Toronto-based Kurdish artist Roda Medhat pushes the boundaries of material into the realm of sculpture, exploring the methods by which conventional West Asian textiles will be translated into varied media. As digital fabrication and 3D scanning cross paths with reminiscence and materials, Medhat’s apply asks “how we stock our tales, and what occurs when these tales are translated into new, artificial languages?”
The artist’s new solo exhibition, titled From the Loom, fills Toronto’s Abbozzo Gallery with large-scale sculptures in dialog with a brand new sequence of textile works. Recognized partially for his neon installations, the artist additionally presents a number of glowing light-based works encased inside glass or acrylic, redolent of patterned Kurdish rugs.

A number of of Medhat’s pictures and symbols—most prominently younger boys driving horses and interacting with nature—are sourced from Kurdish kids’s books. These icons are woven straight into the floor of every textile by the use of an digital Jacquard machine, additional accentuating the distinction between preserved cultural objects and up to date reconstruction. Within the exhibition’s assertion, Medhat shares that his work “features as a distillation of a wider physique of analysis,” together with the up to date subversion of archival supplies.
“The Sheep and the Chevrolet,” an anchoring work throughout the exhibition, reimagines François Balsan’s problematic 1947 ethnographic work of the identical title. Pitting bucolic Kurdish life with Western modernism, Balsan’s off-key travelogue offered a stereotypical, extremely subjective view of Kurdish tradition. Medhat’s daring sculpture invokes 3D printing to assemble a monumental sheep composedly sitting atop a small Chevrolet car, providing a playful level of reconceptualization.
From the Loom is on view via Could 26. You’ll find extra from the artist on Instagram.














