Past Residents
Past Resident2015: Edge of Arabia and Art Jameel
Ayman Yossri Daydban
Ayman Yossri Daydban’s work is often a reflection of his life, focusing on issues of identity and belonging. While his work may appear to be political, as it focuses on the deconstruction of the Palestinian national narrative, the work is deeply personal and has little agenda beyond his search for a sense of self. ‘Daydban’ means watchman, a mask that observes the viewer and its surroundings while at the same time remaining detached from them. There is an unbridgeable opposition between the watchman and what is being watched. The two sides seem to be in different worlds while in close proximity, producing enormous tension.
Ayman Yossri Daydban (born in Palestine, 1966) lives in Saudi Arabia. Daydban’s solo exhibitions include Identity, Selma Feriani Gallery, 2011; I am Anything, I am Everything, Athr Gallery, Jeddah, 2012. His work has been included in group exhibitions such as The Language of Human Consciousness, Athr Gallery, Jeddah; Brunei Gallery, London, 2008; The Future of A Promise, Venice Biennale 2009 & 2011; Transition, Istanbul, 2010; Terminal, Dubai, 2011, We Need To Talk, Jeddah, 2012; and #COMETOGETHER in London, 2012. Additional projects include Bravery of Being out of Range at Athr Gallery, Jeddah and subsequently at Sultan Gallery, Kuwait; The State at Traffic Gallery, Dubai; Tesselation at Galerie Zilberman and The Aftermath curated by Basak Senova at Akbank Art Center, Istanbul; and Hajj: Journey to the Heart of Islam at the British Museum, London. Daydban launched his first public art project Change on billboards across Dubai and Sharjah during Art Dubai, 2013. Daydban’s work is in the permanent collections of the British Museum, Al-Mansouria Foundation, the Abdul Latif Jameel Foundation, BASMOCA, Salsali Private Museum and the Greenbox Museum. He has been in residence at La Cites des Arts in Paris; Cuadro Fine Art Gallery; Traffic Gallery, Dubai; and Ashkal Alwan, Beirut.
Residents from Palestine
Past Resident2015: Foundation for a Civil Society
Zoran Georgiev
Zoran Georgiev’s works refer to the cultural policies of present-day Macedonia and Bulgaria, where the necessity of creating new (post-1989) identities and rethinking the past are leading to new forms of nationalism and visions of society and community. Georgiev underlines the hollowness, the competitiveness and the kitsch in state policies aimed at the construction or restoration of monuments and museums. As if the symbolism of the “new” past is nothing more than the expensive décor for a Bollywood (or rather, a Balkan-wood) production. With simplified form and direct appeal his works “unmask” the kitsch in the visual language of populist nationalism through a kind of authentic and raw objectivity.
Zoran Georgiev (born in 1985 in Macedonia) lives and works in Berlin, Germany. Georgiev graduated with an MA in Painting from the National Art Academy in Sofia, Bulgaria. His solo exhibitions include Vaska Emanouilova Gallery, Sofia; Sariev Contemporary, Plovdiv; and 0GMS Gallery in a Drawer, Sofia. He has participated in numerous group exhibitions including Art for Change, Sofia City Art Gallery, 2015; Prehod For Sale, ICA Gallery, Sofia, 2014; Transcending Cultures, Essl Museum, Viena 2013-2014; Never Ending Story, Rakursi Gallery, Sofia, 2013; and Love, Rayko Alexiev Gallery, 2012. He has received awards including the ESSL Art Award CEE 2013 and the Young Visual Artists Award (BAZA), 2014.
Events & Exhibitions
Salon: Zoran Georgiev and Igor Ruf
April 14, 2015
Residents from Bulgaria
Past Resident2015: Foundation for a Civil Society
Igor Ruf
Igor Ruf explores the relations between object and non-object as a starting point for a work of art. For him memory is the cognitive ability to reconstruct past experiences, whether autobiographical or experienced through media such as film and music. Ruf’s research ranges from unrecorded narratives spread by oral tradition to phantasmal images from childhood. His recent works address the somewhat absurd connection between his own personal fascinations and everyday objects or events. Also, he often deals with humorous self-positioning within society in general.
Igor Ruf (born 1984 in Virovitica, Croatia) graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts, Zagreb where he now works as an Assistant Lecturer. Recent solo shows include House of Tartzans Mom, Academia Moderna, Zagreb, Croatia; Exhibition of Hills, Furniture and Walking Spaces, MKC Split, Croatia; North, South, East, Jam and Boom, Plevnik-Kronkowska Gallery, Celje, Slovenia; and Bure Baruta, (with Vlatka Škoro and Ana Petrović), Kazamat Gallery, Osijek. His awards received include the Radoslav Putar Award, 2014; 31st Youth Salon Award, 2012; and Grand Prize at the XI Triennial of Croatian Sculpture, 2012.
Events & Exhibitions
Salon: Zoran Georgiev and Igor Ruf
April 14, 2015