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Diana Al-Hadid Fire Ball Fallling, 2018

Diana Al-Hadid
Fire Ball Fallling, 2018
Polymer gypsum, fiberglass, steel, aluminum leaf, copper leaf, gold leaf, pigment
63 x 82 x 4 1/2 inches

Diana Al-Hadid Visions of Life and the Youthful Fancy of Early Architecture, From the Gay Morning into the Evening of Dreams, 2018

Diana Al-Hadid
Visions of Life and the Youthful Fancy of Early Architecture, From the Gay Morning into the Evening of Dreams, 2018
Polymer gypsum, fiberglass, steel, plaster, gold leaf, aluminum leaf, pigment
63 x 82 x 4 inches

Diana Al-Hadid The East Wind, 2018

Diana Al-Hadid
The East Wind, 2018
Polymer gypsum, fiberglass, steel, plaster, gold leaf, silver leaf, pigment
87 x 70 x 6 inches

Diana Al-Hadid Slow Surrender, 2018

Diana Al-Hadid
Slow Surrender, 2018
Polymer gypsum. fiberglass, steel, gold leaf, silver leaf, copper leaf, pigment
63 x 82 1/2 x 4 inches

Diana Al-Hadid Volcanic Split, 2018

Diana Al-Hadid
Volcanic Split, 2018
Polymer gypsum, fiberglass, steel, silver leaf, copper leaf, pigment
Each panel: 63 x 82 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches

Diana Al-Hadid Smoke Over There, 2018

Diana Al-Hadid
Smoke Over There, 2018
Polymer gypsum, fiberglass, steel, plaster, gold leaf, copper leaf, pigment
58 x 64 x 3 1/2 inches

Diana Al-Hadid By Cover of Night, 2019

Diana Al-Hadid
By Cover of Night, 2019
Polymer gypsum, fiberglass, steel, cement, pigment
93 x 31 x 43 1/2 inches

Diana Al-Hadid Fool's Gold, 2014

Diana Al-Hadid
Fool's Gold, 2014
Polymer gypsum, fiberglass, wood, plaster, cement, gold leaf, paint
22 x 48 x 48 inches

Diana Al-Hadid Waiting in Relief, 2019

Diana Al-Hadid
Waiting in Relief, 2019
Bronze, polymer gypsum, fiberglass
31 3/4 x 21 1/2 x 1 1/4 inches
From an edition of 3, with unique additions

Diana Al-Hadid Standing in Relief, 2019

Diana Al-Hadid
Standing in Relief, 2019
Bronze, polymer gypsum, fiberglass
25 3/4 x 27 1/4 x 16 1/2 inches
Edition of 3, with unique additions

Diana Al-Hadid Ait, 2019

Diana Al-Hadid
Ait, 2019
Bronze, polymer gypsum, fiberglass
14 5/8 x 26 1/2 x 15 1/4 inches

Diana Al-Hadid Untitled, 2018

Diana Al-Hadid
Untitled, 2018
Conté, charcoal, pastel, acrylic on mylar
42 x 31 inches

Diana Al-Hadid Untitled, 2018

Diana Al-Hadid
Untitled, 2018
Conté, charcoal, pastel, acrylic on mylar
21 x 31 inches

Diana Al-Hadid Untitled, 2018

Diana Al-Hadid
Untitled, 2018
Conté, charcoal, pastel, acrylic on mylar
31 x 21 inches

Press Release

Berggruen Gallery is pleased to present Diana Al-Hadid, an exhibition of panels, sculptures, and bronzes by Syrian-born, New York-based sculptor, Diana Al-Hadid. This show marks Al Hadid’s first solo exhibition with the gallery and will be on view January 14 through February 16, 2019. The gallery will host a reception for the artist on Thursday, January 17 from 5:00 to 7:00pm.

In this exhibition, Al-Hadid explores the material potential of the art object through an investigation of the laws of physics. Undulating, seemingly weightless fragments form a complex dimensionality that is at once fractured and complete, fragile and solid, antiquated and contemporary. The exhibition - which includes sculptural wall pieces, freestanding sculptures, and bronzes - reveals Al Hadid’s use of industrial materials to form a narrative grounded in the artist’s unique process-based study combined with her myriad sources from history and memory to science and literature. This particular body of work – dense with references from art of the past– reveals the unique contextual foundation of Al-Hadid’s artistic practice. Straddling past and present, her work prompts a consideration of the art object’s material history. A timeworn quality exudes from her work to embody a collection of modern relics – relics that express the act of artistic creation and the evocative language of painting and sculpture. The identity of the art objects thus derives from the passing of time through artistic gesture.

In Al-Hadid’s sculptural panels, she experiments with time, matter, and space to conceive gossamer labyrinths that appear capricious and transformable in their tangled layers and delicate fluidity, while these works simultaneously probe the boundary between painting and sculpture. Intricately layered compositions express a tactile sense of depth, where natural inconsistencies and organic imperfections express the artist’s rigorous manual process. Al-Hadid calls upon Northern Renaissance paintings as source material for these works, allowing their atmospheric sense of drama and whimsy to instill her panels with a sense of movement and life. Primarily landscapes, these compositions reveal strong horizontal movement, drawing the eye across each panel to create an illusion of panoramic space. Reference images from Renaissance masters such as Johan Christian Dahl, Joseph Michael Gandy, and Herri Met De Bles provide a foundation from which Al Hadid shapes her own narrative – a heavily material narrative steeped in formal examinations of scale and depth.

Al-Hadid’s freestanding sculptures and bronzes similarly pay homage to the imagery and mythology of Renaissance works. Contemporizing an ancient medium and bringing traditional motifs to life, Al-Hadid reveals how the identity of an art object is not merely defined by representation but rather artistic gesture, indicating the passage of time both through references to the past and through the artist’s material investigation of physical and pictorial space.

Diana Al-Hadid’s Nostalgic Tribute to Penn Station

Diana Al-Hadid’s Nostalgic Tribute to Penn Station

Hyperallergic | By Taylor Michael

January 30, 2023

Diana Al-Hadid | As the Fog settled over SF
News

Diana Al-Hadid | As the Fog settled over SF

San Francisco Chronicle

January 23, 2019