
It is our great pleasure to announce an axe for a wing-bone, Yamini Nayar’s second solo exhibition with Thomas Erben Gallery. This new body of work continues Nayar’s process-oriented practice, further highlighting her method of construction and destruction, where the finally selected photographic recording might not be an end result but chosen from a state ‘in between.’ This is particularly evident in a series of four black-and-white small-scale studies, different iterations of a makeshiftroom where common elements take on roles that change from image to image. The timeline is unclear, giving a sense of parallel realities, and the improbable constructions disrupt any sense of spatial logic as they veer towards abstraction.
Process and temporality have always been essential to Nayar’s work: tabletop and wall-built models are fashioned from raw industrial materials and studio debris, and continuously reworked while being documented by the camera. The works in an axe for a wing-bone seem even more impermanent than earlier examples, unhinging meaning/logic in a classic surrealist clash of visual impulses, where multiple perspectives are contained within the same image. Constructions that previously appeared fractured but stable have been infused with a heightened precariousness, the delicate energy of a place whose very structure is founded on the constant shift of timeand movement. There is a presence of body in these spaces, hands building and tearing apart, the physical and personal merging with the space itself as each small event leaves its mark.
One point of departure for Nayar is her research into modernist architecture–along with the 1920-1930s design of constructivists and the Bauhaus movement–and its monumentality echoes through the work: ambitious structures supported by fragile, skeletal underpinnings. There is a sense of mimicry here, a desire to understand and rework the tectonics of modernism, as if someone from a distant future were trying to make senseof a fragmented architectural past, improvising with any objects at hand. In works like Akhet, this tension between the monumental and the unstable is mirrored in other, similar dichotomies, as solid surfaces are contrasted with the transparency of glass, and familiar materials like wood and plaster intersect insubstantial fields of vague and gauzy matter. Nayar’s new interiors are no less expansive than before, but she seems to increasingly strive towards the vertical, which adds a new dimension of overreaching impermanence. Similarly, a flattening of space has taken place, a shortening of perspective influenced by other ways of rendering depth, such as non-Western pictorial traditions where images are constructed according to a different logic.
Nayar’s 2011 exhibition Head Space represented a critical breakthrough, with reviews in Artforum, Art in America, Whitewall Magazine, The New Yorker and Art Papers, which commented on the artist’s combination of the physical and the improbable, her deconstruction of modernist space, and the visceral lifeof her images. In her continuing effort to open the world we construct around us to alternative strains of history and meaning, Nayar presents us with a collection of monuments just as fragile and ephemeral as they are ambitious.
YAMINI NAYAR, US/India, is based in Brooklyn, NY. Nayar has exhibited her work internationally at venues including the Museum of Moderne KunstFrankfurt, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Queensland Art Gallery inAustralia, DeCordova Museum MA, Kiran Nadar Museum New Delhi, SharjahBiennial in UAE, Saatchi Gallery UK, Studio Museum of Harlem andrecently a solo presentation at Art Cologne. Her work is in many publicand private collections including the Solomon Guggenheim Museum NY,Kiran Nadar Museum, Saatchi Museum, Queensland Art Gallery, CincinnatiArt Museum, Hiscox and US Arts in Embassies. Publications includeChandigarh is in India, edited by Shanay Jhaveri (Shoestring Publishers,2016), Passages: Indian Art Today (Daab Media, 2014), Lines ofControl, Partition as a Productive Space (Green Cardamom 2012),Unfixed: Postcolonial Photography in Contemporary Art (Jap Sam Books,2013); Empire Strikes Back: Contemporary Indian Art Today (Saatchi) andManual for Treason: Sharjah Biennial edited by Murtaza Vali (2011), andin the upcoming publication Global Photography: A Critical History(2019). She has been featured in New York Times, New Yorker, Art India,Artforum, Art in America, Frieze, Vogue India, Artpapers, and others.Residencies and grants include Lower Manhattan Cultural CouncilWorkspace, Center for Photography at Woodstock, Art Academy ofCincinnati and NYU Visiting Artist Scholar, Aaron Siskind Fellowship anda recipient of an Art Matters Foundation grant. Nayar is a ThesisAdvisor in the MFA Photography Dept of the School of Visual Arts andcurrently teaches Photography at John Jay University in New York. Shereceived her MFA from the School of Visual Arts, NY and BFA from theRhode Island School of Design. Nayar’s work is represented by ThomasErben New York, Wendi Norris San Francisco and Jhaveri ContemporaryMumbai.
Established in 1996, Thomas Erben Gallery focuses on rediscovering and introducing artworks that expand or deviate from the media usually associated with an artist.

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