Curatorial
Sophia Bsiri Open studio
Over the past three months, we have had the pleasure of hosting the early career artist Sophia Bsiri at our Atelier, Artist Residency Program.
Following her studies in Mandarin, Sophia undertook, in 2018, private courses in academic drawing with the artist Ahmed Maaleb. She started experimenting with classical constructions of lines and shadows. She then drove her interest in the expression of the matter she used to draw, in its volumetry and its relation to the space.
Her practice is concerned with matter, materiality, gesture, and form in its primary function translated into a secondary one, that of modular sculpture and installation.
As she started experimenting in the atelier, her research was focused primarily on barbed wire and its origins. Coming from an organic and natural root, that took over the years the symbol of oppression of massive security in the streets.
The sharp prickles are made of dozens of interlocking fibres, which increases the resistance and the difficulty of destroying the stems.
She fragmented the wire into pieces, destructured it, and cancelled its repulsive nature, which served as a barrier but once untied, it takes on a free form. These hundred fragmented pieces once unified, find their natural origin, forming roots that spread out on the wall like a climbing plant.
With an affinity for sharp and bulky materials, she turns nails, the sharp tool intended to hang o to carry a form and that it became itself subject. As if it’s a dot or line on a drawing.
She integrates it into the fabric. By dint of using it, repeating it on a porous canvas she multiplies its weight, giving shape to volumetry that associates itself with the movement that it decides.
She works the nail as a weaver works the thread of a repetitive gesture to integrate the canvas one by one as if she is sewing a fabric to end up with a massive and thorny fabric which in the movement generates a form, each time random and a sound of tickling metal. The nail is denatured from its form. It adopts the function of a thread or a line.
She is also well rooted in the alternative scene giving a way into her practice through materiality and subtle selfgenerated sound that translate through the raw and fine tools. On the other hand, Bsiri tends to reflect on analog photagraphy, the density of colours, lights and shadows through her paintings which combine both charcoal drawing and spray paint.
Bsiri navigates between these classical assets by combining them with her new research, explores the potential of the materiality and omits in defining raw tools for her work.
Special thanks to Sophia Bsiri for her trust and the exchange Haithem Toumi for handling the artworks Rania Hentati for the communication Insaf Mejri for the production follow-up Selma Feriani for supporting the Atelier