Jump to content

Draft:Nadine Faraj

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Biography

[edit]

Nadine Faraj (b. Montréal 1977) is an artist primarily known for her watercolour paintings.

Artwork

[edit]

Faraj uses an expressionistic painting style which heightens the social and political tensions that resonate within her work. Her figures are painted in varying degrees of abstraction, with many of her source images deriving from the world of pornography, which often trivializes sex and can be considered dehumanizing. She depicts the deeper psychological states of her figures to express their humanity, political agency, and spiritual dimensions.[1] In 2016, her work tackled political issues when she created portraits of topless female protestors from around the world. In her exhibition Naked Revolt, female figures with text scrawled across their bare chests reading messages such as “égalité,” “with love for female masculinity,” and “still not asking for it,” present a radical vision of female nudity and political power.[2] Art critic Priscilla Frank describes the subjects in her paintings as, "...real-life activists who crusade for the right of women to possess and express their own bodies without being endangered, demeaned, or accused of narcissism or promiscuity."[3] In 2019, Faraj exhibited a series of works dealing with body positivity and LGBTQIA+ representations at Anna Zorina Gallery in New York titled, Get Used To Us, referencing the historic queer slogan, "We're here. We're queer. Get used to us." Art critic Seph Rodney described the shifting quality of the figures in Get Used To Us: "...physical borders are almost always indistinct...Bodies lose themselves in other bodies, melding and morphing in a representation of the act of attempting to forget the self. The sex displayed is straight and queer and undefined. And the borders of gender, therefore, become hazily obscured too..."[4]

Exhibitions

[edit]

Nadine Faraj’s solo exhibitions include Pink Moon Pleasures (2022) at IRL in Brooklyn, New York, Pink Moon Ceremony (2022) at Anna Zorina Gallery, New York, Pink Moon People at McBride Contemporain (2021), in Montréal, Get Used To Us (2019) and Naked Revolt (2016) at Anna Zorina Gallery, New York, and Miel Salé (Salted Honey) (2013) at Galerie Joyce Yahouda in Montréal. Her solo installation at SPRING/BREAK Art Show (2019) was reviewed in multiple recent publications.[5] [6] [7] [8] [9] Her work was included in the group exhibitions Abortion is Normal in New York (2020), CURRENTS: ABORTION at A.I.R. Gallery in New York (2018), G.R.O.S.S. at Never Apart in Montreal (2017), Radical Love: Female Lust exhibited at the Crypt Gallery in London, England (2017), Three Women at Anna Zorina Gallery in New York (2015), and in Battle of the Masters at Open Gallery, New York (2015).[10]

Faraj made other installations specifically for galleries and festivals including Beacon (Phare) for Articule Gallery’s winter window project in Montreal (2009-2010),[11] Élément for IMAGE IN situ in Quebec City (2010), and in Toronto for Scotiabank's Nuit Blanche (2010).[12] [13] In 2008, Faraj was invited to exhibit her work in the Dubai International Art Symposium, UAE.[2][14]

[edit]

Fia Darroch, "Unabashed Exhuberance and "A Lot of Water,"" article on Nadine Faraj's work in the Pink Moon People solo exhibition at McBride Contemporain, AlloyCuratorial.com, December 14, 2021. https://www.alloycuratorial.com/blog/unabashed-exuberance-and-a-lot-of-water

Press Release from McBride Contemporain for the solo exhibition Pink Moon People by Nadine Faraj.

3D tour of Get Used To Us at Anna Zorina Gallery on Artland.com: https://www.artland.com/exhibitions/get-used-to-us-357375

Marta Bausells, "The female artists taking inspiration from ancient erotic poems," Huck Magazine, February 14, 2017: https://www.huckmag.com/art-and-culture/art-2/radical-love-female-lust-arab-muslim-artists/

Michael Anthony Farley. “NSFW GIF of the Hump Day: Nadine Faraj,” Art F City, October 5, 2016, http://artfcity.com/2016/10/05/nsfw-gif-of-the-hump-day-nadine- faraj/

Michael Anthony Farley. “This Week’s Must-See Art Events: An Overdue Eclipse of Male Artists,” Art F City, October 3, 2016. http://artfcity.com/2016/10/03/this-weeks-must-see-art-events-an-overdue-eclipse-of-male-artists/

Priscilla Frank. “Inspired By Erotic Arabic Poetry, Women Artists Depict Radical Love,” The Huffington Post Canada, Arts and Culture, February 7, 2017. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/arab-erotic-poetry-women-art_us_5894f58de4b0c1284f260615

Priscilla Frank, "Paintings of Feminist Protestors Celebrate The Women Who Bare All To Fight Back," HuffPost, Arts and Culture, October 17, 2016: https://www.huffingtonpost.ca/entry/nadine-faraj-feminist-watercolors_us_57fff4f2e4b0162c043afff2

Seph Rodney, "Bodies Lose Themselves Within Other Bodies in Erotic Watercolors," in Hyperallergic, April 4, 2019: https://hyperallergic.com/492943/nadine-faraj-get-used-to-us-anna-zorina-gallery/

Jerry Saltz. "Are There Banner Works of Art On Instagram?" Vulture, December 2, 2014. http://www.vulture.com/2014/12/saltz-great-instagram-art.html

Sarah Sharp, "Tool Book." Brooklyn, NY: ToolBooks, 2017, pp. 106 – 111.

Emily Spicer. "Rip it Up: Paper, Politics and Power," Elephant magazine, March 8, 2018: https://elephant.art/power-on-the-page/

Select Print Publications

[edit]

Faraj, Nadine. Nadine Faraj: Naked Revolt (New York City: Anna Zorina Gallery Press, 2016).

Faraj, Nadine. “Naked Revolt: artwork by Nadine Faraj,” in A Woman’s Thing Magazine, The Fight Issue, no. 10 (Winter 2016-17). Cover image and images on pages 4-9.

Zevitas, Steven T., Ed. New American Paintings, no. 123 (April/May 2016): 17, 52-55.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Anna Zorina Gallery, “Nadine Faraj,” Biography page. http://annazorinagallery.com/artist/nadine-faraj/biography/
  2. ^ a b Anna Zorina Gallery, “Nadine Faraj: Naked Revolt,” Exhibition page. http://annazorinagallery.com/exhibition/nadine-faraj-naked-revolt/
  3. ^ Frank, Priscilla (2016-10-17). "Paintings Of Feminist Protestors Celebrate The Women Who Bare It All". HuffPost Canada. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  4. ^ Rodney, Seph (2019-04-04). "Bodies Lose Themselves Within Other Bodies in Erotic Watercolors". Hyperallergic. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  5. ^ Rodney, Seph (2019-03-08). "This Year, the Spring/Break Art Show Is Less Fanciful but Still Worth It". Hyperallergic. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  6. ^ Cohen, Alina (2019-03-06). "7 Artists Who Stole the Show at Spring/Break". Artsy. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  7. ^ Felman, Avery (2019-03-11). "Spring/Break (Art Fair) Forever". www.lofficielusa.com. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  8. ^ Stephanie, Eckardt (2019-03-09). "The Most Instagrammed Art of Armory Week 2019". W Magazine | Women's Fashion & Celebrity News. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  9. ^ Abrams, Loney (2019-03-06). "9 Exceptional Artworks from Spring/Break Art Show 2019 that Aren't Penile". Artspace. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  10. ^ Nadine Faraj. Bio page. https://www.nadinefaraj.com/bio
  11. ^ Jérôme Delgado, “Devantures de magasins,” Le Devoir, Jan. 10, 2010, E8.
  12. ^ Susan Brooks, Nuit Blanche plans art that rocks,” CBC News, Arts, July 21, 2010. www.cbc.ca/news/arts/nuit-blanche-plans-art-that-rocks-1.959794
  13. ^ Matthew Harris, “Nuit Blanche 2010: The best and worst of Zone A,” October 4, 2010. www.blogto.com/arts/2010/10/nuit_blanche_2010_the_best_and_worst_of_zone_a/
  14. ^ Anna Zorina Gallery, “Nadine Faraj,” Biography page. http://annazorinagallery.com/artist/nadine-faraj/biography/