You are on page 1of 8

Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater | Art21 Blog

1/13/13 7:27 PM

HOME

GUEST BLOG

EDUCATION

VIDEO

Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater


May 28th, 2010 by Georgia Kotretsos

new artists, new films


Like Tweet 30 2

search

subscribe
Art21 Blog feed Video feed Education feed Guest Blog feed

New films in New York Close Up premiering throughout 2012

flash points

communicate

recent comments
How are stories and art
Loul Samater at her studio in Beaufort, SC

intertwined?

Agnieszka in Dissecting the Social Self: A [Wo]Man, an Animal, and an Ambiguous I. : Interesting... dennis in When Works of Literature Make The Leap: Joe, looking at Glenn Ligon this summer inspired me to give my ap... Kyle in Videogame Appropriation in Contemporary Art: Grand Theft Auto (GTA): I love the amount of work Rockstar puts... Docsson in The Art + Brain Files: These sound, to me at least, the same comments that were (and for some continue to... Birgitte Lamb in More Moments, More Dialogue: Hi Joe. This sounds very interesting and is clearly a subject of...

Loul Samater is a Somali artist born and raised in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, but currently based in Beaufort, South Carolina. She came to the U.S. in 1994 to complete the last year of her schooling at the George boarding school in Philadelphia. Loul remained in the U.S. and she now holds a BFA from Dickinson College (1999) and an MFA in painting from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2004). Between 1998-99, she attended the Studio Arts Center International in Florence, Italy, and in 2005, the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Loul has shown at the Acuna-Hansen in Los Angeles, Alona Kagan in New York, and Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art, among other galleries and institutions. Loul recently returned from Somaliland, where she expanded the visual vocabulary that now fuels the work in her studio. It is my pleasure for you to read my interview with her and take a look at her work for yourself.

featured video

David Altmejd: "Assistants"

teaching with contemporary art

In and out of the classroom


Street art gallery, Hargeisa, Somaliland. Photograph by Loul Samater.

pages
About Art21 About the Art21 Blog Writers and Contributors

blogger-in-residence

Georgia Kotretsos: I would like to begin this post by acquainting our readers with your background, by looking into the landscape and cityscape of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, and Hargeisa, Somaliland. Do these places serve as your initial point of departure inspirationwise? Do you carry in your creative hard-drive Jeddahs sculptures, the monumentality of Naasa Hablood, or the feeling of Islamic architecture? Loul Samater: I do, I like how you put that. My background is unique I am a Somali of the diaspora born and raised in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. I had visited Somaliland four times in my life and only two of those times as an adult. I do indeed carry the Islamic architecture in me you see, structures and monuments are the main things I carry in my creative hard-drive. The city I grew up in is on the Red Sea. Jeddah means grandmother and that is where Eve is said to be buried. The city has 400 outdoor sculptures situated at the roundabouts and they vary in sizes but most of them tower over the city thus making Jeddah one of the largest open-air sculpture galleries in the world. The artworks are mainly modernist sculptures or abstract structures. There arent any figurative sculptures on display whatsoever. Anything that even depicts or represents the human form is prohibited in Saudi Arabia. Michael Neault, Content and Media Producer, Portland, OR

newsletter
Sign up

art21 online
on Art21.org on Blip.tv on Del.icio.us on Facebook on Flickr on iTunes on PBS on Twitter on YouTube

categories
> Columns (1284) > 5 Questions for Contemporary Practice (21) > Alchemy of Inspiration (5) > Art 2.1: Creating on the Social Web (16) > Bedfellows: Art and Visual Culture (15) > BOMB in the Building (19) > Bound: The Printed Object in

blogroll
16 Miles of String 2 Buildings 1 Blog Art Fag City

http://blog.art21.org/2010/05/28/inside-the-artists-studio-loul-samater/

Page 1 of 8

Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater | Art21 Blog


Context (6) > Cairo in Context: Art and Change in the Middle East (4) > Calling from Canada (15) > Center Field | Art in the Middle with Bad at Sports. (58) > Future Metaphors (3) > Gastro-Vision (37) > GIF(t) Basket (8) > Gimme Shelter: Performance Now (18) > Ink: Notes on the Contemporary Print (29) > Inside the Artist's Studio (40)
Mosque photograph by Loul Samater, Hargeisa, Somaliland.

1/13/13 7:27 PM

Art Whirled Artlog ArtsBeat Bad at Sports BAM 150 BOMBlog C-Monster Creative Capital The Lab Culture Monster Ed Winkleman Eyeteeth Henry Art Gallery: Hankblog Hrag Vartanian Hyperallergic IMA Blog LACMA: Unframed Look Into My Owl Mattress Factory Modern Art Notes MoMA: Inside/Out New Curator OC Art Blog PBS NewsHour: Art Beat SFMOMA: Open Space The Artblog The Ben Street The Daily Beast The Gray Area (Grey Art Gallery, NYU) The Huffington Post Two Coats of Paint updownacross VernissageTV Walker Art Center

> Inspired Reading (12) > Letter from London (92) > Lives and Works in Berlin (28) > Looking at Los Angeles (81) > New Kids on the Block (4) > No Preservatives: Conversations about Conservation (37) > On Location: Inside Art Documentary Production (9) > On View Now (32) > Open Enrollment (145) > Praxis Makes Perfect (35) > Problematic: Answering Questions with Questions (2) > Revolution 2.1 (3) > Teaching with Contemporary Art (268) > The Weekly Roundup (198) > Transmission (5) > Turkish and Other Delights (11) > What's Cookin': The Art21ndex (34) > Word is a Virus (7) Week in Review (1) > Flash Points: (421) Compassion: Do artists have a social responsibility? (29) Fantasy: Does art expand our

I was also greatly [influenced] by Islamic architecture and especially my experiences in mosques, specifically those in Mecca. Having always made weekend trips when I was a child, I would be in awe of these grand spaces. Its something that I now realize influenced how I look at shapes, spaces, and structures. Their hugeness is something that I see in my work. The idea of looking up to theses massive structures has carried into my work and you see it in pieces like Monuments to My Ruins or even in the Diving Dunce installations that you have to look up to. That being said, the truth is that I never had an in-person reference to statues. What I was exposed to, and I know has a strong influence in my work, are abstract, even post-modern artworks that were all over the city of Jeddah. Henry Moore is an example but Jean/Hans Arp, Csar Baldaccini, Alexander Calder, Henry Moore, Joan Mir, and Victor Vasarely have also all contributed to creating a stimulating cityscape in Jeddah. Partly, I am aware that those structures and the way they seem to loom over the city can also be detected in my work. Of course, I have been influenced by the buildings the architecture, the contrast of new versus the old, etc. But my recent visit to Somaliland was only the third time, and it was the first in which I really got to appreciate the Nassa Hablood, which means the girl breasts something you dont really want to hear coming out of your dads mouth after he picks you up from the airport.

archives
January 2013 December 2012 November 2012 October 2012 September 2012 August 2012 July 2012 June 2012 May 2012 April 2012 March 2012 February 2012 January 2012 December 2011 November 2011 October 2011 September 2011 August 2011 July 2011 June 2011 May 2011 April 2011 March 2011 February 2011 January 2011 December 2010 November 2010 October 2010 September 2010 August 2010 July 2010 June 2010

Naasa Hablood, Hargeisa, Somaliland

ability to imagine? (26) How are stories and art intertwined? (12) How can art effect political change? (74) How do we experience art? (73) How does art respond to and redefine the natural world? (40) How is art influenced? (35) Must art be ethical? (40) Systems: Can art transcend paradigms? (32) The New Culture Wars: What's at Stake? (9) Transformation: How does art adapt and change over time? (26)

I was hoping to go up in these hills during my trip, as they look down on the capital city of Hargeisa. I began realizing that these hills have subconsciously penetrated my visual vocabulary, without even knowing it, until I found myself in Hargeisa again. GK: Whats taken you from architecture to dunce hats and finally to fragile, flimsy, glittery structures that appear temporary? LS: I feel that since I had this strong background as a formally-trained painter, I had to alter my way of working within the canvas. To push myself, to make them work I felt like I wanted them to come across [as] strong. I allowed myself to break out of the canvas and then go the completely opposite way and use materials I find at party stores that give a sense of a fleeting time and space. When I experimented with party store materials, I was able to use them in my installations with paint and paper in a way where I could still reference architectural structures that have this different gravity than my work on canvas. I am working on these structures until they feel like they are just being put up or as if they are about to fall apart has the party or event already ended or not even started yet? [This] makes them playful or allows me to play with this awkward tension in my work. I feel that Diving Dunce was a piece that got that experience across successfully.

http://blog.art21.org/2010/05/28/inside-the-artists-studio-loul-samater/

Page 2 of 8

Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater | Art21 Blog

1/13/13 7:27 PM

What influences art? (47) What is the value of art? (83) What's so shocking about contemporary art? (40) > Video: (528) Classroom (15) Conversation (8) Excerpt (35) Exclusive (186) New York Close Up (62)
Loul Samater, detail of "Diving Dunce," 2008. Acrylic paint, glitter, string, paint, and silver wrapping paper. Variable sizes. Courtesy the artist.

May 2010 April 2010 March 2010 February 2010 January 2010 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 September 2009 August 2009 July 2009 June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 September 2007 August 2007 July 2007

Reblog (198) Spoof (6) Uncut (4) Access '12 (1) Art21 Access '09 (25) Art21 Artists: (1390) Ai Weiwei (19) Alejandro Almanza Pereda (1) Alfredo Jaar (59)

Loul Samater, "Diving Dunce," 2008

Allan McCollum (40) Allora & Calzadilla (68) An-My L (30) Andrea Zittel (49) Ann Hamilton (47) Arturo Herrera (39) assume vivid astro focus (5) Barbara Kruger (65) Barry McGee (75) Beryl Korot (10) Bruce Nauman (82) Cai Guo-Qiang (68) Cao Fei (47) Carrie Mae Weems (79) Catherine Opie (7) Catherine Sullivan (26) Charles Atlas (28) Cindy Sherman (61) Collier Schorr (35) David Altmejd (4) David Brooks (3) Diana Al-Hadid (2) Do-Ho Suh (43) Doris Salcedo (30) El Anatsui (17) Eleanor Antin (40) Elizabeth Murray (17) Ellen Gallagher (26) Erin Shirreff (1) Florian Maier-Aichen (19) Fred Wilson (35) Gabriel Orozco (55) Glenn Ligon (15) Hiroshi Sugimoto (54) Hubbard & Birchler (8) Iigo Manglano-Ovalle (25) Ida Applebroog (27) James Turrell (48) Janine Antoni (43) Jeff Koons (89) Jenny Holzer (99) Jessica Stockholder (37) John Baldessari (79) John Feodorov (4) Josephine Halvorson (2)

GK: While looking at your work, I felt the urge to put on Sun Ra. Your work at first seems raw, coarse, at times violently loud and feminine, or reserved and phallic. Cocooned elements in womb-like luscious structures combined with what it may seem a tacky childlike finish and a dominant palette create that very same cacophony I enjoy in Sun Ras music. What I mean by that is that your work is not traditionally easy on the eyes but is strong and intense. And on top of that, your work gives away your gender and hints at your ethnic background. Please discuss Cornered, Monument to My Ruins, and Afro Dunce for me.

support art21
Your tax-deductible donation provides crucial support for Art21 projects.

Loul Samater, from left: "Black Arch," 2003. Oil on canvas, 45 x 55 inches. Right: "Black Dome," 2003. Oil on canvas, 80 x 70 inches.

admin
Admin access

Loul Samater, "Cornered," 2004. Acrylic on paper on wall, 100 x 40 x 35 inches.

LS: Yes to everything you said above! I approach my work in several different ways and there is more than one interpretation or reading. Sometimes it comes out subconsciously, othertimes more purposefully. I think you hit it on the spot with your description of work that is not traditionally easy on the eyes but is strong and intense. Each piece that I make has a story and different history than the other one. I think what ties them together is that intensity. In Cornered, I was working with the idea of being set aside and being either shunned or on purposely watching from a distance. This piece for me relays those cocoon-like elements you are referring to with a childlike finish. For sure, I am playing with those

http://blog.art21.org/2010/05/28/inside-the-artists-studio-loul-samater/

Page 3 of 8

Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater | Art21 Blog


elements and trying to evoke those feelings in the piece. Monument to My Ruins was more reserved and a pretty minimalist and simplistic piece for me, but [one] that has such a presence.

1/13/13 7:27 PM

Josiah McElheny (44) Judy Pfaff (40) Julie Mehretu (60) Kalup Linzy (20) Kara Walker (86) Keltie Ferris (10) Kerry James Marshall (47) Kiki Smith (85) Kimsooja (20) Krzysztof Wodiczko (37) Lari Pittman (21) LaToya Ruby Frazier (12) Laurie Anderson (57) Laurie Simmons (42) Laylah Ali (36) Liz Magic Laser (2) Louise Bourgeois (93) Lucas Blalock (8) Lynda Benglis (5) Margaret Kilgallen (17) Mariah Robertson (5) Marina Abramovi (16) Mark Bradford (100) Mark Dion (88) Martha Colburn (8) Martin Puryear (35) Mary Heilmann (33) Mary Reid Kelley (8) Matthew Barney (52) Matthew Ritchie (30) Maya Lin (56) Mel Chin (32) Michael Ray Charles (6) Mika Tajima (7) Mike Kelley (84) Nancy Spero (51) Oliver Herring (54) Paul McCarthy (46) Paul Pfeiffer (22) Pepn Osorio (16) Pierre Huyghe (35) Rackstraw Downes (5) Rashid Johnson (17) Raymond Pettibon (52) Richard Serra (69) Richard Tuttle (37) Robert Adams (37) Robert Mangold (4) Robert Ryman (31) Roni Horn (34) Sally Mann (30) Sarah Sze (11) Shahzia Sikander (32) Shana Moulton (11) Susan Rothenberg (19) Tabaimo (4) Tim Hawkinson (22) Tommy Hartung (4) Trenton Doyle Hancock (38) Ursula von Rydingsvard (35) Vija Celmins (29) Walton Ford (21) William Kentridge (91) William Wegman (35)

Loul Samater, "Monument to My Ruins,"2005. Silver wrapping paper and cardboard, 120 x 40 inches.

The size and the fragile quality of the piece [are significant] since it looks like it can fall apart. The reflective quality plays an important role because I always like to reflect the viewer or the environment in the work. Afro Dunce has the more manic chaos childlike [quality], you can say, but is really controlled. Using the afro (which I only use a couple of times) does give away my background but I still try to use it in formal elements even though I am still negotiating its role in my work. Visually it works in that piece, so I went with it.

Loul Samater, "Afro Dunce," 2007. Silver wrapping paper, glitter, acrylic paper and paint, 100 x 65 x 40 inches.

When I enter into my studio, I dont have a message or an agenda for the day. I really do work with sets of emotions, energies, and experiences that I am trying to get across. Everything is just a little rough around the edges. GK: In one of the texts you shared with me, you talk about the 3D qualities of your paintings. Is this how you best understand your work? LS: Yes, I use the 3D qualities as my starting point. But I make sure that as I am working on my pieces, I am using the language that I would use on 2D surface. At the same time, when I am working on my installations, I see them in 2D as I move around them.

http://blog.art21.org/2010/05/28/inside-the-artists-studio-loul-samater/

Page 4 of 8

Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater | Art21 Blog

1/13/13 7:27 PM

Yinka Shonibare MBE (61) Art21 News (300) Biennials (61) Education (432) Exhibitions (735) Festivals (49) Guest Blog (710) Interviews (305) Locations: (1669) Africa (15) Argentina (5) Asia (15) Australia (12) Brazil (2) Canada (48) Caribbean (2) China (24) Colombia (5)
Loul Samater, "Silver Squid," 2010. Acrylic on paper and silver paper, 24 x 21 inches.

Cuba (4) Denmark (11) Egypt (2) Finland (10) France (26) Germany (83) Greece (23) Guatemala (1) Iceland (2) India (7) Iraq (2) Ireland (7) Israel (1) Italy (31) Japan (6) Korea (2) Mexico (11) Middle East (14) Netherlands (13) Peru (3) Poland (3) Russia (2) Scotland (3) South Africa (13) Spain (29) Sweden (10) Switzerland (18) Taiwan (1) Thailand (1) Turkey (22) Ukraine (1) United Kingdom (154) USA (1271) Boston (27) Chicago (165) Connecticut (3) Houston (9) Indianapolis (28) Los Angeles (185) Miami (18) Minneapolis (3) Nebraska (3) New Orleans (23) New York City (569) North Carolina (4) Ohio (10)

Around the time I was getting ready to work off the canvas, one of the artists I felt connected to was Yayoi Kusama. I got the chance to experience one of her installation pieces firsthand. After that, I started to really research her work and understood that she came from a painting background, then started to go off the canvas and work with this idea of dots everywhere, covering her installations with dots. This obsessive quality was almost manic, and it is what draws me to her work. GK: Take me through your studio please, and try to explain to me what is it like to make art for you? LS: Well, making art for myself induces a very bipolar sensation. There are really very high moments and then very low moments of being onto something or discovering new venues for my work by working on a painting that is coming together and then by hitting a wall when it turns ugly.

Loul Samater at work

That is the low part when its not so nice to be in my studio and I am trying to work through whats not working. In either stage, I am in the studio and I cant avoid it just because its hard to be in there, since I know its not going to resolve itself. I feel that when I am at a high, I try to enjoy the studio but at the back of my mind, I know hard times are around the corner. There is a certain challenge to having to work through the problem and get to the other side. Its an addiction and I am a slave to it.

http://blog.art21.org/2010/05/28/inside-the-artists-studio-loul-samater/

Page 5 of 8

Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater | Art21 Blog

1/13/13 7:27 PM

Philadelphia (21) Pittsburgh (6) Portland (3) San Francisco (89) Seattle (12) Texas (30) Washington (4) Washington D.C. (28) Media: (1629) Architecture (60) Design (82) Drawing & Collage (285) Fashion (27) Film & Video (421) Food (42) Installation (590) New Media (261)
Loul Samater, "Golden Shower," 2010. Acrylic on wood, 24 x 24 inches.

Painting (377) Performance (346) Photography (329) Printmaking (95) Public Art (224) Sculpture (455) Social (208) Sound (41) Sound & Music (100) Photos (23) Podcasts (14) Prizes (46) Programs-Events (297) Publications (103) Season 5 (113) Season 6 (32) Support Art21 (19) Uncategorized (75) William Kentridge: Anything is Possible (20)

My studio practice is the core of my work because I work intuitively and its how I come to my forms in the paintings and installations.

Loul Samater, "Gold on the Red," 2010. Acrylic on paper, 8 x 11 inches.

GK: Did you always want to teach or did it just happen? LS: Well, I cant say that when I was in graduate school my goal was to be a teacher. It was on the horizon as a possibility but I wasnt solely focused on that being my future. The job I had at the College of Charleston from 2005-2009 started off as a one-year position where I was selected from a small pool of people. That one year position just happened to be renewed for four years because of different circumstances. To have a full-time job a year after graduate school and then be able to walk away with 4 years of teaching experience is quite an accomplishment and something that I am very grateful for. And teaching made me look at my studio practice in a different way. I taught basic painting and it made me realize how important it is to observe. So I started to set up still lifes to paint in my studio and rediscover some of my old school heroes like P.Morandi, Bonnard, J.W. Turner, and Matisse, to name a few. I learned a lot from teaching and thats something I hope can keep happening. GK: Is there an installation currently in the works in your mind that hasnt been realized yet? What should we be expecting from you next? LS: I have one installation that is in the works; it has to do with an enormous quantity of sequins, paper, and glitter. It stems from a piece I recently did that is called the Bearded Oval. That piece would serve as my starting point for a floor and wall installation.

http://blog.art21.org/2010/05/28/inside-the-artists-studio-loul-samater/

Page 6 of 8

Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater | Art21 Blog

1/13/13 7:27 PM

Loul Samater, "Bearded Oval," 2010. Acrylic on paper, 17 x 15 inches.

The problem Im working on is to how not make it so permanently in one space as Id like to move it into different spaces. So I hesitate working on a piece in my studio that requires alterations of my space. My recent work is moving towards paper pieces that can be moved, but that doesnt mean I am not going to manipulate the space they occupy after they leave my studio. I just decided not to make my studio the white box, but to wait for that white box to come to me and then realize the pieces to their full extent. So I see some of my work [as remaining] dormant and not fully blossomed until it occupies spaces outside of my studio. And, thats a wrap!
5 Tweet 2 Like 30 0

Posted in: > Inside the Artist's Studio, Africa, Installation, Interviews, Middle East, Painting, USA Similar posts: Inside the Artists Studio: Brandon Anschultz , Maya Lins Systematic Landscapes in St. Louis , NYCU | Eddie Martinez Whistles While He Works , Inside the Artists Studio: Dafni E. Barbageorgopoulou, Athens , New guest blogger: Maria Nicanor of the Guggenheim Museum, NYC Comments (2)

2 Responses to Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater Note Card Artist on May 31, 2010 8:43 am I like her place and I want to feature them in my note cards collection. Reply

1 LOVE S.O. on June 23, 2012 12:29 am [...] Meet Somali visual artist Loul Samater, a painter, sculptor and teacher with roots in Saudi-Arabia and currently based in the United States. With an educational background in painting, fine arts and sculpting from Chicago and Florence, Loul has showcased in Los Angeles, New York and other galleries and institutions throughout the world. She recently returned from Somaliland, where she expanded the visual vocabulary that now fuels the work in her studio. Check out some of her installations as part of a recent New York showcase here and read more. [...]

Trackback URI | Comments RSS Name (required) Email (required) Website Leave a Reply

http://blog.art21.org/2010/05/28/inside-the-artists-studio-loul-samater/

Page 7 of 8

Inside the Artists Studio: Loul Samater | Art21 Blog

1/13/13 7:27 PM

Submit Comment

Art21, Inc. 20012013. All rights reserved. Art21 is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization; all donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent of the law.
contact us posts(RSS) comments (RSS) top

http://blog.art21.org/2010/05/28/inside-the-artists-studio-loul-samater/

Page 8 of 8

You might also like