Mohammad Salemy | |
---|---|
Born | 1967 |
Nationality | Canadian, Iranian |
Other names | Mo Salemy |
Alma mater | Emily Carr University of Art and Design, University of British Columbia |
Occupation(s) | Artist, art critic, curator |
Organization | The New Centre for Research & Practice |
Mohammad Salemy[1] (born 1967 in Iran, Kermanshah)[2] [3] is a Canadian[4] artist,[5] art critic, curator,[6][7] writer[8] .[9][10] curator,[11] writer[12] He is sometimes referred to as "Mo Salemy".[13][14]
Salemy holds a master's degree in Critical Curatorial Studies from the University of British Columbia. [15] His work is situated in the space between curatorial and artistic practice.[16]
As an artist he has shown his work internationally[17][18][19][20][21][22] and nationally, specially in Ashkal Alwan in Beirut and Witte de With in Rotterdam.[23] In 2016 he participated in the Gwangju Biennale with his project "For Machine Use Only".[24]
Salemy has curated shows at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery,[25] Koerner Gallery, AMS Gallery at the University of British Columbia,[26] Access Gallery,[27][28][29] as well as the Satellite Gallery[30][31][32][33] and he was the curator of Dadabase.[34][35][36] Lastly his curatorial project "For Machine Use Only" was included in the 11th edition of the Gwangju Biennale.[37][38][39] His curatorial project "This is the Sea" was included in the 2017 edition of the artmonte-carlo [40] [6] Together with Patrick Schabus he curated the 2018 edition of the Sofia Queer Forum, that featured Barbara Hammer and Bruce laBruce.[41][42][43] [44][45]
He is one of the co-founders of The New Centre for Research & Practice and the Fixing the Future platform. [46] In 2014, he organized the Incredible Machines conference in Vancouver. [47] and the "Here and Elsewhere, at War, and into the Future: Palestine" Discussion that was hosted Live at Whitebox Art Center.[48] In 2015 he co-organized the "Knowledge Forms and Forming Knowledge – Limits and Horizons of Transdisciplinary Art-Based Research" Seminar at the University of Graz and the IZK Künstlerhaus – Halle für Kunst & Medien.[49] He gave lectures and presentations at the New Museum, Art in General, the Dutch Art Institute, UNSW[50] University of New South Wales, Witte de With Contemporary Art, [51] Goethe-Institut, CalArts School of Critical Studies, NYU, CA2M[52] and the University of British Columbia.[53]
As a writer,[54] critic, and editor, Salemy has been a regular contributor to numerous exhibition catalogues, anthologies, and journals. His writings have appeared in numerous journals, catalogues, books, and magazines including: e-flux, Volume,[55] Flash Art, Brooklyn Rail[56] ,[57] Third Rail,[58]Ocula,[59][60] Spike Art Quarterly [61] DIS Magazine, C Magazine[62][63]
In 2016 he edited the book For Machine Use Only (&&& / The New Centre, 2016.) that featured texts by Jason Adams / Kate Armstrong, Elie Ayache, Benjamin Bratton, Clint Burnham, Lou Cantor, Manuel Correa, Alexander Galloway, Leo Goldsmith, Simón Isaza, Victoria Ivanova, Vaclav Janoscik, Ed Keller, Diana Khamis, Jessica Law, Siwin Lo, Nicola Masciandaro, Gean Moreno, Benjamin Noys, Jeff O’brien, Matteo Pasquinelli, David Roden, Judith Rodenbeck, Rory Rowan, Daniel Sacilotto, Samuel Sackeroff, T’ai Smith, Nick Srnicek, Kate Steinmann, Steven Warrick, and Peter Wolfendale.
His texts were published in books like "reinventing horizons", [64] and Politics of study.[65] He participated in numerous panel discussions and lectures in galleries, museums and colleges.[66][67][68][69][70][71][72]
ART AFTER THE MACHINES, 2015 [73]
The Artist Is Hyperpresent, Installation 2015 [74][75]
What were you doing on 9/11?, 2010-2015 [76]
Stairwell, 2015 [77]
Preliminary materials for any theory, 2014 [78][79]
THIS IS NEW YORK GARBAGE, Color prints, 2009 [80]
In between the empty frames, Color prints, 2008 [81]
How to Assemble an Atomic Bomb, DVD and tin can, 2006.[82]
Exhumed: Deliberating R.M. Khomeini, Photographs, 2002 [83]
He was the co-founder of the successful fashion label "Government Clothing",[84] and is known for his activism[85] He also worked as a designer, specially for The Organ (band)'s album Grab that gun [86]