Short Grip

As a former Tehraner, Taghavi engages with the city through materials, situations, atmospheres, and activities that were once perceived as neutral. This engagement becomes vivid through encounters with the ineptness permeating public space. During her residency at Sazmanab, she collects objects and images that register moments of imbalance, collapse, and failure. These visual modes of social investigation are reinterpreted through multiple rearrangements in order to arrive at moments of temporary stability. The project takes form as a performative installation that tests possibilities existing between failure and provisional solutions, collapse and scaffolding, imbalance and equality.
Maryam Taghavi graduates from Emily Carr University in Vancouver in 2008 and continues to work across drawing, performance, sculpture, and site-specific installation. Issues of adaptation, displacement, and collapse remain central to her practice. Informed by mundane activities, materials, and situations, her work seeks to reconfigure established relationships and negotiate multiple scenarios to create conditions for ephemeral experience, contemplation, and other forms of exchange. Her work is exhibited in Canada, Mexico, and Iran.
Venue: Sazmanab (Sazman-e Ab St.)
Date: Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Time: 6:30–8 PM



















