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Diana Al-Hadid

  • Biography
  • Works
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  • Biography
    View works. Diana Al-Hadid, Winter, 2024
    Winter, 2024
    View works
    Born in Aleppo, Syria, 1981
    Lives & Works in Brooklyn, New York
    Download Selected Press (PDF, opens in a new tab.)
    Download Artist CV (PDF, opens in a new tab.)
  • Diana Al-Hadid examines the historical frameworks and perspectives that continue to shape discourse on culture and materials today. With a...
    Portrait by Charlie Rubin

    Diana Al-Hadid examines the historical frameworks and perspectives that continue to shape discourse on culture and materials today. With a practice spanning sculpture, wall reliefs, and works on paper, the artist weaves together enigmatic narratives that draw inspiration from both ancient and modern civilizations. Al-Hadid’s rich allegorical constructions are born from art historical religious imagery, ancient manuscripts, female archetypes, and folkloric storytelling frameworks. 

    Framed by a host of references from antiquity, cosmology, cartography, and architecture, Al-Hadid’s work gives form to ghostly images abstractly rendered in materials as various as steel, polymer gypsum, fiberglass, wood, foam, plaster, aluminum foil, and pigment. The artist’s process-based explorations innovate from commonplace industrial materials. Their formidable presence sits steady in the lineage of creation and construction that we associate with empire, complicated by an often-elegiac tone. 

    On these architectural associations, Aruna D’Souza has said, “Though Al-Hadid is known for making work that is engaged with architecture—imagining the body as a kind of scaffold or superstructure, using materials commonly found on building sites—it is anti-architectural in one crucial way: it is a product of intuition, of responsiveness in the moment, of seeing what’s there and what needs to come next, of having a vision and allowing it to develop according to its own logic. Though she draws upon a deep understanding of what is possible given her long engagement with her chosen materials and methods, there is no set plan, no strict blueprint, no predetermined schematics.” 

  • "Though Al-Hadid is known for making work that is engaged with architecture—imagining the body as a kind of scaffold or superstructure, using materials commonly found on building sites—it is anti-architectural in one crucial way: it is a product of intuition, of responsiveness in the moment, of seeing what’s there and what needs to come next, of having a vision and allowing it to develop according to its own logic." —Aruna D'Souza
  • Al-Hadid’s large-scale sculptures layer these figurative, landscape, and architectural elements to decontextualize the historical circumstances they reference. In 2018, the...
    Photography by Field Studio. Courtesy of Diana Al-Hadid.

    Al-Hadid’s large-scale sculptures layer these figurative, landscape, and architectural elements to decontextualize the historical circumstances they reference. In 2018, the artist presented Delirious Matter in Madison Square Park, New York, featuring six female figures—The Grotto and Gradiva; Citadel; and three called Synonym. Balanced between ruin and regeneration, these elusive figures communed to form a kinship of women throughout the history of art. 

    Described by Al-Hadid as “somewhere between fresco and tapestry,” the artist’s three-dimensional wall panels emphasize her skilled gestural brushwork. Holes and gaps form not from puncture, but through controlled dripping, methodically reinforced in a delicate interweaving of mass and void. Their abstractions variously recall both human creations and those of the natural world: the swirling drapery of fine fabrics or the slow drip of cave matter. These forms have been realized as hanging objects, architectural interventions, and most recently as outdoor installation. 

  • Works
    Diana Al-Hadid, The Sighting, 2023

    Diana Al-Hadid

    The Sighting, 2023
    linen pulp paint on abaca base sheet
    40 x 30 inches
    101.6 x 76.2 cm
    Copyright The Artist
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  • Exhibitions
    • Diana Al-Hadid: The Four Seasons

      Diana Al-Hadid: The Four Seasons

      June 25 – July 12, 2024
      Diana Al-Hadid's The Four Seasons comprises four new panel paintings that expand the artist's engagement with the natural world. Situated at the convergence of abstraction and landscape painting traditions, The Four Seasons deepens Al-Hadid’s investigation of nature as an allegory for the human experience, turning to a subject with universal resonance: the seasonal cycles of life.
      View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid at Dieu Donné

      Diana Al-Hadid at Dieu Donné

      Online November 18 – December 22, 2023
      View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid: Women, Bronze, and Dangerous Things

      Diana Al-Hadid: Women, Bronze, and Dangerous Things

      November 2 – December 22, 2023 509 West 27th Street, New York
      View More
    • Shades of Daphne

      Shades of Daphne

      January 12 – February 22, 2023 509 West 27th Street, New York
      View More
  • The Kasmin Review

    There Are New Mountains by Stephanie Cristello 'There Are New Mountains' by Stephanie Cristello, coheres a constellation of the meaning...

    There Are New Mountains

    by Stephanie Cristello

    "There Are New Mountains" by Stephanie Cristello, coheres a constellation of the meaning of time, history, and place in Diana Al Hadid's site specific work The Time Being (2022). The sculpture, based on blueprint drawings of a water-clock by the twelfth-century Islamic polymath Ismail Al-Jazari, was featured in the Syrian Garden in Cleveland, Ohio as part of the 2022 FRONT International: Cleveland Triennial for Contemporary Art, "Oh, Gods of Dust and Rainbows." The exhibition was on view from July 16–October 22, 2022.

     

    Read More

  • News
    • Diana Al-Hadid featured in Family Style

      Diana Al-Hadid featured in Family Style

      by Meka Boyle February 23, 2025
      The natural world shines through in Diana Al-Hadid’s new, labyrinthine works, in which intricate layers congeal into views of the trees and sky.
      View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid interviewed in Frieze

      Diana Al-Hadid interviewed in Frieze

      by Livia Russell February 18, 2025
      Artist Diana Al-Hadid looks to the skies in new paintings showing at Frieze Los Angeles
      View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid elected to the National Academicians in the Class of 2024

      Diana Al-Hadid elected to the National Academicians in the Class of 2024

      September 24, 2024 View More
    • Women, Bronze, and Dangerous Things reviewed in Frieze

      Women, Bronze, and Dangerous Things reviewed in Frieze

      by Rebecca Rose Cuomo January 5, 2024 View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid: Women, Bronze, and Dangerous Things reviewed in Artsy

      Diana Al-Hadid: Women, Bronze, and Dangerous Things reviewed in Artsy

      by Rawaa Talass November 16, 2023 View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid profiled in Vogue

      Diana Al-Hadid profiled in Vogue

      By Grace Edquist November 10, 2023 View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid featured in Upstate Diary

      Diana Al-Hadid featured in Upstate Diary

      by Sophia Herring October 30, 2023 View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid interviewed in Artnet News

      Diana Al-Hadid interviewed in Artnet News

      by Katy Diamond Hamer September 18, 2023 View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid featured in Galerie Magazine

      Diana Al-Hadid featured in Galerie Magazine

      by Hilarie Sheets August 11, 2023 View More
    • Diana Al-Hadid Joins Kasmin

      Diana Al-Hadid Joins Kasmin

      November 22, 2021 View More
    • USA For UNHCR

      USA For UNHCR

      Art And Resilience Benefit Auction April 29, 2021 View More
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info@kasmingallery.com

 

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