Falling Petals in Glittering Snow





Falling Petals in Glittering Snow
10th March - 7th April 2024
Zaal Art Gallery, Toronto, ON
 

Zaal Art Gallery presents the second exhibition in its Focus Room series, “Falling Petals in Glittering Snow", a solo show by Shahrzad Jahan, opening on March 10 and continuing through April 7, 2024. Her first collaboration with Dastan, “Falling Petals in Glittering Snow", is her fourth solo exhibition.  “Falling Petals in Glittering Snow" takes off from a recent exhibition by the artist, “Bouquets of Glimmering Flowers in Fading Vases over Frames" (2023, Electric Room, INSIDE, despite). The latter focused on bringing together numerous studies over more than a year that the artist made based on and inspired by a single painting: the 1670s oilon-canvas “Bouquet of Flowers in a Vase" by Dutch painter Maria van Oosterwyck (1630–1693). She had painted from the image repeatedly until it became unrecognizable. In the new series of works, imagining her practice within a new context, she explores memory, loss, and a journey in learning light from darkness.  Created within the setting of the artist's discovery of the environment in Canada, she takes in her new experiences and browses through her older memories. While following the same original inspiration, she aims to understand the different narratives light and its play on objects create. She recounts that “the practice of recreating a single painting has been more and more about the material feeling of days creating it," as well as fresh experience in a new setting, including “how shadows have more blue in them, how snow sits and covers, how the light from the sun dances on the waters —looking at the moon in daylight, and the burn from air on my skin."  Following the previous show, in “Falling Petals in Glittering Snow", Shahrzad Jahan continues to use subtle ornamentations, this time wooden in contrast to plasterwork, to re-inhibit the space with an aura of domestic introspection. Creating 'a room of one's own', she maximizes the isolation of her subjects and themes to revisit each of their unique attributes.