the alleyway to the prison’s garden.
Solo Exhibition by Nooshin Rostami
Curated by Alex Paik
Opening Reception: Friday, September 28th
On view through October 24th, 7-9pm
Art Talk: Tuesday, October 9th, 7pm
Gallery Hours: M W F 1:30-6:30pm, Sat 12-6pm
Trestle is pleased to announce the alleyway to the prison’s garden, a solo exhibition by Iranian artist Nooshin Rostami, curated by Alex Paik. The title of the exhibition comes from the name of a street where her father grew up in the desert of Sharood, Iran.
Inspired by the artist’s unsettled journey of immigration and exile, this exhibition explores the politics of diaspora, family, and the by product of their dynamics. Within a metaphorical construction, the artist changes the perception of space and navigates the traits of form – both fluid and structural – to negotiate the relationship between seemingly paradoxical concepts of the human state: stable versus uncertain, controlled versus unruled, and static versus fluid.
The exhibition will be in conversation with it’s sister exhibition at Art in Buildings, titled Corner of my room. Both installations are based on interviews Rostami conducted with her parents where she asked them open ended questions as they watched the video piece that both of these installations refer to. They are collectively called Corner of my room and the alleyway to the prison’s garden.
BIO:
Nooshin Rostami is a New York-based interdisciplinary artist and educator born in Shahroud, Iran. She immigrated to the United States to pursue her graduate studies, but soon after her move, she found herself in a place of exile and uncertain of the possibility to return to her home country. This displacement shaped the core questions of her practice. As a multidisciplinary artist, Rostami works predominantly in performance, installation, and sculpture where a series of abstract forms mutate into an amalgam of objects, constituting personal, social & political narratives.