Navid Sinaki: The Infinite Garden
October 5, 2023–June 23, 2024
Gallery 26
Inspired by the mythological works of Persian poets Ferdowsi (940–c.1025) and Nizami Ganjavi (1141–1209), artist Navid Sinaki has created The Infinite Garden, a queer epic about a king who builds a garden for each of his three lovers; one of flowers, one of fruit, and another of glass. Each lover regales the king with tales of shrinking princes, supernatural trickery, and paramours who never quite meet until death.
Over centuries, Persian epics inspired countless painted manuscripts. To visualize his imagined epic poem, never completely written down, Sinaki has looked to digitized manuscripts as well as the more recent visual language of the early internet, GIF animations, and VHS cassette packaging.
The Infinite Garden’s short films and faux ephemera draw from the figures and iconography of 18th- and 19th-century Persian paintings, tilework, and manuscripts from the collection of the Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design. Four Zand and Qajar period paintings from its collection are also included in this gallery. Rarely seen due to their fragile nature, these objects are made accessible by Sinaki as he nests stories within stories to conjure a space for queerness in Persian mythology.
About Navid Sinaki
Navid Sinaki is an artist and writer from Tehran who currently lives in Los Angeles, California. His work entwines mythology with outdated digital media, including early aughts-style web pages, DVD menus, and diaristic text that falls somewhere between fiction and nonfiction. Sinaki’s work has screened at museums and art houses around the world, including the Modern Museum in Stockholm, Lincoln Center, British Film Institute, REDCAT, and Cineteca Nacional in Mexico. His debut novel Medusa of the Roses will be released by Grove Atlantic in 2024.
Sinaki is an Artist-in-Residence at the Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design in 2023.
THIS EXHIBITION IS CURATED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH:
Doris Duke Foundation
Shangri La
TOP BANNER
Navid Sinaki. Still image from The Infinite Garden, 2023. Courtesy of the artist.