Salzburger Kunstverein

Tarik Kiswanson

Afterwards

19 Jul - 10 Sep 2023

Exhibition view Tarik Kiswanson. Afterwards, Salzburger Kunstverein 2023, photo: Rainer Iglar, © Salzburger Kunstverein.
Exhibition view Tarik Kiswanson. Afterwards, Salzburger Kunstverein 2023, photo: Rainer Iglar, © Salzburger Kunstverein.
Exhibition view Tarik Kiswanson. Afterwards, Salzburger Kunstverein 2023, photo: Rainer Iglar, © Salzburger Kunstverein.
Tarik Kiswanson, The Wait, 2023, resin, fiberglass, paint, wooden chair, 143 x 52 cm, chair 80 x 50 x 50 cm, courtesy the artist. Exhibition view Tarik Kiswanson. Afterwards, Salzburger Kunstverein 2023, photo: Rainer Iglar, © Salzburger Kunstverein.
Tarik Kiswanson, The Wait, 2023, resin, fiberglass, paint, wooden chair, 143 x 52 cm, chair 80 x 50 x 50 cm, courtesy the artist. Exhibition view Tarik Kiswanson. Afterwards, Salzburger Kunstverein 2023, photo: Rainer Iglar, © Salzburger Kunstverein.
Tarik Kiswanson, The Wait, 2023, resin, fiberglass, paint, wooden chair, 143 x 52 cm, chair 80 x 50 x 50 cm, courtesy the artist. Exhibition view Tarik Kiswanson. Afterwards, Salzburger Kunstverein 2023, photo: Rainer Iglar, © Salzburger Kunstverein.
F.l.t.r.: Tarik Kiswanson, Contact Sheet, 2016, stainless steel, 250 x 135 x 3 cm, courtesy the artist and carlier l gebauer. Tarik Kiswanson, The Wait, 2023, resin, fiberglass, paint, wooden chair, 143 x 52 cm, chair 80 x 50 x 50 cm, courtesy the artist. Exhibition view Tarik Kiswanson. Afterwards, Salzburger Kunstverein 2023, photo: Rainer Iglar, © Salzburger Kunstverein.
Tarik Kiswanson, Respite, 2020, resin, candle, 40 x 28 x 9 cm, courtesy the artist and Sfeir-Semler Gallery Beirut / Hamburg. Exhibition view Tarik Kiswanson. Afterwards, Salzburger Kunstverein 2023, photo: Rainer Iglar, © Salzburger Kunstverein.
Tarik Kiswanson presents a multi-form installation of new work in the Great Hall. Forms of rootlessness, regeneration and renewal are combined in this project through poetic sculptural and architectural gestures, where we see post-war histories eliding with contemporaneous experience. Born in Halmstad, Sweden in 1986 where his family exiled from Palestine, Kiswanson’s practice has been described as evincing a poetics of métissage: a means of writing and surviving between multiple conditions and contexts. His broad artistic practice acts as a cosmology of related conceptual families, each exploring variations on themes like refraction, multiplication, disintegration, levitation, hybridity, and polyphony through their own distinct language. Tarik Kiswanson is a 2023 Nominee for the Marcel Duchamp Prize.

Tarik Kiswanson (*1986 in Schweden) lives and works in Paris.

Exhibition curated by Séamus Kealy.
 

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