Unfolding the Middle East: Kristen Alvanson’s Nonad – Robin Mackay
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ROBIN MACKAY
Unfolding the Middle Eas: Krisen
Alvanson’s Nonad
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2008 Topics:
Contemporary Art, Iran, Islam, Kristen Alvanson
On Kristen Alvanson’s show Nonad (Azad Gallery, Tehran, May
2008), for Umelec magazine 2008/2.
TOPICS
In his 1998 book on Leibniz, philosopher Gilles Deleuze proposed the figure of
‘The Fold’ as a way in which a philosophy of immanence might measure the
multiplicity of the universe. If Being speaks in one voice, if we invoke no
transcendent plane of organisation, then how can difference be articulated?
Deleuze’s vision of folds-within-folds, which he discovers to be the reigning
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Unfolding the Middle East: Kristen Alvanson’s Nonad – Robin Mackay
principle of the baroque, extends to labyrinthine structures enfolding infinite
complexity (or implexity) without yielding to any form of transcendence. Kristen
Alvanson, an American artist working in Iran, suggests that we read the Middle
East, in all its obscurity, inscrutability and hybridity, in terms of such a topological
model, as a fabric folded and refolded into a baffling surface where disparate
elements abut unexpectedly and overlap each other in paradoxical fashion.
Inversely, her recent work demonstrates how the multiple cultural codes at work
in the region can be manifested through the folds of its fabrics.
Alvanson must have been prepared, as her show Nonad opened in
Tehran’s Azad Gallery, for it to be misread as a further move in an already
hackneyed political ‘debate’. For nothing brings out the neurotic nature of the
West’s relationship with the Middle East in the twenty-first century (beginning, let
us say, on September 11th 2001) better than those garments that notorious
legislation in France attempted to outlaw under the description ‘conspicuously
religious’. With the debate on the hijab and the chador, the reassertion of
secularism as non-negotiable principle of enlightenment clashes with the liberal
commitment to tolerance; and the confused credo of multiculturalism vies with the
neo-feminist exigency of ‘liberating’ Middle-Eastern woman into the alternative
cruelties of consumerist subjection. Writing in Le Monde on the controversy over
the banning of ‘the veil’ in schools, French philosopher Alain Badiou suggested
the French protect their schoolchildren instead against those far more pernicious
semiotic triggers of social antagonism, ostentatiously-displayed global consumer
brands. And yet, comfortably addicted to those ciphers of abstracted desire, the
West continues to find something chilling and disturbing in the sight of women
uniformed in mute, black coverings whose significance and relation to their
wearers’ individual and collective desire is obscure. The conflicted allegiances of
feminism – do the dark folds create a protected, autonomous space, its blank
surface baffling the male gaze; or are they walking prison cells, sinister
instruments of ‘islamofascism’? – attest to the essential point: The West is only
able to confront Islamic dress as a sign of absence, or an absence of signs. It is this
tendency which Alvanson’s project challenges, by engaging instead with
overlooked features of their material and manufacture. Discovering that this
supposedly traditional garb envelops more than its state-approved image would
like to admit, Alvanson has refabricated it, making these disavowed complications
explicit in a work which unfolds between the materiality of the clothing and the
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Unfolding the Middle East: Kristen Alvanson’s Nonad – Robin Mackay
cultural formations that seek to capture and overcode it.
Some visitors to Nonad did inevitably misinterpret as a feminist or postcolonialist gesture Alvanson’s employment of the chador (the traditional Islamic
female garb—usually black—which covers the whole head and body). However
the work was concerned above all with encouraging a more subtle and attentive
relation to these garments. It is Alvanson’s attunement to the language and the
construction of textiles (in the eighties, she ran HOUSE, a New York fashion label
popular with nightclubbers), that enables her to avoid the obvious pitfalls facing
an artist who attempts to interrogate an alien culture – The false naïvety that
promotes artists’ ‘personal response’ to experiences, often no more than an alibi
for reproducing exoticism; and the equal danger of an overcautious respect for
‘otherness’. By adopting a hands-on relation with the fabric and patterns of the
chador, rather than approaching it through already-coded political discourses or as
part of a personal odyssey, Alvanson makes possible a fresh look at the
sociopolitical relations in play in the Middle East. Rejecting the artists
‘responsibility’ to relevantly address hot topics, she chooses instead to experiment
with the matter which underlies them.
Described by the artist as part of an investigation into the ‘threefold’
relation of women, the Middle-East, and fabric, the main component of Nonad
consists of a number of chadors which, suspended from the ceiling, form a kind of
soft, diaphanous architecture through which visitors wander. Liberated from their
inhabitants, draped from above, hanging like sleeping bats, the garments open up,
exposing that inhabited inner space which the West invests with such anxiety.
Indeed, exploring the installation, or seated within its confines (the Azad gallery is
also a meeting-place where artists and friends meet to talk and debate, during
Alvanson’s show doing so inside a ramified textile cocoon), it is no longer clear
whether one is ‘inside’ or ‘outside’ any one of the chadors. The viewer becomes a
participant, embraced by materials which have ceased to be ‘conspicuously
religious’, and instead unfold to reveal hidden possibilities.
The most important of these hidden dimensions concerns not the relation
between woman and Islam, but that between nomads and the state: a relation
which Alvanson highlights through a re-engineering of the traditional chador.
Banned by Reza Shah in 1936, but reinstated at the time of the revolution, the
standard-issue chador favoured by the current Iranian regime, with its affection for
Khomeini doctrine, is made in regulation black material. By contrast, the clothing
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Unfolding the Middle East: Kristen Alvanson’s Nonad – Robin Mackay
of the nomad people of the region is characterised by highly-coloured, patterned,
sequined or diaphanous fabrics. In Iranian towns, the bazaar remains, true to
Persian tradition, something of an interzone between these cultures, a station or
intersection where women from both cultures browse at their leisure, surveying
the fabrics on offer for hours at a time. Particularly in Shiraz, where Alvanson
lives with her Iranian husband, the bazaar is a place where the nomadic and the
sedentary converge momentarily, only to go their own ways once again.
Alvanson’s chadors, which incorporate the lively nomadic fabrics, and which
adapt the regulation four-piece half-circle pattern of the Chador to incorporate
elements of nomad tradition, seek to prolong this moment of commingling. But
furthermore, they seek to make tangible the twisting, convoluted fabric of Iranian
culure itself. Nomad and state are never exactly opposed; in fact they have an
episodic history of informal co-dependency, their relation of mutual suspicion
often giving way to mutual convenience. It is nomads, for instance, who stand
guard around the state-run desert oil complexes. Modern Iranian culture comprises
an inextricable mixture of nomad and Islamic influences. The presumption (of
either the Iranian state or its Western critics) that the chador can be subtracted
from such syncretism and re-presented as a sign of religious purification, is
therefore nothing more than a contemporary artifice.
Whilst thus laying out the implicit (in-folded) dimensions of this society,
Alvanson’s creations also constitute a kind of speculative fiction, projecting
forward a vision of a mongrelised culture whose dress would express rather than
suppress these inherent hybridities. Rather than making an orientalist exhibition of
the strangeness of the chador or the nomadic garb, therefore, Alvanson uses them
to make a direct intervention into the socio-political fabric in which they are
mutually imbricated.
The more obscure elements in this intervention are the ABJAD diagrams
which Alvanson showed together with the chadors. ABJAD is an apocryphal and
syncretic numerical system not unlike hebrew gematria. A popular, vernacular
numerology surviving on the peripheries of official religion, ABJAD has been
used for centuries for spell-casting, charms, protection, fortune-telling and koranic
interpretation. According to Alvanson, in Middle-Eastern occultism, nine is the
number of ‘unceasing collectivity’: it is the number which, in ABJAD, acts as a
base element to which other numbers can be transformed, thus acting as a conduit
between otherwise unrelated texts. This element of the show gives the ‘nine’ of
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Unfolding the Middle East: Kristen Alvanson’s Nonad – Robin Mackay
the title (‘Nonad’ being a neologism composed ‘of nines and nomads’), and can be
seen reflected in the chador installation: the half-circles of Alvanson’s reengineered chadors are composed of nine textile panels sewn together, rather than
the four which make up state chadors. Three outer panels employ the black fabric
of the state chador, framing the selections of nomadic fabrics in the remaining
panels: the nomadic elements, ironically, finding themselves inside the
frameworks and the boundary of the state; whilst the state simultaneously
embraces an internal heterogeneity. Meanwhile, in the ABJAD diagrams, the ninepanel pattern of the chadors is echoed, repeated and multiplied, in a sort of dance
or other social interaction, with a number of whirling and sweeping garments seen
as if from above. The drawn chadors are filled with markings which from a
distance seem to be arabic writings, but close-up reveal themselves to be a mixture
of arabic, numerical ciphers, and incantations in English repeated across several
drawings (‘speed’, ‘inside’, ‘fire’). The collectivity of chadors, the drawings
suggest, is not that of a rigid, victimised mass, but harbours stranger connections
and potentials, its undulating black waves carrying information in encrypted form.
The drawings are freely adapted from the elaborate spell-casting diagrams
of ABJAD. Alvanson takes up the calligraphic pen, as she did her dressmaker’s
scissors, without any compunction with regard to ‘authenticity’. Since ABJAD is
already a syncretic, mongrelised system, she allows herself a free hand in its
contemporary re-creation. Returning from these mystifying and charged diagrams,
one appreciates how Alvanson’s nomadic chadors themselves act as ‘diagrams’ or
political maps, where state and different nomad groups meet in strange alliances.
The inevitable difficulties of sewing together the various materials
involved means that each chador displays idiosyncrasies and ‘flaws’, effectively
emphasising the materiality of what is usually a heavily coded and standardised
garment: the formerly quiescent materiality of the thing reasserts itself against the
abstract (uni)form, and where the black of the state is married with nomad
influences, the seams and sutures show and tell. Yet as Alvanson argues, the same
applies as soon as any chador is worn, transformed from a standard-issue garment
into a living, social form: the chador cannot therefore be reduced to the empty,
blank cipher of subjugation. Neither curtain nor shield, the internal logic of these
textile entities, the artist demonstrates, deserves to be properly explicated.
Amirali Ghasemi, one of the originators of a ‘Tehran Roaming Biennial’
designed to counteract the isolation of the Islamic Republic from the international
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Unfolding the Middle East: Kristen Alvanson’s Nonad – Robin Mackay
art scene, has declared that, in order to take this touring show designed to promote
Iranian artists worldwide, the organisers together with their suitcases of artworks
‘will travel like nomads’ – making Alvanson’s participation in the upcoming event
highly appropriate. But how much more strange and compelling would it be if the
political pariah and ‘rogue state’ she has made her home were to return to the fold
of the art world, from which it absented itself after Ahmedenijad’s rise to power,
by sending to the next Venice Biennale this American artist, with her passionate
demonstration that the reviled chador cannot be understood in the terms of
readymade political ‘debates’ that serve only to reconfirm comfortable dogma….
Such a possibility is only one of the baroque twists suggested by Alvanson’s work,
in its involved examination of the complex spaces of the Middle East.
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