Gülay Semercioğlu: The Woman On The Wire

Pi Artworks London hosts Gülay Semercioğlu’s solo exhibition at the gallery. Semercioğlu has been working with Pi Artworks since 2005, and her work has recently been acquired by the Metropolitan Museum, New York and Istanbul Modern, Istanbul. Semercioğlu carefully loops by hand thin, coloured, enamel coated, wire to create knitted structures. By densely overlapping these fine wires, the surfaces appear from a distance like shimmering, glossy blocks of smooth colour, while up close the viewer witnesses fluctuating tonal modulations as light is reflected from one strand to the next. In the past her work has drawn parallels with abstract and colour
September '15

Pi Artworks London hosts Gülay Semercioğlu’s solo exhibition at the gallery. Semercioğlu has been working with Pi Artworks since 2005, and her work has recently been acquired by the Metropolitan Museum, New York and Istanbul Modern, Istanbul.

Semercioğlu carefully loops by hand thin, coloured, enamel coated, wire to create knitted structures. By densely overlapping these fine wires, the surfaces appear from a distance like shimmering, glossy blocks of smooth colour, while up close the viewer witnesses fluctuating tonal modulations as light is reflected from one strand to the next.

In the past her work has drawn parallels with abstract and colour field paintings, but for The Woman On The Wire she seeks to emphasize more than just the formal qualities of her process. Within this body of work the artist investigates authority and control, with particular attention to the curtailing of agency and free-will women are subjected to within Turkey’s persistently patriarchal society. A subject matter that was central to her practice up until 2005, which she now feels ready to re-approach through the prism of her well known recent aesthetic.

For her new work, Semercioğlu has worked with women from across Turkey, in collaboration with whom she has produced in her signature style items familiar to domestic spaces. A bed stands at the far end of the gallery, a free flowing garment hangs from the ceiling, and the walls are decorated with framed pictures. By working almost exclusively with gold plated filament – a colour closely associated with weddings in Turkish culture – she alludes to this being the surreal marital home of an imagined young woman.

This scene, however, is critically deconstructs by taking the reoccurring motifs that are indicative of a patriarchal society that are embedded within such domestic spaces and bringing them to the fore. Motifs that signify processes such as marriage, birth, and the feeling of pride after giving birth to a baby boy regularly feature within traditional Anatolian craftwork that fill many homes but are too subtle and ubiquitous to be noticed. Yet these motifs epitomize patriarchal soft power by subtly defining two separate paths that a man and a woman are to progress down. By introducing these references Semercioğlu reveals how even private domestic spaces are not free from the understanding of the male as the authoritative figure whose role is separate from that of a woman’s. This is further emphasized by the artist’s mimicry of the aesthetic of Capitones; rectangular, fabric panels consisting of rows of indented buttons placed behind the desks of state bureaucrats that signify, typically male, authority.

Gülay Semercioğlu’s (b. 1968) work can be found in numerous public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY, USA; Istanbul Modern, Istanbul, Turkey; Farhad Farjam Collection, Dubai, UAE; Cocca Art & Design Institute, Coimbatore, India; the collection of the Centene Center for Arts and Education, MO, USA; the Papko Art Collection, Istanbul, Turkey. Recent solo exhibitions include, Walking On The Wire at Pi Artworks Istanbul (2014), Variations On Line at Leila Heller Gallery, New York (2012), and The Line Of Life at Gallery Etemad, Dubai (2012). Group exhibitions include Sublime Porte: An Exhibition of Contemporary Turkish Art at the Dr. MT Geoffrey Yeh Art Gallery in New York (2013); Dream and Reality – Modern And Contemporary Women Artists From Turkey, Istanbul Modern (2011); Abbara Kadabra, Mardin Biennial (2010) and Istanbul Next Wave, Akademie der Kunste, Berlin (2009).

9 October – 21 November 2015
Private View: Thrusday 8 October 2015 18:30 – 21:00
Panel Discussion: Thursday 19 November 2015 19:00 – Chaired by Jareh Das
Pi Artworks London, 55 Eastcastle Street, W1W 8EG ✪

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