Studio Stories with artist Kour Pour

Friday, Mar 5, 2021 4 – 5 pm

835 W. Washington Blvd.
Floors 1 & 2
Chicago, IL 60607

Click here to access the IG Live at 4 pm cst

 

Join us next Friday, on Instagram Live for Studio Stories with artist Kour Pour. The artist will be providing a behind the scenes look at his LA studio and discussing works slated for his inaugural solo exhibition opening at Kavi Gupta | Washington Blvd. April 3.

New to the Kavi Gupta community of artists, the British-Iranian artist is known for meticulously composed and delicately rendered artworks which intersect diverse material and aesthetic traditions, allowing for a remapping of the standard understanding of “Eastern/Western” cultural exchange.

Pour (b. 1987, UK) was born in Exeter, England. His father owned a small carpet shop, and Pour would spend time there as a child. He also often traveled to Los Angeles to visit family on his father’s side, and he ultimately attended Otis College of Art and Design (BFA, 2010). In Los Angeles, he was exposed to hip-hop and became interested in the idea of sampling as it is practiced in music production, and how he might apply a similar practice in his artwork.

Appropriating forms and techniques from numerous cultures and time periods, Pour’s truly global vision weaves together representational imagery, abstract patterning, and ornamental elements to create new hybrid artworks—equally ancient, classical, and contemporary—a constellation of influences from Iran, Britain, Egypt, India, and China, among others.

Primarily working with painting and printmaking, Pour’s works encompass diverse subject matter and culturally specific references, ranging from Persian carpets to ukiyo-e prints, and Western abstraction to Eastern landscape painting. These references are used as starting points for his paintings, in which a source image is often cropped, abstracted, or adjusted in palette to create vivid, intricate, and layered painting surfaces. Kour’s synthesis of image and process often connects different art histories in an attempt to highlight the cultural exchanges that lead to artistic innovation and disrupt the notion of singular originality.