Nest

Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Beirut

22.03.22 – 13.08.22

Curated by Andrée Sfeir-Semler

The Fall, a film on loop shows a pre-adolescent boy falling backwards from his chair. The image moves in slow-motion and the empty classroom around the character invites the viewer to enter a space of suspended time — the exact moment when balance is disturbed. The transient nature and perpetual movement of identity formation is similarly tackled in the artist’s charcoal drawings: blurry representations of children, who sometimes seem to be emerging out of a chrysalis, in the midst of a transformative phase, or on the threshold of visibility. They are slowly, meditatively, produced with layer after layer of charcoal.

A third-culture child himself, Kiswanson sometimes uses his family’s belongings in an attempt to conciliate his cultural heritage with the reality he was born into. Objects carried by a migrant family into exile are frozen into blurry resin blocks, while the traditional clothing of the artist’s parents and grandparents are mixed with contemporary youth sportswear in the series Passing. Produced through radiology scans, the images are printed on canvas, as if revealing new possibilities of belonging within a state of cultural homelessness.

Ultimately, the artist’s quest is crystalized in the works Nest that can be found hanging on the wall or nested in doorways. These cocoon-shaped works can be understood as a haven, a sanctuary, or a shelter. The sculptures made of fiberglass and resin speak of becoming, transformation and most importantly, possibilities.