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CONTEXTS

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Toba Khedoori

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Toba Khedoori creates intricate drawings of ordinary architectural spaces on a very large scale, using sheets of wax-treated paper. She deconstructs and isolates these spaces, creating vast ghostly visages that draw you into an enigmatic and lonely world.  

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Toba Khedoori, Untitled (house), 11 by 16 feet, 1995, oil and wax on paper

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One work that displays these qualities most strongly, is Untitled (house) 1995. This monumental work shows a sectional view of an eviscerated house surrounded by a sea of what appears to be white empty space. This negative space is not in fact as devoid of substance as it first seems, as on closer inspection, it reveals the personal traces of the artist. The various remnants picked up from the artist's studio scatter various parts of the white expanse, as do dog hairs and a footprint on the bottom left corner. These personal touches are motifs that run throughout her wax paper renderings.  

Her work relates to my own practice in several ways. Her use of large amounts of negative, white space to give emphasis and intensity to the subject is a compositional device that I will use to inform my own work. The way in which she leaves these traces of herself is also of seminal importance to the aesthetic presentation of my rubbings. What might otherwise be impersonal and reproductive has become expressive and autobiographical. It highlights the artist's interest in process and conveys the story of the drawing. The gesture of the artist's personal touch is like an imprint of the artist's identity. This is something I have been thinking about a lot in my own work. The traces and echoes of the graphite pencil as they go over the surface of the thing being caressed, these marks and gestures, give life and expression to the work. It is what makes them a drawing and gives them personality and expressiveness, an expressiveness that conveys my own identity through the work. 

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