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Dala Nasser: Adonis River Opening Talk

  • The Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago 5811 South Ellis Avenue Chicago, IL, 60637 United States (map)

Please join the Renaissance Society to celebrate the opening of Dala Nasser’s solo exhibition Adonis River. There will be an artist talk at 4pm followed by refreshments until 7pm. The gallery will be open from noon to 7pm.

The artist talk will take place in Swift Hall, the 3rd floor lecture room in the Divinity School building. The Divinity School is a one minute walk from Cobb Hall (the Renaissance Society is on the 4th floor of Cobb). Cobb Hall and the Divinity School are handicap accessible. Please contact us if you need directions or accommodations.

As an artist working through abstraction and alternative forms of image-making, Nasser applies an interdisciplinary approach through painting, performance, and film. Her indexical paintings of land, made through direct contact on location, stand in opposition to the sweeping vistas offered by traditional landscape painting. In contrast, Nasser’s canvases provide close-up views of the markings of political and environmental erosion and toxicity. Finding meaning in materials and physical processes, Nasser’s works examine the deteriorating ecological, historical, and political conditions that result from practices of capitalist and colonial extraction. In a growing body of work that foregrounds human and non-human entanglements, she takes the non-human as witness to ecologies of slow violence, colonial theft, and infrastructural failure in times where human language has been rendered insufficient or out of reach.

Nasser’s project at the Ren centers on the Adonis River (known in modern day Lebanon as the Abraham River) where the mythical Adonis, the mortal lover of the Goddess Aphrodite, was killed by a wild boar. To this day, the myths surrounding this river are commemorated in pilgrimages of mourning and grief. Nasser made the paintings for the exhibition inside the cave where Adonis was killed, on fabrics dyed with iron oxide-rich local clay and washed in the river’s water. Rather than hanging on walls, these works are configured into three-dimensional spatial environments that evoke the Adonis temple, the cave, and its surroundings.

Curated by Myriam Ben Salah. This show is on view until November 26, 2023.

More information on the event can be found here.

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September 16

Le Ventre de Paris

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Unbreakable: Feminist Visions from the Gilberto Cárdenas and Dolores Garcia Collection