Vian Sora : House of Pearls

31st October - 10th December 2024
  • VIAN SORA 

     

    House of Pearls 

     

  • House of Pearls

    Wassan Al-Khudhairi
  • Scenes of war, destruction, and loss evoke the trauma and violence that Iraq experienced not long ago. Vian Sora, like many Iraqis, finds these images and stories deeply resonant. For most of her life, Iraq has been a landscape marked by conflict, where violence often resurfaces quickly after brief pauses. Sora has navigated the challenges of living through the intense turmoil of war, transforming her experiences into a vibrant creative practice.

  • Her artistic foundation is largely self-guided, built on visits to the Iraq Museum in Baghdad, where she was captivated by...
    Vian Sora, Exhale, 2024, Oil on canvas with mixed media, 152.4 x 121.92 cm

    Her artistic foundation is largely self-guided, built on visits to the Iraq Museum in Baghdad, where she was captivated by ancient Mesopotamian reliefs. Surrounded by art and culture from an early age—her mother ran the Al Mazad Al-Baghdadi art gallery, and her father operated an antiques business on Al-Mutanabbi Street, a historic area once bustling with bookstores and stalls—she grew up among writers, painters, and architects who profoundly shaped her early impressions of art. Immersing herself in the works of Jewad Selim and the sculptures of Mohamed Ghani Hikmet, she took a different path when the esteemed artist Faiq Hassan advised her against attending art school. Instead, she assisted the influential architect Qahtan Al-Medfai in organizing his first retrospective at Dijla Art Gallery. The cultural figures surrounding her were pivotal in the Arab art scene, now recognized as pioneers of that era.

  • Sora's studio practice in Baghdad flourished until the war escalated in the 2000s, prompting her to take a job with...
    Vian Sora, Inhale, 2024, Oil on canvas with mixed media, 152.4 x 121.92 cm

    Sora's studio practice in Baghdad flourished until the war escalated in the 2000s, prompting her to take a job with the Associated Press, where she witnessed the impacts of war on her community firsthand. In 2006, she fled Iraq, first to Turkey, where she studied calligraphy at the Istanbul Museum of Graphic Arts and took printmaking classes at the Istanbul Modern Museum. She then moved to Dubai before settling in Louisville, Kentucky. Throughout this journey, her practice evolved from figurative painting, inspired by the artists she once knew in Baghdad, to more abstract works.

  • In her studio, she pours herself into her art, using the act of painting as a grounding process. Her large-scale...
    Vian Sora, Seabed, 2024, Oil on canvas with mixed media, 182.88 cm x 152.4 cm

    In her studio, she pours herself into her art, using the act of painting as a grounding process. Her large-scale works feature complex layers of paint that she skillfully negotiates. Initially, she pours, spills, and sprays paint onto a flat canvas, allowing the materials to flow intuitively in a moment of free expression. Once the paint dries, she stands the canvas upright, reflecting on the chaotic layers before building upon them. Drawing inspiration from ancient Mesopotamian mural-making techniques, she creates a rich tapestry of color and texture, with small shapes emerging to evoke a dream-like quality, reminiscent of watching clouds shift—each glance revealing new interpretations open to the viewer's imagination.

  • Over the past decade, Sora has learned to channel her creativity, balancing intention with spontaneity. Initially inspired by a wide...
    Vian Sora, Plumes,2024, Oil and mixed media on canvas, Diptych, 243.8 x 152.4 cm

    Over the past decade, Sora has learned to channel her creativity, balancing intention with spontaneity. Initially inspired by a wide range of sources, she gradually narrows her focus, intentionally resisting recognizable figures in favor of ambiguity. For her, the paintings represent psychological landscapes and extensions of her own body. 

     

    In the work debuting in the exhibition House of Pearls at The Third Line, Sora delves into the creation, extraction, and cultural significance of pearls. Characterized by scientific titles, this exhibition highlights themes of decomposition, regeneration, and the emergence of new life forms. Central to this body of work is the creation of pearls, formed by the convergence of molecules and environments responding to external challenges beneath the sea, paralleling similar processes in soil. The paintings explore the cycles of life and death, emphasizing regeneration after destruction. Sora is particularly fascinated by how things decompose only to reemerge in different forms, an obsession that manifests in a variety of ways.

  • The paintings in the exhibition form a cycle of their own. Plumes, the first piece created in this series, represents...
    Vian Sora, Opalescent, 2024, Oil on canvas with mixed media, 121.92 x 182.88 cm

    The paintings in the exhibition form a cycle of their own. Plumes, the first piece created in this series, represents the physical struggle and tension involved in pearl formation—the storm at sea that leads to the creation of something new. Opalescent, is vibrant and glowing, serving as a metaphor for how the universe shapes individual identity. This is followed by Inhale and Exhale, two gestural paintings that depict the act of a shell opening to let energy in and out before closing, absorbing everything once again.  A more topographical piece, Olivine, reflects the changing state of nature, highlighting themes of climate change and memories of a once green landscape. And Biomimicry emphasizes the practice of drawing inspiration from nature to address human challenges. 

  • Through swaths of bright blue suggesting vast bodies of water and desert brown terrains, Sora blends her artistic process with...
    Vian Sora, Astral, 2024, Oil on canvas with mixed media, 182.88 x 152.4 cm

    Through swaths of bright blue suggesting vast bodies of water and desert brown terrains, Sora blends her artistic process with scientific language, infusing her work with her ancestral heritage as a source of strength. Ultimately, she creates pieces that evoke a sense of spirituality, viewing her art as both archaic and futuristic. This reflects her belief that history and life function in a pendulum-like cycle, constantly repeating themselves. Each painting becomes a testament to her journey, embodying the intricate connections between personal experience, cultural memory, and the natural world.

  • About Vian Sora

    Vian Sora (b. 1976, Baghdad, Iraq) has lived and worked in Louisville, Kentucky since 2009. She received a BS from Al Mansour University in Baghdad, Iraq in 2000 and studied printmaking at the Istanbul Museum of Graphic Art (IMOGA) in Istanbul, Turkey in 2007. Sora’s work has been presented in solo and group exhibitions nationally and internationally including the Baltimore Art Museum, Baltimore, MD; Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA; Speed Art Museum, Louisville, KY; Contemporary Arts Center (CAC), Cincinnati, OH; Sharjah Biennale, Sharjah, UAE; IMOGA, Istanbul, Turkey; as well as the KMAC Triennial, Louisville, KY; Grinnell College Museum of Art; among others. Commencing in 2025, Sora will have a travelling solo museum show at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art and the Speed Art Museum.

     

    Sora's work is included in the collections of the Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, MD; Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, CA; KMAC Museum, Louisville, KY; Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA; Speed Art Museum, Louisville, KY; Grinnell College Museum of Art; Ministry of Culture Contemporary Collection, Baghdad, Iraq; the Pizzuti Collection, Columbus, OH; Fidelity Art Collection, Boston, MA; and the Shah Garg Foundation Collection, New York, NY; as well as numerous private collections.

  • About Wassan Al-Khudhairi

    Wassan Al-Khudhairi is an independent curator and was appointed curator for the 2025 Hawaii Triennial. Most recently, Al-Khudhairi held the position of Ferring Foundation Chief Curator at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, where she organized exhibitions and new commissions with artists Hajra Waheed, Dominic Chambers, Gala Porras-Kim, Martine Gutierrez, Derek Fordjour, Stephanie Syjuco, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, Bethany Collins, Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Guan Xiao, Hayv Kahraman, among others. She co-produced the podcast Radio Resistance to accompany the publication and exhibition Stories of Resistance, a thematic group show with over 20 participating artists.


    Al-Khudhairi was co-curator for the 6th Asian Art Biennial in Taiwan in 2017 and co-Artistic Director for 9th Gwangju Biennial in South Korea in 2012. She served as the Hugh Kaul Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Birmingham Museum of Art where she organized the first large-scale exhibition of the museum’s contemporary collection, Third Space / shifting conversations about contemporary art. Serving as the Founding Director of Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art in Qatar, Al-Khudhairi oversaw the opening
    of the Museum in 2010 and co-curated the exhibition Sajjil: A Century of Modern Art and curated Cai Guo-Qiang: Saraab.


    She holds a BA in Art History from Georgia State University and an MA in Islamic Art and Architecture with Distinction from the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. Al-Khudhairi is a graduate of the Getty Leadership Institute, the recipient of the 2021 VIA Curatorial Fellowship Grant, and a fellow in the 2021 Center for Curatorial Leadership program.