【foto erotice】
Signs and foto eroticeWonders: In the Studio with Hayal Pozanti
Studio Visit
My first encounter with artist Hayal Pozanti was the lucky happenstance of a predetermined seating arrangement: she was placed across the table from me at a dinner celebrating Jessica Silverman Gallery, which represents Pozanti on the West Coast. We spent the evening in deep discussion on the finer points of photographic theory and discovered a shared interest in the writings of Friedrich Kittler. Agreeing to stay in touch, I found myself in New York for Frieze Art Fair and decided to pay a visit to Pozanti’s studio in Queens. She was born in Istanbul in 1983, and moved to New York in 2009. In a small, partitioned space with views looking over the East River toward Midtown Manhattan, we talked about her current body of work, which will be exhibited later this year at the Prospect New Orleans biennial and at the Parisian iteration of the Foire Internationale d’Art Contemporain.
With my recent paintings, I’ve been thinking a lot about Ken Price, Philip Guston, and Allan McCollum. And, of course, I always come back to Giorgio Morandi—I think about him regularly. I find that a common ground for all of these artists was the ability to create, through figurative abstraction, a world parallel to the one we live in. As a Turkish immigrant who has moved from place to place, who speaks several languages, I’m intrigued by the possibility of creating a universal language to unite my cross-cultural experiences. When I think back to my childhood in Istanbul—even to my time as a young professional there—I was always concerned with the question of acceptance and with the idea of unifying people.
My early paintings were very figural—I was looking at Turkish miniatures and thinking about the Abrahamic religions I was in contact with daily. While getting my M.F.A at Yale and studying with Peter Halley, my practice was based on images that I would collect from the Internet. I was really engrossed in that culture of image collecting, collaging. But I realized that I couldn’t propose something new by appropriating things. I wanted to step away from the computer, because I was spending so much time in front of the screen, sitting there staring at something with dozens of tabs open. I decided to invent my own language, through abstraction. I was deeply intrigued by hieroglyphic and pictographic-based civilizations, and often I would take the train down from New Haven to visit the Met’s collection of Mesoamerican artifacts. I also have a background in graphic design—prior to making art full time, I worked in a corporate environment developing visual branding—so I have a familiarity with making signs and symbols.
My initial approach to shape-making was variations on “a circle in a square.” After generating hundreds of sketches, I noticed similarities in form and order. This led me to narrow it down to thirty-one signs—an alphabet, if you will. After that, I began combining those initial signs to produce additional ones, much like creating words and sentences from letters.
I free-sketch most of the time. Then I put the sketch-painting in the computer and keep painting on the computer. I have a track pad, so I’m still using my hands. When I’ve adjusted the image to my liking, I print off a preliminary copy as my guide and begin the composition anew, painting with acrylics or oils on wood board. Sometimes, I’ll pause to take a photograph of the composition, import it into Photoshop, and see how it looks on-screen. Until a painting is completed, I think about how the composition looks on the wall, through the camera’s viewfinder, and on-screen. Recently, I’ve also starting making three-dimensional sculptures and short animation videos, both informed by my sketches and paintings.
As for my routine, I’m usually very disciplined. I live in Chinatown with lots of families in very close quarters, so I wake up to children running down the stairs. In the morning, I put on the BBC, do Pilates, and then catch the L train to my studio. I put in regular hours. I tried being the bohemian artist for a while, but then you’re not in sync with the world, and phone calls need to be made.
Joseph Akel is a writer based in New York City and San Francisco. A regular contributor to Artforum, Frieze, and ArtReview, among others, he is a Ph.D. candidate in the University of California, Berkeley’s Rhetoric Department.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Here's what it would take for Trump to actually get impeached
2025-06-26 22:43Here are the best cheap headphones for working out and daily life
2025-06-26 21:23Commissioning Misleading Core i9
2025-06-26 21:15Popular Posts
Amazon to sell its own face shields and this is normal now
2025-06-26 22:32Elon Musk's Tesla factory drama is mostly resolved
2025-06-26 21:55Amazon requires sellers to use more efficient packaging, or pay up
2025-06-26 21:32Featured Posts
Best JBL deal: Save $80 on JBL Xtreme 4 portable speaker
2025-06-26 23:40Photographer undertakes mission to document every species on Earth
2025-06-26 23:29Liv Little on gal
2025-06-26 22:32Even the White House doesn't know what Ivanka Trump does
2025-06-26 21:41Popular Articles
The fat bears are already extremely fat
2025-06-26 23:53Apple is launching a big, celeb
2025-06-26 22:11Amazon launches faster Fire HD 8 tablets with more storage
2025-06-26 21:50The 10 Most Anticipated PC Games of 2017
2025-06-26 21:30Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (286)
Free Roaming Information Network
The Story Behind the Home of Forgotten Video Games
2025-06-26 22:50Sky Information Network
Uber's new update will now let you look at public transit data while using the app
2025-06-26 22:47Dawn Information Network
There's finally an easy way to see 'Retweets with Comments' on Twitter
2025-06-26 22:42Creation Information Network
There's finally an easy way to see 'Retweets with Comments' on Twitter
2025-06-26 22:33Neon Information Network
The Ultimate Guide to Protecting Your Identity in the Digital Age
2025-06-26 22:03