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Kamyar Bineshtarigh's new series of works blurs the line between artist and curator, studio and gallery, offering a broad meditation on authorship, presence, preservation, and impermanence.
The artist’s second solo exhibition with the gallery, Group Show repeats and refines Bineshtarigh's surface transfer technique in a study of lifted walls and floors from the studios of artists working in South Africa. The immersive mixed-media works give form to his curiosity around artists’ creative processes, with each work carrying layers of history and energy from its original site - the studio.
Watch a time-lapse video of Bineshtarigh's process here.
The collection of interiors and interiorities — not originally meant for exhibition — are adrift in the gallery setting, finding comfort embedded in the plaster and paint of their original rooms. At once archaeological samples, memorials and psychic exposures, the works of Group Show continue Bineshtarigh’s enquiry into the potential of these surfaces to still time and preserve history, while also highlighting the social exchange between the art practitioners that is fundamental to the transfer.
Group Show should firstly be noted as a key development of the artist’s wall transfer method, where cold glue is gradually applied to surfaces, creating a thickened skin that is then peeled off along with the paint, plaster and markings of the top layers. In Bineshtarigh’s 2023 solo exhibition 9 Hopkins, the process was an exercise in memory, a ‘digging’ into the surfaces of a complex of soon-to-be-demolished buildings in Salt River, Cape Town, where the artist’s studio was located. Although the threat of disappearance is not immediate in Group Show, the vulnerable quality of the surfaces sustains a sense of the technique’s sensitivity.
Some surfaces have not been tacked with references, drawn on, or painted. They are marked only by the spatial and material character of the particular studio architectures they are pulled from, bringing with them wall or floor paint, textures, or dirt. Others have been occupied with conviction: they are personal and layered, stacked with cues, references, sketches, spills and outlines. In such transfers, where notations are so immediately characteristic of their makers’ styles and thought trajectories, Bineshtarigh’s intervention of reframing them cannot help but beckon to postmodernist-era traditions of appropriation as art. But the intervention is clear: The artist’s wall samples and their delicate, uneven outer edges, recalling ruins or ancient tablets, materialise his fixation with memory and desire to capture space in time.
The archaeological samples implicate everyday marks as signs of life. For artists, though, marks are more self-conscious, staged and largely shaped, as Nolan Oswald Dennis contends, by the “overt demands of exhibition practices”.[1] What then of the work that never escapes the studio, the place of making before, and at best, despite the exhibition? Imiso Studios’ circular umsamo (ritual area), once painted on the floor with cow dung and clay, now hangs as Group Show’s aesthetic and conceptual outlier. With the studio replacing this spiritual holding pattern seasonally, the circle, designated for sharing food, drink, music and ancestral ceremony, carries with it months of Imiso Studios’ social life and gathering.
The ink of Mary Sibande and Lawrence Lemaoana’s collage cut-outs bleeds, a reddish dog raining lines of pigment against a grey-white wall holding faint impressions of its brickwork. The wall surfaces of Vusumzi Nkomo are hyper-citational in image rather than word: a sea of closely packed print-outs of object-centred conceptual art references, bad news, Coke adverts and ambiguous diagrams.
These walls are mysterious, exposing and ‘unresolved’, and yet Bineshtarigh’s process revolves around them. Social logistics are built around the doodles, visits are conducted to preserve paint splashes, and domestic flights are organised in hopes of gathering rejected notations. The studio visits are a serial event, with each of two to three layers of cold glue requiring days of drying before the slow and careful peeling can take place.
Splashes, spills and drips produce transfers, which read as abstract paintings in their own right. Alka Dass’s liquid cyanotype chemicals leave ethereal marks, while Andrew Kayser’s blue drips and tiny grey strips collect as a cramped audience. Sibusiso Ngwazi and Thokozani Mthiyane’s studio floor transfers read in the tradition of abstract expressionism: Ngwazi’s, confrontational; Mthiyane’s, gentle. Ed Young, Michael MacGarry and Nandipha Mntambo’s surfaces are quieter, defined by textural impressions, with Bineshtarigh having pulled a transfer of Mntambo’s 125-year-old brickwork studio wall, clay leftovers and all.
Crucially, Bineshtarigh’s transfers are not photographs, but samples, collections of actual unique surfaces that cannot be recreated, and no longer exist in the space of their making. Artist Daniel Buren’s 1979 essay “The Function of the Studio” argues that the artwork’s original place of belonging is the studio from which it comes, and that in a gallery or museum exhibition, the work becomes “foreign” to its new world: “Torn from their context, their ‘environment,’ they had lost their meaning and died, to be reborn as forgeries”.[1] (#_ftn1) Bineshtarigh’s practice then, which transfers studio surfaces, and in turn implicates these studios’ spatial make-up within the exhibition space, contends with the parameters of Buren’s thinking, blurring the line between studio and gallery. In fact, in the case of Group Show, the artwork is only able to become itself once removed from its studio, the place in which it was labelled ‘not artwork’. It is through Bineshtarigh’s preservation efforts that the pulled surface is reborn as an artwork.
Thus, through the transfer of surface ownership via logistics of ‘the pull’, Bineshtarigh presents a conceptually unusual practice that often feels intimately touched and worked by the (other) artist’s hand. Brett Charles Seiler’s large studio wall transfer, for instance, looks like a Brett Charles Seiler artwork, scrappy Queer notations littering the spaces around nostalgic hints of painted monochrome portraits, sparse reference images and an off-white backdrop. Bineshtarigh’s gesture is not a claim over these hidden practices, but a hope to memorialise them, to still them long enough to become objects of study.
Perhaps Bineshtarigh’s transfers are always motivated by disappearance, their careful preservation of everyday histories betraying an understanding that spatial and geographic belonging are precarious and unstable (for the majority world in particular). It is a great irony that the focus of Group Show — the artist’s studio — forces Bineshtarigh out of his own and into a practice far more akin to that of the group show curator. Offering viewers the chance to enter the hard-won intimacies of several studio visits, Kamyar Bineshtarigh’s Group Show transfers destabilise the space of the studio, presenting it as historic ruin, as memorial, to the exhibition.
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[1] Nolan Oswald Dennis, “Some Informal Remarks on a Wicked Problem”, Wherewithall, (2021, online)
https://wherewithall.co.za/?library.head.167880216970
Text by Thulile Gamedze
For press enquiries, please email [email protected]
An artist walkabout with Bineshtarigh will take place on Saturday 20 Sep at Southern Guild Cape Town at 11am.
To attend, please mail [email protected]
WATCH: a walkthrough short film of the exhibition here.
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Mikhael’s Studio Wall II, 2025Magnetic paint, wall paint, oil paint, acrylic paint, graphite, paper, ink, cello tape, masking tape, ink, cold glue on hessian backing
79.1 x 52.4 in. | 201 x 133 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Mikhael’s Studio Wall, 2025Magnetic paint, wall paint, oil paint, acrylic paint, graphite, paper, ink, cello tape, masking tape, ink, cold glue on hessian backing
70.1 x 115 in. | 178 x 292 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Mikhael’s Studio Wall III, 2025Wall paint, plaster, cold glue on hessian backing
17.3 x 14.6 in. | 44 x 37 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Andrew’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, oil paint, cold glue on hessian backing
84.6 x 115.4 in. | 215 x 293 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Andrew’s Studio Wall II, 2025Wall paint, oil paint, cold glue on hessian backing
41.7 x 28.1 in. | 106 x 71.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Alka’s Darkroom Wall III, 2025Wall paint, cyanotype solution, cold glue on hessian backing
67.3 x 56.7 in. | 171 x 144 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Alka’s Darkroom Wall IV, 2025Wall paint, cyanotype solution, cold glue on hessian backing
39 x 24.6 in. | 99 x 62.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Alka’s Darkroom Doorway Wall, 2025Wall paint, cyanotype solution, cold glue on hessian backing
87 x 14.2 in. | 221 x 36 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Alka’s Darkroom Wall V, 2025Wall paint, cyanotype solution, cold glue on hessian backing
15 x 12.6 in. | 38 x 32 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Alka’s Darkroom Floor, 2025Floor paint, cyanotype solution, cold glue on hessian backing
35 x 34 in. | 89 x 86 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Alka’s Darkroom Table, 2025Cyanotype solution, paper, cold glue on hessian backing
55.1 x 22.4 in. | 140 x 57 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Alka’s Darkroom Table II, 2025Cyanotype solution, cold glue on hessian backing
42.1 x 22.2 in. | 107 x 56.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Brett’s Studio Wall, 2024Wall paint, bitumen, acrylic, roof paint, ink, canvas, masking tape, cigarette butts, cardboard, dried sunflower, cold glue on hessian backing
118.1 x 244.1 in. | 300 x 620 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Brett’s To Do List on His Wall, 2024Wall paint, roof paint, acrylic paint, cold glue on hessian backing
78.7 x 12.21 in. | 200 x 31 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Mmango’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, oil paint, graphite, cold glue on hessian backing
80.9 x 92.3 in. | 205.5 x 234.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Nandipha’s Studio Wall, 2025Plaster, oil paint, cold glue on hessian backing
86.6 x 92.5 in. | 220 x 235 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Nandipha’s Studio Wall II, 2025Wall paint, oil paint, plaster, cold glue on hessian backing
33.9 x 15.7 in. | 86 x 40 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Nandipha’s Studio Wall III, 2025Wall paint, plaster, oil paint, cold glue on hessian backing
89 x 54.7 in. | 226 x 139 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Nandipha’s Studio Wall IV, 2025Plaster, oil paint, cold glue on hessian backing
83.5 x 48.8 in. | 212 x 124 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Nandipha’s Brick Wall, 2025Brick and cement remnants, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
19.3 x 17.3 in. | 49 x 44 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Nandipha’s Studio Floor, 2025Brick remnants, debris, oil paint, cold glue on hessian backing
37.8 x 37.4 in. | 96 x 95 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Ed’s Studio Wall (Brilliant White #1), 2025Wall paint, cold glue, canvas on board
39.6 x 39.6 in. | 100.5 x 100.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Boytchie’s Studio Wall II, 2025Wall paint, blackboard paint, spray paint, graphite, ink, paper, masking tape, domino, cold glue on hessian backing
112.6 x 105.9 in. | 286 x 269 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Boytchie’s Doorway Wall, 2025Wall paint, enamel, bitumen, oil paint, cold glue on hessian backing
65 x 12.2 in. | 165 x 31 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Dom’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, charcoal, acrylic paint, masking tape, paper, cold glue on hessian backing
64.2 x 53.9 in. | 163 x 137 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Dom’s Studio Wall II, 2025Charcoal, masking tape, found paper, cold glue on canvas backing
24.8 x 19.9 in. | 63 x 50.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Dom’s Studio Wall III, 2025Wall paint, charcoal, acrylic paint, masking tape, found paper, cold glue on hessian backing
59.8 x 24.6 in. | 152 x 62.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Zander’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, oil paint, reference images on paper, ink, masking tape, cold glue on hessian backing
99.6 x 103 in. | 253 x 261.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Zander’s Studio Wall II, 2025Wall paint, oil paint, reference images on paper, ink, black foil, masking tape, cold glue on hessian backing
87 x 116.1 in. | 221 x 295 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Daniel’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, oil paint, cold glue on hessian backing
86.2 x 73.6 in. | 219 x 187 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Daniel’s Studio Wall II, 2025Wall paint, oil paint, cold glue on hessian backing
44.5 x 23.4 in. | 113 x 59.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Daniel’s Studio Wall III, 2025Wall paint, oil paint, masking tape, cold glue on hessian backing
63.8 x 16.7 in. | 162 x 42.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Meesh’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, acrylic paint, cold glue on hessian backing
83.1 x 50.4 in. | 211 x 128 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Sibu’s Studio Floor, 2025Floor paint, acrylic paint, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
115.4 x 57.5 in. | 293 x 146 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Sibu’s Studio Floor II, 2025Floor paint, acrylic paint, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
65.7 x 95.7 in. | 167 x 243 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Sibu’s Studio Floor III, 2025Floor paint, acrylic paint, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
71.7 x 60.2 in. | 182 x 153 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Sibu’s Studio Floor IV, 2025Floor paint, acrylic paint, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
89 x 54.7 in. | 134 x 106 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Sibu’s Studio Floor V, 2025Floor paint, acrylic paint, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
31.5 x 25.6 in. | 80 x 65 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Vusi’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, reference images on paper, ink, masking tape, cold glue on hessian backing
87.4 x 85 in. | 222 x 216 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Vusi’s Studio Wall II, 2025Wall paint, reference images on paper, plastic sleeve, shoe polish, masking tape, cold glue on hessian backing
35.8 x 31.5 in. | 91 x 80 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Vusi’s Studio Wall III, 2025Wall paint, ink, reference images on paper, masking tape, cold glue on hessian backing
42.1 x 27.2 in. | 107 x 69 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Guy’s Studio Floor, 2024Floor paint, acrylic paint, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
74.4 x 91.3 in. | 189 x 232 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Guy’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, acrylic paint, spray paint, cold glue on hessian backing
82.7 x 80.1 in. | 210 x 203.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Jane’s Studio Floor, 2025Rust, cello tape, packaging tape, debris, paint, cold glue on hessian backing
70.5 x 51.2 in. | 179 x 130 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Jane’s Studio Floor II, 2025Rust, cello tape, packaging tape, debris, paint, cold glue on hessian backing
35.8 x 30.5 in. | 91 x 77.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Mary and Lawrence’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, paper, ink, thread, fabric, masking tape, putty, resin, Tippex, cold glue on hessian backing
77.8 x 101.6 in. | 197.5 x 258 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Mary and Lawrence’s Studio Wall III, 2025Wall paint, marker, pencil, masking tape, cold glue on hessian backing
39.8 x 40.2 in. | 101 x 102 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Mary and Lawrence’s Damp Wall, 2025Wall paint, plaster, brick remnants, rubber flex, cold glue on hessian backing
52.8 x 38.2 in. | 134 x 97 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Mary’s List on her Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, marker, pencil, masking tape, cold glue on hessian backing
45.5 x 24.8 in. | 115.5 x 63 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Migi’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, spray paint, acrylic paint, graphite, marker, floor paint, cold glue on hessian backing
125.2 x 129.3 in. | 318 x 328.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Group Show Plans on The Wall (33 Yew Street), 2025Wall paint, ink, sticky notes, card, masking tape, paper, paint, cold glue on hessian backing
64.2 x 117.7 in. | 163 x 299 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Amy’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, acrylic paint, card, graphite, cold glue on hessian backing
68.5 x 46.3 in. | 174 x 117.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Nabeeha’s Studio Wall, 2025Paper, canvas, duct tape, marker, pencil, cold glue on hessian backing
28 x 28.5 in. | 71 x 72.5 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Nabeeha’s Studio Wall II, 2025Paper, canvas, duct tape, marker, pencil, oil paint, rag, lace, cold glue on hessian backing
31.5 x 53.5 in. | 80 x 136 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Nabeeha’s Studio Wall III, 2025Paper, canvas, duct tape, marker, oil paint, rag, cold glue on hessian backing
31.5 x 29.5 in. | 80 x 75 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Stairway to Michael’s Studio, 2025Fresco pigment, cold glue on hessian backing
72 x 92.9 in. | 183 x 236 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Michael’s Studio Wall, 2025Wall paint, rust, cold glue on hessian backing
45.5 x 30.7 in. | 115.5 x 78 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Michael’s Studio Wall II, 2025Wall paint, spray paint, cold glue on hessian backing
35.4 x 23.2 in. | 90 x 59 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Thokozani’s Studio Floor, 2025Floor paint, acrylic paint, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
63 x 146.1 in. | 160 x 371 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Thokozani’s Studio Floor II, 2025Floor paint, acrylic paint, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
18.5 x 17.7 in. | 47 x 45 cm
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Thokozani’s Studio Floor III, 2025Floor paint, acrylic paint, debris, cold glue on hessian backing
20.7 x 16.9 in. | 52.5 x 43 cm




























































