Dates: | 23 June – 6 August 2023 |
Venue: | Delfina Foundation |
Opening times: | Mon – Sun, 12:00 – 17:00 |
Access information: | Please refer to this page. |
FEATURED IN
- Shows to see in mid-July – ArtAsiaPacific
- Top 10 Exhibitions to See in June 2023 – ArtReview
- The best free exhibitions in London – Evening Standard
- Plus reviews on e-flux and Canvas, interviews on Ocula and Something Curated, and a profile on Burlington Contemporary.
ABOUT
Delfina Foundation is proud to present the first European solo exhibition by its former resident, LA-based Iranian artist, writer, and filmmaker Gelare Khoshgozaran, guest curated by Eliel Jones.
Born in Tehran in 1986, Khoshgozaran produces work that engages with the legacies of imperial violence. Through film and video Khoshgozaran explores narratives of belonging outside of the geographies and temporalities that both unsettle a sense of home, and make places of affinity uninhabitable.
To Be the Author of One’s Own Travels brings together three films by Khoshgozaran — two of which are new commissions — that continue the artist’s deep reflections on the effects of displacement. Through the invoking of various social and political imaginaries, both past and present, Khoshgozaran’s exhibition seeks to speak to the personal impact of exile and its generative potential as a space to build transnational solidarity.
Shown for the first time in the UK, To Keep the Mountain at Bay (2023) is a short film shot on Super 8, which explores the figure of the mountain as a witness to experiences of displacement and exile. Conceived as an ode to Etel Adnan and her relationship to California, the film weaves together fragmented images and words that speak against the passivity of nostalgia and assimilationist propaganda.
In close proximity to this work, Khoshgozaran’s new hand-edit of the 1939 animation Gulliver’s Travels will be projected on loop through a prism, producing a visual distortion of images in the space. The exhibition draws its title from the original Jonathan Swift novel, a piece of literature fuelled by the gallivanting tales of 18th century upper-class English men — an imaginary that is stark in its contrast with the ongoing crisis of movement of vulnerable populations of the Global South who face the closed borders of Europe and North America.
Delving into the temporal, spatial and relational effects that these contemporary migratory movements have on the body and mind of the exiled, the third film presented will be an ambitious visual expansion of Khoshgozaran’s 2022 essay, The Too Many and No Homes of Exile. Central to this newly-commissioned work is an ‘exile retreat’ organised by Khoshgozaran in rural France with participants recruited from an international open call for individuals who are barred from returning due to border partitions, war, occupation, colonial settlements, fear of political persecution or other circumstances.
Khoshgozaran’s discursive and participatory approach towards developing this new moving image commission is guided by a desire to create space for the convening of persons in exile across borders, languages, and histories. In the process, the artist seeks to create an adjacency to similar gatherings sparked by civil and global wars of the early 20th century — in particular, the convenings made possible by the radical hospitality of the Catalan psychiatrist Francesc Tosquelles.
It was at the psychiatric hospital of Saint-Alban-sur-Limagnole, in Lozère, where Tosquelles worked for over 20 years, that numerous international artists, writers, and thinkers escaped political persecution, whether through engaging in psychoanalytic training, or through taking informal long-term shelter in the space. All in one way or another became involved with his vision for a type of ‘anti-concentrationist’ environment, which integrated patients with the local community, involved them in meaningful work, and sparked their engagement and participation in various types of cultural production.
At a time of on-going urgent calls for the fulfilment of a politics of abolition of prisons and migrant detention centres, of occupations and expanded forms of carcerality, Khoshgozaran’s exhibition will create a space to contemplate alienation, world-building, and the role of fantasy to cross boundaries and enclosures both literal and figurative.
ARTIST BIOGRAPHY
Gelare Khosgozaran’s work has been exhibited at the New Museum, Queens Museum, Hammer Museum, LAXART, London Short Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival, Artspeak, Plug In ICA, and Museo Ex Teresa Arte Actual among others. Khoshgozaran was the recipient of a LACE Lightening Fund (2022), Graham Foundation Award (2020), the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award (2019), Art Matters Award (2017), Rema Hort Mann Foundation Emerging Artist Grant (2016), and the Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant (2015). She received her BFA from University of Arts in Tehran, in 2009, and MFA from University of Southern California, in 2011. Gelare Khosgozaran was an artist-in-residence at Delfina Foundation during spring 2021.
Curator Biography
Eliel Jones is an independent curator, writer and organiser based in London. He was recently the Curator of the Brent Biennial 2022, titled In the House of my Love, and Interim Head of Programmes for Metroland Cultures. Jones’ research interests and methodologies stem from intersectional approaches to queer and feminist discourse and are guided by his involvement in direct community action and solidarity. Other curatorial projects include: Queer Correspondence, Cell Project Space, London; do you host?, Ujazdowski Castle CCA, Warsaw; Acts of Translation, Mohammed and Mahera Abu Ghazaleh Foundation, Amman; and Experiments on Public Space, Dallas Museum of Art, Texas. He has previously held curatorial positions at organisations including Cell Project Space and Chisenhale Gallery (both in London), where he has worked towards realising commissions of new work by emerging artists, including Alex Baczynski-Jenkins, Maeve Brennan, Luke Willis Thompson, Hannah Black, Lydia Ourahmane, Paul Maheke, Krzysztof Baginski, Carlos Maria Romero (AKA Atabey Mamasita) and Joseph Funnell, amongst others. Jones has written over a hundred pieces of criticism on contemporary art and performance for various international platforms and publications, including Artforum, Frieze, The Guardian, Flash Art, Mousse, and X-TRA. He is an Associate Lecturer in the MA Curating and Collections at Chelsea College of Art, London; a Trustee of PEER UK; and a Selection Committee Member for the LUX Moving Image Collection (2023-2024). In autumn 2023, Jones will take up the position of Curator Performance and Time-Based Media at Kanal-Centre Pompidou, a new interdisciplinary museum in Brussels due open in 2025.
CURATOR
PRESS COVERAGE
- Review on e-flux Criticism.
- Review on Canvas Magazine.
- Interview with Gelare Khoshgozaran for Ocula.
- Interview with Gelare Khoshgozaran for Something Curated.
INTERVIEW
In Conversation: Gelare Khoshgozaran and Eliel Jones
PRESS RELEASE
PRESS CONTACT
Helen Gale,
Marketing and Communications Manager
helen@delfinafoundation.com
press@delfinafoundation.com
+44 (0)207 233 5344
CURATOR TOUR
Saturday 15 July, 15:00-16:00
OPENING
CREDITS
The exhibition has been made possible thanks to support from: The Andy Warhol Foundation Lightning Fund via LACE – Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions; the Elephant Trust; Delfina Foundation’s Network of Patrons for the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia; and the Gelare Khoshgozaran Exhibition Circle.
Other forthcoming exhibitions
Farah Al Qasimi: 4 October – 12 November 2023