Yara El-Sherbini “Forms of Regulation and Control”

CUE Art Foundation

poster for Yara El-Sherbini “Forms of Regulation and Control”
[Image: Yara El-Sherbini "Other Forms of Regulation and Control" (2020) Plastic, metal, paper, ink, human hair, hygrothermographs, 8 x 16 x 33 in.]

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Curated by Naeem Mohaiemen

CUE Art Foundation presents Forms of Regulation and Control, Yara El-Sherbini’s first solo exhibition in the U.S., curated by Naeem Mohaiemen. El-Sherbini’s practice draws upon interactive artworks, using humor and play to reveal the social systems that produce unconscious bias. Her gallery interventions untangle the ways our environments are regulated, and gesture toward the biases inherent in speech, visualization, and surveillance.

El-Sherbini’s playful, minimalist work underscores how insidious forms of knowledge-based control continue, in spite of recent efforts to decolonize the sciences. In Other Forms of Regulation and Control, El-Sherbini displays three hygrothermographs: inconspicuous machines used by museums and galleries to track and regulate the temperature and humidity of an exhibition space as part of protocols to protect artwork. Data is collected using a piece of human hair (typically hair classified as “Asian”), and any fluctuations in the environment are traced on graph paper. At CUE, El-Sherbini has replaced the hair in the machines with hair from the three “scientifically” classified ethno-hair categories: “African,” “Asian,” and “Caucasian.” In rupturing museum protocols, the artist questions the methods of monitoring artwork in public spaces, while also revealing how the idea of “race” always needs to be examined and untangled.

In Questioning, multiple choice questions are presented on colorful posters, replicating game cards in popular board games. In a startling mix of veiled sarcasm and off-the-wall answers, El-Sherbini uses the time gap between reading the question and finding the answers to have visitors reflect upon their biases surrounding current events. The work Occupied/Freed replaces the lock on CUE’s restroom with a lock that states the lavatory is either “occupied” or “freed” in red and green letters, reminding viewers of the ways borders mark ownership over the movement of people within geopolitics. In his curatorial essay, Naeem Mohaiemen writes that El-Sherbini’s projects ”have seemingly gentle, ‘friendly’ surfaces, with the sharp shards of discursive turmoil underneath. Each work appears as an innocuous object and game, but start to think of the implications and your reaction will be a productive shock.”

Three grey hygrothermographs are lined up next to each other without their plastic covers and with the motor and threaded side facing out. The hygrothermograph on the left holds straight blonde hair. The hygrothermograph in the center holds curly black hair. The hygrothermograph on the right holds straight brown hair.
Yara El-Sherbini, Other Forms of Regulation and Control, 2020. Plastic, metal, paper, ink, human hair, hygrothermographs, 8 x 16 x 33 inches.

CUE often invites artists to curate solo exhibitions of emerging artists’ work. In 2009, DJ Spooky curated Mohaiemen’s first solo show (Live True Life or Die Trying), at CUE Art Foundation. A decade later, CUE invited Mohaiemen to, in turn, curate an exhibition, for which he invited Yara El-Sherbini. Mohaiemen previously curated her work in System Error: War is a Force That Gives us Meaning (co-curated by Lorenzo Fusi) at Palazzo Papesse, Siena, in 2007. In preparation for this exhibition, El-Sherbini and Mohaiemen collaborated on a new work for CUE’s 2020 virtual benefit and auction, titled Passing Comment.

Yara El-Sherbini (b. Derby, works in Santa Barbara) works with humor, play, and irreverence through the forms of games, quizzes, advice, and puzzles disguised as installations. Recent exhibitions in London include Somerset House, Bloomsbury Festival, Tate, Hayward Gallery, The RCA, National Portrait Gallery, David Roberts Art Foundation, National Maritime Museum, Modern Art Oxford, The Victoria & Albert and Iniva. In Britain she has also exhibited work at Manchester Art Gallery; Arnolfini, Derby; IKON gallery, Bristol; and BALTIC, Birmingham. Other exhibitions include the Venice Biennale; Case Arabe, Cordoba; San Telmo Museum of Art, Madrid; ZKM, Germany; and Lombard-Freid Projects, New York. In 2021 she will be touring her public artwork, Arrivals + Departures, throughout the UK; and developing Kick Off, a social practice artwork with the National Trust, UK.

Naeem Mohaiemen (b. London, works in New York) combines essays, films, photography, and installations to research the idea of elusive utopias, shifting borders, rhizomatic families, and unreliable memory. His work exhibited at Mahmoud Darwish Museum (Ramallah), Bengal Foundation (Dhaka), SALT Beyoglu (Istanbul), Tate Britain (London), MoMA PS1 (New York), and documenta 14 (Athens/Kassel). He was a 2014 Guggenheim Fellow, and a finalist for the 2018 Turner Prize and the 2019 Herb Alpert Award. He is currently a Senior Fellow at Lunder Institute of American Art, Maine, and on the board of Vera List Center for Art & Politics, New York, and the film council of ICA, London.

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Schedule

from November 07, 2020 to December 15, 2020

Opening Reception on 2020-11-07 from 12:00 to 17:00

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