Meena Hasan & Tommy Kha

Other Echoes Inhabit The Garden

May 18 – June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2018

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

LAUNCH F18, New York

May 18 - June 22, 2019

Meena Hasan

Textile from John Everett Millais’ Vanessa, 1868, 2018

Oil, acrylic, flashe paint and gesso on Okawara paper with Jamdani textile and bamboo

69 x 63 in

Nape (Ambereen at home), acrylic on handmade Indian Khadi paper, dimensions approx. 43 x 53 inches (will double check later today), 2019

Meena Hasan

Nape (Ambereen at Home), 2019

Acrylic on handmade indian khadi paper

43 x 53 in

Meena Hasan

Earrings, 2019

Flashe, gesso and acrylic on Okawara paper

2 x 4 in

Tommy Kha

May (or Half a Self Portrait), Whitehaven, Memphis, 2017

Archival inkjet on adhesive

32 x 40 in

Tommy Kha

May (with her Half-Self-Portrait), Whitehaven, Memphis, 2017

Archival inkjet on adhesive

32 x 40 in

Tommy Kha

Canada (Jane with Flowers), 1984

Archival inkjet on vinyl

6 x 4 in

Tommy Kha

Canada (Red, Blue, and Yellow), 1984

Archival Inkjet on vinyl

3 ½ x 5 in

Meena Hasan

Untitled, 2018

Gouache on primed cardboard

4 x 5 1/5 in

Meena Hasan

Untitled, 2019

Gouache on primed cardboard

5 x 5 in

Meena Hasan

Untitled, 2019

Gouache on primed cardboard

6 x 4 3/4 in

Meena Hasan

Untitled, 2019

Gouache on primed cardboard

6 x 4 3/4 in

Tommy Kha

Untitled, 2019

Xerox photograph on newsprint

17 x 11 in

Limited edition

Tommy Kha

Untitled, 2019

Xerox photograph on newsprint

17 x 11 in

Limited edition

Tommy Kha

Untitled, 2019

Xerox photograph on newsprint

17 x 11 in

Limited edition

Press Release

LAUNCH F18 is delighted to present a two-person exhibition of works by artists Meena Hasan and Tommy Kha titled Other Echoes Inhabit The Garden. The exhibition opens Saturday, May 18th and is on view through June 22, 2019. Please join us for the opening reception on Saturday, May 18th from 6-9pm.
 
Other Echoes Inhabit The Garden takes its title from T.S. Elliot’s first poem in his Four Quartets: Burnt Norton (1936) by way of Edward Said’s speech at Toronto’s York University in 1993. Said concludes,
 
Imperialism consolidated the mixture of cultures and identities on a world scale. But its worst and most paradoxical gift was to allow people to believe that they were only, mainly, exclusively white or black or Western or Oriental. Just as human beings make their own history, they also make their cultures and ethnic identities. No one can deny the persisting continuities of long traditions, sustained habitations, national languages and cultural geographies…Survival, in fact, is about the connections between things. In Eliot's phrase, reality cannot be deprived of the "'other echoes that inhabit the garden.'
 
Both Hasan and Kha probe the power structures present in their images, questioning given hierarchies and suppositions. They ask: who is the subject, why and how is the viewer implicated, and how can the compositional lens become a tool? They cultivate the process of translating a person to image by approaching their subjects with self-awareness of their roles as artists, consistently implicating themselves in their images. Through this inquiry, the artists share a desire to articulate an Asian American experience by means of subtle manipulation of the everyday. Their works reveal complex and malleable ideas of self that lead to subject recognition, misrecognition and environments rich with textures and colors that mirror and distort the figures inhabiting them.
 
The artists, like all children of immigrants, have inherited the post-colonial legacies of their families. This exhibition seeks to pay respect to this inheritance and the matriarchs who shaped and raised them. The strategies present in the show acknowledge the inescapable matriarcal figures whose influences pervade the works. For Kha, who primarily works in performance and self-portraiture, portraits of his aunt and mother take precedence, the latter’s being “half self-portraits.” A stack of Southern landscapes appear on the otherwise illegible article, recalling the events leading up to his aunt’s murder. As the stack depletes, so does the article’s legibility. For Hasan, she investigates two aspects of the decorative: floral textiles and yellow-gold jewelry. The textiles present are tied to legacies of colonial influence and British intervention into South Asian patterning: the Chintz in John Everett Millais’ Vanessa, 1868, the Bengali Kantha hand-stitched quilt in Putting on Bangles and the Liberty London floral print of her mother’s shirt in Nape (Ambereen at home). The yellow-gold jewelry featured in the paintings are coveted heirlooms that are gifted generationally and reveal the desire for tactile connections to past matriarchs through the preciousness of objecthood.
 
Language discloses numerous distinctions present in this exhibition: Hasan, a South-Asian-American is a painter while Kha, an East-Asian-American is a photographer. Kha’s family settled in Memphis, TN after fleeing China and Vietnam. Hasan’s settled in NYC in the 70s during Bangladesh’s tumultuous efforts for Independence from Pakistan. Together, the artists attended Yale’s MFA programs in 2013 and they borrow strategies and themes from each other’s mediums, creating echoes between painting and photography and finding spaces between the two. This exhibition recognizes all these distinctions and offers the rare opportunity to witness geographically distinct colonial legacies produced in a variety of media side by side. The particularities that distinguish the artists from each other are also exactly that which communicates. Kha and Hasan work within and through ideas of distinction, searching for meaning through specificity and, in Said’s words, they survive by nuancing the “connections between things”.

 

Meena Hasan received her B.A. in Studio Art from Oberlin College in 2009 and her MFA in Painting and Printmaking from Yale School of Art in 2013 where she won the Carol Schlosberg Memorial Prize for Painting. In 2010, she was awarded the Terna Prize Affiliated Fellowship at the American Academy in Rome. Hasan has participated in numerous group exhibitions at museums and galleries including The Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (2013); Bruce High Quality Foundation, New York (2014); Anahita Art Gallery, Tehran (2015); 0.0 Gallery, Los Angeles (2019); Vacation, New York (2019). Hasan’s forthcoming solo exhibition will open at 17 Essex Gallery, New York later this year. She lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.
 
Tommy Kha received his BFA in Photograph from Memphis Collage of Art in 2011 and his MFA in Photography from Yale School of Art in 2013. Kha has recently held solo exhibitions at Blue Sky Gallery, Portland, Oregon (2018) and Baxter Street at Camera Club of New York, New York (2019). Kha has participated in group exhibitions in the United States and abroad including Kunstverein Wolfsburg, Wolfburg (2014); Deli Gallery, Queens (2016); White Box, New York (2017); Ogden Museum of Southern Art, New Orleans (2018) and the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art, Charleston (2018). Kha lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.
 
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