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Shoja Azari & Shahram Karimi
Video Paintings

29 July 29 - 15 August
LTMH Gallery
Pop Up Exhibition Southampton, NY
Shoja Azari & Shahram Karimi. Spring (from the Silence Series), 2007-2008. Acrylic on canvas with video projection, 50 x 89 inches. Courtesy the artists and LTMH Gallery, New York
Shoja Azari & Shahram Karimi. Summer (from the Silence Series), 2007-2008.. Acrylic on canvas with video projection, 50 x 89 inches. Courtesy the artists and LTMH Gallery, New York.
Shoja Azari & Shahram Karimi. Autumn (from the Silence Series), 2007-2008. Acrylic on canvas with video projection, 50 x 89 inches. Courtesy the artists and LTMH Gallery, New York.
Opening reception: July 29
Benefit Event for Southampton Fresh Air Home presented by Leila Heller: August 6




SOUTHAMPTON, NY.  A SOLO exhibition of collaborative work by video artist and filmmaker Shoja Azari and painter Shahram Karimi will be on view at LTMH Gallery’s pop-up exhibition at Tripoli Gallery of Contemporary Art, 30A Jobs Lane, Southampton, from July 29 – August 15, 2011. The space is located across the street from the Parrish Museum. Featured in the exhibition are the artists’ innovative “video paintings,” which combine painting with video projection to create dynamic surfaces of moving images. The opening reception will be held on Friday, July 29, from 6-9 p.m. A special benefit for Southampton Fresh Air Home a not-for-profit residential camp for physically challenged youth, presented by Leila Heller, will be held on Saturday, August 6 from 5-8 p.m. A percentage of proceeds will benefit Southampton Fresh Air Home.

Azari and Karimi’s video paintings are achieved by superimposing filmed footage of landscapes onto canvases that are painted with the same subject matter. Once the mirrored moving image is projected onto the painted canvas, the flat surface is suddenly brought to life. The physical result is unexpected, and the viewer gets a distinct impression that these surfaces have been infused with poetry
and life.

Included in the exhibition is Azari and Karimi’s Silence Series, 2007-2008, which is comprised of four video painting works, each representing one of the four seasons. In these works, abstract views of a lake are depicted with subtle movements of wind, water, rain, and other natural elements bringing the canvas alive, and imparting an element of real time on an otherwise frozen moment.

Also on view will be two new video paintings, The Mist, 2011, and Dusk, 2011, which introduce increasingly realistic elements including birds, boats, buildings, and people. In The Mist, a trio of people swim across a misty lake. Dusk portrays a spectacular view of the New York City skyline, alive with light and movement.

The newest work of American artist Rachel Hovnanian , a five-foot sculpture of a black bathing suit explores the reward and the cost of beauty, can be viewed at LTMH Gallery. The work, which is entitled Body Armor, 2010, is delivered with monochromatic precision and while it is made of bronze it looks like leather. Hovnanian uses simple observation honed by life experiences that often verge on the caustic and the humorous. The artist explores the tensions encountered by conforming to conventional beauty as well as how physical beauty is valued and the search for inner meaning.
About Shoja Azari

Iranian-born Shoja Azari has lived in New York City since 1983. His films and video installations have been screened and exhibited widely around the world. His video work has been seen in solo gallery exhibitions in London; Turin, Italy; and Köln, Germany, and at art fairs including Art Basel, Switzerland, and ARCO, Madrid. Most recently he has had solo exhibitions at LTMH Gallery in New York, and Galerie Jerome de Noirmont in Paris. Since 1997, he has collaborated with Shirin Neshat on video installations and feature films including Women Without Men, which won the Silver Lion for best director at the 2009 Venice Film Festival.


About Shahram Karimi

Shahram Karimi was born in 1957 in Iran, and grew up in Shiraz. He has worked as the production designer on many of Shirin Neshat’s films, most recently the award winning Women Without Men. Karimi’s art has been widely exhibited in Iran, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Germany, Italy, and New York. He most recently had a solo exhibition at the Stadtmuseum in Siegburg, Germany.