ARYANA MINAI

ARYANA MINAIDOES IT HAVE A HEART, DOES IT SING, DOES IT STING?

September 10 - October 22, 2022
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA

OCHI is pleased to present DOES IT HAVE A HEART, DOES IT SING, DOES IT STING?, a solo exhibition of new work by Aryana Minai. This will be the Artist’s first solo exhibition with OCHI, located at 3301 W Washington Blvd, Los Angeles, California, on view from September 10 through October 22, 2022. An Artist’s Reception will be held on Saturday, September 10th from 5:00 to 8:00 pm PST.

DOES IT HAVE A HEART, DOES IT SING, DOES IT STING? features molded, impressed, and deeply pigmented paper pulped sculptures and wall works that mimic the forms and poetics of architecture. For Aryana Minai, architecture is a body: “space is alive, has a beating heart, and pulsates memories.” Minai creates remembered and imagined spaces that are situated within the context of places and recollections that survive or don’t. An avid reader, DOES IT HAVE A HEART, DOES IT SING, DOES IT STING? references three of Minai’s favorite Iranian poems. Written to be sung, these translated fragments are combined to make a new diasporic framework.

Minai begins each artwork with kitchen blenders, creating a liquid pulp by mixing found paper with recycled water. Brick outlines on her studio floor are placed to determine the borders of an artwork—Minai fills these temporary plastic-lined shallow molds with a patchwork mass of strained and pigmented pulp. Once a brick-mold is full, Minai presses an array of objects into the surface of the pulp—creating patterns from parts of salvaged buildings, textile woodblocks, and other decommissioned artifacts that provide a link to generational and cultural histories. Small sculptural elements such as paper pulp hands, flowers, altars, and other biological or architectural motifs are added as needed. Though Rome wasn’t built in a day, Minai must complete each work during one epic and laborious studio session, predicated by drying times. Impressions of Minai’s fingertips are preserved like fossilized footprints that emerge from a lakebed during a drought. Embodying loss, bittersweetness, and nostalgia Minai embraces these human traces, aligning her sculptural process with geological time—fossils are but a stone’s memory of the bones of an animal.

Aryana Minai (b. 1994, Los Angeles, CA) makes paper-based sculptures and wall works that are intimately linked to philosophies and histories of architecture, migration, labor, craft, and the body. Minai received her BFA from Art Center College of Design in 2016 and her MFA from Yale School of Art in 2020. Minai’s work has been exhibited at venues including the Craft Contemporary, OCHI, and Steve Turner in Los Angeles, CA; Brand Library & Art Center in Glendale, CA; and Galerie Perrotin and Ed. Varie in New York, NY. Her work has been featured in publications including artnet news, LA Weekly, Whitehot Magazine, and Arte East. Minai lives and works in Los Angeles, CA and is represented by OCHI in Sun Valley, ID and Los Angeles, CA.

Multi colored handmade paper with brick and metal fencing patterns embossed on the surface.Multi colored handmade paper with brick and metal fencing patterns embossed on the surface.Multi colored handmade paper with brick and metal fencing patterns embossed on the surface.Red handmade dyed paper containing an archway, finger impressions, and a paper pulp flower.Green handmade dyed paper with an obscured figure/archway at the centerBrown handmade dyed paper with a floral pattern, archway, and underlying grid pattern.Green handmade dyed paper with a floral pattern, archway, and underlying grid pattern.Reddish orange handmade dyed paper with a metal fencing pattern embossed at the centerA collection of finger and brick impressions on earth toned handmade dyed paperTwo half-arches made of yellow tinted handmade dyed paper and embossed with bricks. Also contains two paper pulp hands, shelves, and patterns protruding from the surface.

Press

  • Aryana Minai
    Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles
    Aryana Minai at OCHI
    Text by Vanessa Holyoak
    LINK

  • Aryana Minai
    ARTFORUM Must See
    September, 2022
    LINK