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Hormazd Narielwalla | The artist revitalising bespoke Savile Row ...
src: www.narielwalla.com

Hormazd Narielwalla (born 1979) is a London-based, London-based collage artist, collage and writer, PhD from the London College of Fashion at the University of the Arts, London. He has pioneered artwork depicting abstract body shapes and abstract designs by collage on tailor patterns thrown away from deceased clients of Savile Row tailors or on patterns obtained from ancient or contemporary tailors of the same genre. His unique style of work has attracted the attention of artists, art magazines and collectors, and his work is exhibited in several cities and placed in a collection of art and fashion libraries around the world. During his tenure at the sewing company Savile Row of Dege & amp; Skinner, he noticed the pattern of adjustment of the dead client was destroyed because it was not used anymore. Narielwalla decided to collect this and inculcate new life on these patterns, creating abstract art in an entirely new genre-a process of finding radical abstractions by collages on antique sewing patters

Gentleman's Gazette describes Narielwalla as "Artist, illustrator and fashion writer." He mentioned in and received reviews in art magazines and journals.

The Craft Council has commissioned his work for the national tour exhibition - Block Party (2011). In addition to London, his work has been exhibited in Melbourne, Stockholm, Athens, and Scope Art Fair, New York City and at the Indian Art Fair in New Delhi.

The London's Artist Quarter provides details of Narielwalla's work with, and mentions, the Association that recognizes his artwork or has held exhibitions-The Craft Council, Saatchi Art Gallery, Possible Study Center-Serpentine Gallery, Sheridan Design Agent, Tokyo Beam, Victoria and Albert Museum store , Tiger of Sweden and other circles and art associations.

In the recent competition "The Saatchi Showdown Body Electric Show" held in 2014, Narielwalla's work was placed first from several participants.

Narielwalla is Artist in Residence for Frieze 2014 at Hyatt Regency Hotel, Churchill, London. Studio for on-site work was set up in the hotel lobby for Frieze Week; guests and visitors can see it working to create artwork on a copy of Sir Winston Churchill's suit pattern, provided from Henry Poole and Co. archives.

Robert Elms at BBC London 94.9 interviewed Narielwalla in his "Today's Listed Londoner" program, aired on May 6, 2013, describing it as a 'contemporary artist.'

In 2014, Hormazd announced a limited edition print edition of my Le Petit Echo de la Mode series will be available from King and McGaw art publishers.

In March 2015, Vogue magazine wrote: If fashion is art? This is debatable, but Narielwalla creates artworks on sewing and sewing patterns that have attracted the attention of collectors and critics.

In October of this year, 2015, an exhibition, featuring 8 of his works, opens at the Fashion Museum, Bath and will run from October 24, 2015 to January 3, 2016.

Collage by Hormazd, along with artwork by Stuart Semple Rob Ball, Dan Dickson and several others set up a stage setting for Oscar-winning director Danny Boyle to play, The Children's Monologue will be presented at the Royal Court Theater for the 2015 Birthday Gala.

In its October 22, 2015 edition, Aesthetica Magazine describes Hormazd's artwork as a new interpretation of the adjustment pattern, as an interesting abstract image of the human form and ahead of their time, anthropomorphic in origin and abstraction beautiful in isolation.

Canvas A Blog by Saatchi Art, in Art News they wrote in Narielwalla: "The artwork of Hormazd Narielwalla serves as an elegant reminder of the potential to create something beautiful when we re-imagine the familiar.The color block he thought miraculously miraculously revived the reading which is outdated into a brilliant contemporary work. "

In June of this year, 2016, Artlyst magazine describes Hormazd's work as an art that is essentially a meditation on the human condition, his unique collection reinterpreting the human form, establishing the legacy of Cubism. Writing about a series of Hormazd artworks, Lost Gardens, at an exhibition at the Southbank Center, London, Artlyst sees a pattern of reflection by artists, about personal loss (an urban rose garden in his hometown of Pune taken over for a building project) and "the political and social destruction of society currently." [1]

In early February 2017, Hormazd was interviewed by London Live TV on the occasion of the exhibition, "Migration" at Eagle Gallery, where his artwork, Lost Gardens, is being exhibited.

The work of Hormazd is exhibited from 15 June to 14 July under the motif "Sanctuary," at the prestigious art gallery in London Gallery Elena Shchukina, where an introductory biography mentions her artwork with collage in a series called "Lost Gardens" seen as a meditation of the human condition, exploration of cultural notions and migration.

In May 2017, his work was exhibited in 8 pages distributed by the famous international luxury magazine, The World of Interiors, entitled, Soul Inside Silhouettes; a prelude to Hormazd's clothing representing the 'artificial landscape' that describes the body, and even life. (hard copy edition of May 2017 magazine, pages 198-205.)


Narielwalla has published two books:

  1. Dead Man Pattern . Amazon.com in a review of his work on their website, describes this book as a Limited Edition Artist book, and a design story inspired by the deceased client's deceased pattern of Savile Row Tailors. This book has been purchased by collectors including Rare British Modern Collection in the British Library.
  2. The Savile Row Cutter (ISBN: 978-1-903071-33-5) an interesting biography of Master Cutter, and Chairman of the Savile Row Dege and Skinner tailor, Michael Skinner (Bene Factum Publishing) Limited)

Video Hormazd Narielwalla



References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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