Hayv Kahraman: Gut Feelings: Part II
The Third Line is pleased to announce Gut Feelings: Part II, our fifth solo exhibition with Los Angeles based artist Hayv Kahraman. Occupying both gallery spaces, Kahraman presents a series of new paintings and drawings that continue her ongoing scientific research and exploration into the effects of trauma on the body, and the role of the gut in our healing process.
Kahraman’s practice is heavily guided by her refugee experience, where notions of gender and trauma are consistent themes throughout her work. Recently, the artist has directed her research towards neuroscience, human immunology and “neurosculpting” – the ability to restructure the neural pathways in our brain through the gut microbiome – and how they specifically relate to trauma, and our ultimate goal to heal and repair.
Often referred to as the body’s “second brain”, the gut is responsible for our somatic state whereby the bacteria inside our gut regulates the hormones that control our feelings. Kahraman became increasingly fascinated with this theory, and how neurosculpting offers the potential to heal through the process of unlearning and relearning. In this body of work, Kahraman applies this theory alongside her own lived experiences to highlight the puissant connection between the mind and the body. Exposed and tangled digestive organs act as a visual metaphor of unravelling the restorative process.
Delving further into the gut microbiome as a site for recognition and renewal, Kahraman addresses the notion of “otherness” through the medium in which she paints. We have learnt to consider the bacteria and foreign microbes found inside our gut as undesirable, but in fact they are fundamental to our human psyche. By incorporating into her paintings the lilac dye from torshi – fermented beetroot served in Middle Eastern cuisine which is believed to improve mental wellbeing via the gut, and jars of which are on view in the exhibition – Kahraman affirms that the microbial world is verification of our acceptance of difference. Physically painting with torshi – i.e. bacteria – serves as an allegory to how we sentient beings live in symbiosis with the “other”.
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Hayv KahramanTentacular eye boobs, 2023Oil and torshi on linen127 x 127 x 6.4 cm
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Hayv KahramanEye megaphones, 2023Oil and torshi on linen177.8 x 177.8 x 6.4 cm
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Hayv KahramanMustache and beard brain axis, 2022Oil on panel177.80 x 177.80 x 6.35 cm.
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Hayv KahramanTies and Y, 2022Oil on panel127.00 x 127.00 x 6.35 cm.
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Hayv KahramanBrain wash, 2022Oil on panel177.80 x 114.30 x 6.35 cm.
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Hayv KahramanBrain frog 2, 2022Oil on panel127.00 x 127.00 x 6.35 cm
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Hayv KahramanFeeding on entanglements, 2022Oil on panel190.50 x 127.00 x 6.35 cm
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Hayv KahramanNeurobust no 6, 2022Oil on linen60.96 x 60.96 cm.
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Hayv KahramanNeurobust no 7, 2022Oil on linen60.96 x 60.96 cm.
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Hayv KahramanLizard hair, 2023Ink, dried pigment, flax fibers on paper26.9 x 18.4 cm
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Hayv KahramanTorshi eye boobs drawing, 2023Ink, dried pigment, flax fibers on paper21.3 x 21.3 cm
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Hayv KahramanComposite figure drawing, 2023Ink, dried pigment, flax fibers on paper21.3 x 21.3 cm