Flaka Haliti
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Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.This striking contemporary artwork features a minimalist yet captivating installation. The visual elements comprise a stark, geometric grid-like pattern of suspended wires and transparent lines that create a dynamic, three-dimensional effect. The subject matter appears to be a conceptual exploration of space, light, and movement, with the ghostly lines and shadows suggesting an ethereal, almost kinetic quality. The artistic style and technique employ a pared-down, industrial aesthetic that evokes a sense of tension and visual intrigue. Conceptually, this piece may be commenting on the interplay between the physical and the ephemeral, challenging the viewer's perception of the environment. ...
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Flaka Haliti
1982 , KosovanFlaka Haliti’s artistic practice includes mixed media, sculpture and spatial installation with a decidedly site-specific approach. Appropriation and re-arrangement are continuous lines in her works, whereby new aesthetic patterns are created. Haliti emphasizes altered perceptions on a visual level, as well as in conceptual methods to engage in political reflections and geopolitical preoccupations. Mediated by the sensory and by visual fields, territorial boundaries and powers such as national borders or the dispositions of associations like the UN or the European Union, are brought to negotiation. Importantly, her works steadily confront languages of identity in order to transcend its categorizations of gender or nationality. Occupying in-between states, Haliti furthermore challenges humanist perspectives and its authority over representation and abstraction. ...
Flaka Haliti: Artworks
Deborah Schamoni
MunichDeborah Schamoni is a contemporary art gallery based in Munich, Germany. Situated in a 1970s villa, the gallery is able to offer its artists a spacious white cube, flooded with daylight and opening up to a greened outdoor area, as well as an independent smaller room. Since its founding in 2013, the gallery has focused on showing and supporting emerging international artists and it presents an exceptional program that unites international positions with a subversive and self-reflexive approach to art making considering the complexity of human coexistence. The gallery often stages the first shows of upcoming international artists in Germany. The program is developing a distinct profile with artists like Maryam Hoseini, Yong Xiang Li, and Flaka Haliti, who investigate the sociopolitical conditions of queer identity and gender, and share a diasporic experience in their works. Beyond its international focus, the gallery has been playing an important part in establishing Munich as a prominent destination for contemporary art and its discourses. ...