This is Not an Eggplant
“…In Eggplants, large life-size ceramic eggplants bear a style of gold Farsi script commonly used in sacred or decorative objects. Suffice to say the gold script on the eggplants is no poem (though, it could be) or mystic wisdom. It is a transliteration of a more profane English word. Amjadi is interested in this play of cultural relations, of who in effect “gets it.” Yet, understanding the work does not hinge on reading Farsi or being “in” on the joke. Like a codec, Amjadi is encoding and decoding meaning at various levels of entry and access. The invitation in her work is to a radical opening up to the entanglements between ourselves and the object as well as our entanglements with each other across lines of difference and encampments of identity. If she had not explained her intent behind the porcelain eggplant to me, how would I have first encountered it? What meaning would I have made of it independently? I find them lovely, pleasing to look at. I want to touch them like I would in a grocery store. I want to know how she made them and achieved their uniformly smooth, curved shape. My looking, triggers my own indices of meaning and memory…” –Nicole Nfonoyim-Hara
In her work I Pity the Garden, the Iranian poet Forough Farokhzad grieves the loss of the family garden, the world’s garden, and through passages in the voices of her father, mother, brother and sister, describes how despair has infected all that were nourished by its soil. The poem features prominently in my 2019 multi-media installation The Garden: Recalling Paradise. The garden here serves as a metaphor for the nation, for the land, for the earth itself, and for the collective “we the people”.
This is Not an Eggplant, proposes that the threat of ecological failure is intertwined with the dark rifts of the political landscape that continue to shape our personal and collective lives. The present, held in abeyance, is deeply rooted in history and yearns for a better future, the possibilities of “what if?” How can an individual imagine otherwise when the collective is turning aside? Why is this “we” so disparate? What can bring us together? Art? Poetry? Protest?
This is Not an Eggplant, 2020-2022
multimedia installation at MCAD Gallery, Minneapolis, MN
laser-cut steel, cast porcelain, 18k gold luster, water, oil, coins, blood meal
My MCAD/Jerome installation consists of two bodies of work that were conceived in the dawn of the cold season of January 2020. This is Not an Eggplant is a multimedia installation accompanied by four visual poems, and a durational video performance projected in the darkroom. Collectively titled Diaries of a Village Potter, each of the visual poems is linked one to the other as introspective meditations about a world on the brink. Simply spoken, they are the reflections of a village potter, the storyteller.
Diaries of a Village Potter, 2020-2022
2-channel visual poetry audio/video projection at MCAD Gallery, Minneapolis, MN
HD video | 33:18
Operation Ajax, 2021
durational performance audio/video projection at MCAD Gallery, Minneapolis, MN
HD video | 37:00