Haleh Jamali Explained

Haleh Jamali (Persian: هاله جمالی) is an Iranian artist currently living and working in Scotland. She works with a wide range of media and techniques that include painting, photography, installation, video, and performance. She completed her Bachelors of Arts in Painting at the College of Fine Arts, University of Tehran, in 2005. In 2007, she received her MA in Art and Media Practice from the University of Westminster, London. Her works focus on the hidden layers beneath the visible by using the media of painting and installation.

Paintings

Jamali’s interest in portraiture and narrative is inspired by her desire to address the social aspects of representation, particularly of the female gender. Jamali states: “For me, the diversity, versatility, and unrivaled ability of portraits to communicate, make them an enigma. Indeed, my particular concern is to reveal the paradoxes and ambiguities behind the eyes of the portrait subject who tries to communicate emotions, arrest attention, and often express feelings of both attraction and repulsion." Jamali encourages an intimate relationship between the viewer and the subject; she considers how an individual’s identity can be constructed in relation to Others, while simultaneously suggesting that the Self and the Other are inseparable.

In September 2014, Haleh trained at Charles H. Cecil Studios for advanced portraiture painting in Florence, Italy.

Installation and video works

Jamali's installations and video works are often focused on themes of identity. She has been included in exhibitions such as the Finalist Exhibition of 6°Arte Laguna Prize;[1] Nappe of Arsenale of Venice, Italy; Fashion Art Toronto Festival;[2] multi-arts event, Toronto, Canada; HB55 Räume der Kunst,[3] Berlin, Germany; Propeller Centre for the Visual Arts, Toronto-Canada;[4] Edinburgh Iranian Festival, Edinburgh, UK; and La Viande Gallery, London, UK.

For Someone who is not like anyone (2007), she created a single-screen video installation exploring the depth of female identity that is primarily based on women's appearance by focusing on how their identity can be made fluid by different types of clothing. This video first exhibited in relation to the installation it originally animated. It was a chamber surrounded by transparent black fabric through which the viewer can see a distant video image: a series of portrait images on a different plane. The painting was placed at the entrance of the installation. When the audience entered the installation, they would see a glass bin, which held a reflection of both the changing projected photographic portrait and the viewer. The glass served as a mirror to cause the audience to identify themselves as "the Other". In response, viewers were encouraged to develop their own narrative from their life experiences.

In Departure (2011), she collaborated for the first time with a performer, Monica De Ioanni.[5] In this work, a figure was set against a white ground wrapped in fabric to create different shapes, sometimes abstract ones. Jamali was fascinated by the relationship between women and fabric and more specifically, the drapes and forms created by the veil and the invisible gaze of the veiled women. De Ioanni used fabric as a symbol to show the struggles and sometimes the frustration of individuals whose identities have been disguised.

In Layers (2011), Jamali presented her self-portrait in two large-scale simultaneous projections that moved in coordinated timing. In the first projection, she applied clay to her face to cover the surface, while in the second projection, she wipes her face with her hand to reveal her face underneath. By exploring the notion of masking identity, Haleh focused on the themes of alienation and transformation of one's self.

Press

Jamali was interviewed by the press, including Shargh newspaper during her exhibition in the Atbin gallery in 2005,[6] [7] [8] Voice of America's Persian News Network (VOA) (Shabahang program) in 2010,[9] Kahkeshan TV during her exhibition as a part of Edinburgh Iranian Festival in 2011,[10] [11] and Jadid Online and BBC Radio Scotland in 2012.[12]

Exhibitions

2015

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2007

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 6° International Arte Laguna Prize. 6° International Arte Laguna Prize,.
  2. Web site: Fashion Art Toronto Festival. 29 April 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120505055411/http://fashionarttoronto.ca/2012/02/29/haleh-jamali-monica-de-loanni-departure/. 5 May 2012.
  3. Web site: HB55 Räume der Kunst. HB55 Räume der Kunst.
  4. Web site: Propeller Centre for the Visual Arts. Propeller Centre for the Visual Arts.
  5. Web site: Departure. Art and Fashion Festival. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120505055411/http://fashionarttoronto.ca/2012/02/29/haleh-jamali-monica-de-loanni-departure/. 2012-05-05.
  6. Web site: Shargh newspaper. Today's Portrait. 2012-04-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20120505121226/http://sharghnewspaper.ir/. 2012-05-05. dead.
  7. Web site: Abtin gallery. abtin gallery, Today's Portrait Article by Reza Jalali .
  8. Web site: Today's portrait. Reza Jalali.
  9. Web site: Sara Dehghan. VOA Persian TV .
  10. Web site: Edinburgh Iranian Festival. Edinburgh Iranian Festival 2010.
  11. Web site: Kahkeshan TV. Kahkeshan TV.
  12. Web site: Jadid online. (Haleh's Portrait) Interview by Bahar Navai.