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Venue
ARNDT Fine Art
Date
2015.06.27 Sat - 2015.09.06 Sun
Opening Exhibition
06/27/2015 16:00
Address
Gillman Barracks 9 Lock Road #03-21 Singapore 108937
Telephone
+65 67340775
Opening Hours
Wednesday to Sunday: 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Director
Matthias Arndt
Email
info@arndtfineart.com

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Transition / Evacuation by Khadim Ali /ARNDT Singapore
[Press Release]

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ARNDT has partnered with Art Stage Singapore to host an exhibition walkthrough with Khadim Ali on Saturday, 27 June at 2.30 pm. We will be joined by Singaporean curator June Yap for the guided tour. Admission is free but seats are limited. To register, please email singapore@arndtberlin.com.

ARNDT Singapore is pleased to announce its first solo exhibition by Khadim Ali.

Following the style of miniature painting and rug making, Sydney-based artist Khadim Ali makes use of traditional methods in his work which draws inspiration from Afghan mythology dating back thousands of years.

The artist hails from the Hazara minority in Afghanistan where his family was forced to flee from their home, escaping Taliban massacres. They settled in Quetta, Balochistan in Pakistan where Khadim was born and raised. In 2000, Khadim was accepted into the National College of Art in Lahore, Pakistan, where he specialised Miniature Painting. The turbulent times were unrelenting, and after losing many family members to the Taliban, Khadim realised it was no longer possible to continue his art making in Pakistan. He was offered a distinguished talent visa by the Australian government in 2010, and moved to Sydney. The relocation offered him greater mobility, and the opportunity to develop work incorporating other art forms.

Khadim Ali’s current body of work reflects his many concerns and demonstrates an adept way of combining mediums and conceptualizations. Speaking about his work, Ali states “It’s a medium of confrontation, connecting me with my present collective identity”. The artist´s deepening anxieties about events in the region he still calls ‘home’, (both Pakistan and Afghanistan) reflects his responsibility concerning his role as an artist– and despite the harrowing conflicts that are implied throughout most of his practice, an unexpected sense of heroism prevails.