Aicon Gallery is pleased to announce the second solo
exhibition of Brooklyn and Lahore based artist Salman
Toor’s most recent series of paintings, titled Resident
Alien. Born in Lahore, Pakistan, Toor’s new work consists
of a series of complex figurative paintings, of varying scale
and style, delineated with Sufi poetry and ranging in
subject from autobiographical constructs to Art History,
Post-Colonialism, and Pop Culture.
These new paintings show surreal gatherings of people,
romances and adventures in imagined homelands and
scenes of conflict in places designated as both East and
West. Toor’s life and art traverse the boundaries between
these two worlds, dismantling stereotypes and seeking to
broaden perceptions on both sides of the global divide. In
the artist’s own words: ‘For me painting is a process of selfdefinition,
as an outsider in multiple worlds which become
more and more entangled and complex.’ Historical ghosts
of origin collide with scenes of leisure and repose, pointing
to issues of exile, integration, and the cultural rituals that
divide and unite us. At sad family dinner tables and imagined multiethnic communities, the paintings map out a
space where personal and global concerns intersect. These vignettes evoke the fluid boundaries of identity and the
anxieties of living in our post 9/11 world and revitalize the potentiality of the medium of painting.
Process is central to Toor’s work. Compositions are unplanned. Toor paints intuitively, from memory, embracing
the surprise of the transformations he encounters as an image comes to life. Toor’s painting moves seamlessly
between abstraction and representation. He uses text and figures to carve out a psychological space or site of
fantasy, memory and deconstruction. The text consists of poetry as well as Persio-Arabic gibberish, memories of
graffiti dribbled in alleyways and mosques, calligraphic protest banners and shop signs in Pakistan. These are
peppered with elements of graphic design, comic strips and advertising as in the Sale! Pow! Boom! Signs, as well as
thought and speech bubbles. The 17th century poems of Bulleh Shah, a wandering Sufi dervish from Punjab, and
the contemporary poetry of exile by Hasan Mujtaba point to the shape-shifting nature of longing and belonging, a
fruitful unmooring from communities of origin. Amid the diverse tableau vivant of Toor’s figures, apartment
buildings sprouting out of metropolitan skylines are overlapped by silhouettes and contours of mosques and
Salman Toor, Resident Aliens, 2015, Oil on canvas, 66 x 46.5 in.
shrines, distorting our sense of place and time.
In this way Toor’s paintings create an interface
between seemingly divergent understandings of
an over-connected world, developing societies
seething in turmoil and the microcosms of
cultures like Brooklyn’s art scene where Toor
now works.
The scroll-like triptych titled Rooftop Party with
Ghosts is reminiscent of the naive distortions of
the Indian artist Bhupen Khakhar, with echoes of
James Ensor, and George Grosz. Blurred
apparitions that look like memories, but could
be characters from multiple chapters of history,
wander among gatherings of bohemian
globalistas. The ghost of a soldier in a uniform
resembling that of the British Indian army has a mysterious exchange with a coterie of urban intellectual types. They
are amused by the wisdom or song of a crouching beggar or minstrel or prophet, resembling a cartoon from an
Orientalist painting or ubiquitous photojournalism from the Middle East and South Asia. A disapproving matronly
ghost hovers behind a pair of embracing lovers as a modish man in a ponytail smiles his Tom-and-Jerry smile, toying
with a smartphone and lighting a joint. For Toor, these ‘ghosts’ serve as reverberating echoes of origins, ‘cultural
baggage’, as well as enablers of disruption and reinvention of static ideas of self and belonging.
In Resident Aliens and Ghosts, young revelers take selfies and spill red wine in a gathering cloud of text, speech
bubbles and the abstract forms of puddles and splashes of what looks like black oil which the artist sees as a physical
form of guilt. At a distance a Mughal prince is shown a view by a coiffed Victorian lady resembling Jane Austen. In
a group of works titled Newscaster, black oil splashes again, with television news anchors as harbingers of ominous
accounts of international conflicts and crises. In smaller works, immigrants reminisce in their urban apartments,
listening to traditional gazals on YouTube. They sit among stacks and collections of books on Post-Colonial
scholarship, contemporary art and fiction. In For Allen Ginsberg, avatars of global hobos ramble along towards an
unknown destination with sacks of allegorical belongings and Marcel Duchamp’s wheel in tow. Swimming in the
verses of Mujtaba’s poem, overlapping worlds host scenes of violence, historical fiction and divine revelation.
Born in Lahore, Pakistan in 1983 and living and working in Brooklyn, New York, Toor received his Masters of Fine
Art (Painting) at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn in 2009. Toor’s works have ranged in style from meticulously executed
nineteenth century-style history painting to loosely painted and abstracted figuration employing design elements
and visual language from both Eastern and Western pop culture. He has had several solo exhibitions in the U.S. and
Pakistan and has been featured both as an artist and a writer in publications such as ArtAsiaPacific, Wall Street
International, The Express Tribune, and The Friday Times. This is his second solo exhibition with Aicon Gallery, New
York.