2014.

Selected solo exhibitions

gollark: Also whatever America is doing with guns.
gollark: Well, to clarify, I find many of the things the *federal government* does bee. Such as basically everything involving the NSA and its border control.
gollark: Increasingly, people seem to want their preferred laws to be enforced at the federal level, probably because something something internet something something greater visibility of further away regions of the country.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._Filburn
gollark: Is it *that* restricted? Apparently there was a thing where it was *somehow* ruled that feeding animals things was "interstate commerce" and thus federally controlled.

References

  1. Oweis, Fayeq S. (2008). Encyclopedia of Arab American artists (1. publ. ed.). Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. pp. 108–111. ISBN 9780313337307.
  2. Gorce, Tammy La (January 16, 2014). "A Review of 'Dahlia Elsayed: Hither and Yon' at New Jersey State Museum". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 12, 2017.
  3. "Arab American Artists at the 12th International Cairo Biennale". Arab American National Museum. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
  4. "Dahlia Elsayed – Lower Manhattan Cultural Council". Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. Retrieved March 12, 2017.
  5. "Dahlia Elsayed; Hither and Yon". New Jersey State Museum, Trenton. 2009.
  6. "What Are We Still Mapping For?". Hyperallergic. April 25, 2013. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  7. "About & Bio". Dahlia Elsayed. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.