Ahmet Yiğider’s newest exhibition 'Intellect' offers insight into human development from different aspects with a touch on nature in the Russian capital
It is always hard to narrow down the boundaries of interdisciplinary art. While it may simply be described as the art form creating a relationship across various disciplines, using different materials and processes to generate a piece is the essential part of this combination. But the important thing is that interdisciplinary artists cross boundaries, explore new ideas and gain new experiences.
Ahmet Yiğider, as an interdisciplinary artist, embraces new ideas and angles that can be traced in his pieces focusing on art and design. With his versatile creativity that feeds on his background in engineering, the Turkish artist produces unique approaches that transcend the boundaries of the art of sculpture. The sculpture series that he prepared using dead trees and industrial trees produced with environmentally friendly standards at his latest show "Intellect" may be a good example of his oeuvre blended with these original perspectives.
It is cliche to say that human progress against nature, or "modernization" to be more precise, corrupts people. Instead of sticking to this cliche, Yiğider goes deeper in his mind and scrutinizes how humanity has failed in terms of universal humanitarian issues although his cumulative knowledge provides significant progress in his dominance over nature and his perception of the universe. Concentrating on our cumulative knowledge, Yiğider neither looks for an answer or a reason for this failure nor unveils centurieslong, inconsiderate human behaviors. Instead, he evaluates this failure on humanitarian subjects as an "anomaly," which makes his artistic approach authentic. This anomalous side of humanity finds a voice in the form of amorphous pieces in "Intellectual." These amorphous sculptures reflect the inner world of the artist and how the issue he questions has evoked pessimistic and shocking feelings within his soul. Also, they intriguingly bring an eerie take from nature to the exhibition while meeting with and struggling against the artist’s minimal lines from time to time.
With this show, the artist’s amorphous pieces do not only reveal his distinctive stance as an artist with an exclusive point of view but also carry some traces from Yiğider’s life to the Russian lands. The artist’s interest in nature and human relationships reflected in the exhibition, for example, are actually rooted in the first periods of his life. His birthplace, northeastern Artvin province, and his hometown in eastern Erzurum province in Turkey were the initial determinants of the development of awareness on this issue for him with their breathtaking natural wonders. Saying that he finds himself surrounded by nature whenever he closes his eyes, Yiğider stated that he begins to truly feel and comprehend in such moments. "Then, I sense an urge to express my experience. This is when and where art begins for me. If there are people, there will always be a need for expression, which will bear art," he continued.
Fight for survival
After exploring new approaches with the artist’s first amorphous sculpture series, the second series in "Intellectual," which Yiğider named "Destructive Anatomies," offers new experiences through reduced biology. While applying certain plastic interventions on wooden surfaces in these sculptures, the artist sometimes separates or isolates these solid surfaces using colors. He also manages to create a balance with the color mixtures he improved with special pigments that do not hide the nature of the wood.
Yiğider says that this second series seeks to fuse the human effort to exist and the anatomy in a single conceptual and formal language. Unlike the abstraction or simple simplification approach, it expresses the desire to purge anatomical lines from many of the basic and common distinctive elements, to reach the lowest point of anatomy’s existence and to seek new images that bless seeing and thinking.
"Intellectual" will host international art enthusiasts in the flourishing atmosphere of Moscow, which once considered lackluster drawing little attention and respect from the West but turned into a global cultural center, until May 9.