Press Release

Gazelli Art House presents The New Verge, the first joint exhibition of Ashraf Murad and Farhad Khalilov, two of Azerbaijan’s most significant artists of the last century. Although the two artists are contemporaries, they have never been exhibited together, and The New Verge (a title inspired by the article Kazimir Malevich published in a daily newspaper Anarchy on 30 March, 1918, called K Novoi Grani) aims to finally establish a multi-dimensional conversation between them. ‘At first glance, it might appear that Ashraf Murad and Farhad Khalilov are strikingly different. Indeed, both artists had their own separate paths, but The New Verge is not merely a juxtaposition of two masters—these two outstanding Azeri artists are kindred spirits; one matches the other in power, depth, and relationship to the canvas itself. United by a political epoch, these artists managed to remain freethinkers, maintain their individuality and internal independence despite the framework of Soviet ideology.’–Farah Piriye (exhibition curator).

Mila Askarova (gallery director) adds, ‘it’s really exciting to be able to show such important artists from Azerbaijan and give voice to the region’s history in the UK. In an uncertain geopolitical time we benefit from looking beyond the Eurocentric.’ The show marks the beginning of a conversation that will be expanded upon in January 2021, as part of Gazelli Art House’s series of annual art historical exhibitions.

Avant-garde non-conformist Ashraf Murad is shown here in London for the first time. Underrated during his lifetime, Murad’s work has only recently gained recognition, becoming part of large private collections and the subject of a number of museum shows. Each one of his works served as a protest against the Soviet regime and its tenebrous reality; imbued with his humanity, mystery, sincerity, and boundless courage. Murad experienced persecution, arrest and torture (traumas that have echoed in his body of work ever since), and stylistically his practice can be divided into different periods on either side of tragic life events. The first part of his career was typically socialist realist, and his later phase can be described as true avante-garde. His works from a ‘protest’ period contain harsh and planar black and red tones, later works convey an almost mystical secrecy. Despite this backdrop of struggle Murad was known for his luminous personality and childlike innocence. He somehow succeeded in resisting the stifling atmosphere of Soviet rule.

Farhad Khalilov’s work has been shown twice in London but never in dyadic exchange with a master who has inspired and influenced his work this deeply. It features Khalilov’s early portraits and landscapes, as well as his new abstract colour fields, including the infamous ‘Meeting’ series. The continuous expanses of colour evoke the nostalgic scenery of the Absheron peninsula and reflect the artist’s own reality. Following on from experiments in colour and form that began with Malevich’s Black Square Khalilov draws instead from nature, vast skies and seascapes that disrupt the expectation of realism or contemporary conceptual art. Art historian and critic Grigory Anisimov has described Ashraf Murad’s work as magical realist, which can also suit the spirit of Khalilov—for whom this exhibition is a long-awaited encounter: ‘It is an honour for me to be exhibited with a master like Ashraf Murad. He was truly one with his canvas; no distance existed between the two—it was a dense unity’.

Read More

Installation Views

Artists Exhibiting

Also Exhibiting at Gazelli Art House

About the Gallery
Contemporary art gallery Gazelli Art House supports and presents a wide range of international artists, presenting a broad and critically acclaimed program of exhibitions to a diverse audience through international exhibition spaces in London and Baku. Gazelli Art House was founded in 2003 in Baku, Azerbaijan where it held exhibitions with Azeri artists. After hosting conceptually interlinked off-site exhibitions across London, founder and Director of Gazelli Art House, Mila Askarova, opened a permanent space on Dover Street, London in March 2012. As part of Gazelli Art House’s on-going commitment to art education, the gallery hosts a series of events and talks to run alongside each exhibition.
View Gallery Profile
Address
39 Dover Street
London
United Kingdom
Opening Hours
Monday – Friday
10am – 6pm
Saturday
11am – 7pm
(1)
London 39 Dover Street
Gazelli Art House
39 Dover Street, London, United Kingdom

Opening hours
Monday – Friday
10am – 6pm
Saturday
11am – 7pm
The art world in focus