KALINER is pleased to announce that we will be participating in Untitled Miami Beach 2025. We will be presenting a solo booth featuring works by Dana Nechmad.
We are pleased to present a solo booth featuring a new body of works by artist Dana Nechmad, presented at the Untitled Miami Art Fair. Titled ‘The Braided Mythology’, the solo presentation explores the ways in which our very core conceptions, which include notions such as self and gender, are first constructed and then embodied through artifacts and stories.
Taking as her starting point ancient Greek and Roman sculpture; the artist uses these fragmented findings, broken myths and patched up histories to piece together her own mythology. Hers is not a solid, monolithic, seemingly linear series of stories and events linking the now with the then, the son with the father, one empire to another - instead, Nechmad presents us with a vulnerable, ambiguous and fragmented body of knowledge, evoking not certainty but ambiguity, not logic but emotion.
Working in drawing, textile and embroidery, Nechmad uses techniques which allow for no leeway; the needle holes can not be filled, the bleach cannot be undone, the marks cannot be erased from the pristine paper. The results are both intimate and bold, inviting the viewer to a closer inspection of the materiality (and corporeality) of the pieces and themes on display.
The presentation consists of four chapters: The Braided Mythology, Fragile (Freedom) Victory, Harmony?, and Gone with the Wind.
Composing its own odyssey, The Braided Mythology (a grid consisting of works on paper) depicts a woman with braided hair as she undergoes a series of trials and tribulations. The figure is depicted in non-spaces that evoke cave paintings or Greek vases, simultaneously flat and dimensional. Acting like peepholes, these settings reveal unseen, private moments of struggle, lust, longing, confusion, anger and fantasy.
Combining both textile and drawing, the work moves between abstraction and figuration. With the abstracted textile pieces functioning as wounds, bringing the body itself to the forefront. The story here is told viscerally, reminding us that flesh and materiality are inseparable from emotional experience.
The source material for Fragile (Freedom) Victory work is the Hellenistic Nike known as the Winged Victory of Samothrace—a marble masterpiece from around 190 BCE, pulled from the Aegean Sea in 1863 and brought to Paris, where it remains. There's a bitter irony here: the winged goddess, found broken and vulnerable at sea, stripped of her powers, was carried as prisoner to foreign land, displayed as stolen war treasure. In the drawing we see Nike's left wing, amputated and wrapped in embroidered netting.
In Harmony? the canvas is submerged in deep dye for an extended period, then stretched across the floor. Working quickly with bleach, the artist reveals larger-than-life figures from within the fabric itself—a form of removal that paradoxically creates a positive presence, like a double negative. At first glance, the figures revealed suggest the form of yin and yang, but closer attention shows the female body is twice the size of the male—the power dynamic is anything but equal.
“I enjoy working with paper; it is a delicate and intimate material, yet also very unforgiving; once a hole is made, it remains. I appreciate the quiet, dramatic effect of it”
- Dana Nechmad
Gone with the Wind is a large-scale work employs both drawing and embroidery in tandem, working with the tension between line and thread, negative and positive space, movement and stillness. At the center of the composition the artist placed a fragmented face, rendering it in careful detail. Made to appear as though it were part of a larger sculpture, the image was inspired by a broken off piece of a Greek sculpture the artist encountered at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Layered over the drawing are waves of cotton thread embroidery, stretched and flowing to suggest the movement of time—or, as the title proposes, the sweeping power of the wind.
Gone with the Wind, detail