at Sean Kelly TEFAF New York 2025, Stand 330
at Sean Kelly TEFAF New York 2025, Stand 330
Drawing on diverse cultural sources including literature, art, music and religion, Idris Khan has developed a unique narrative involving densely layered imagery that inhabits the space between abstraction and figuration and speaks to themes of history, cumulative experience and the metaphysical collapse of time into single moments.
Khan repeatedly stamps texts (see example stamps displayed in Khan’s 2024 retrospective at the Milwaukee Art Museum) which are specific to each work onto heavily gessoed aluminum panels, ultimately eradicating the meaning of the original text to construct an abstract and universal visual language. Through this minimal presentation of repetitive gestures, the blocks of text stamped onto the surface in oil shift across each painting, creating a rhythm from one work to the next. The density and precision of Khan’s composition, defined by his technique of imposing multiple layers of text upon one another, alludes to the excessive proliferation of information in the technical age whilst simultaneously advocating for a slower, more considered way of looking. Retaining traces of what has gone before or what has been left behind, Khan’s work speaks to a layering of experience that harbors palimpsests of the past whilst suggesting entirely new possibilities. In this painting, color becomes a major protagonist, mapping an emotional context onto the image that compresses into a single frame, layering passages of experience and time.
Installation view of Idris Khan | Repeat After Me at the Milwaukee Art Museum, 2024. Photo Shelby Ragsdale.
Photo: Vikram Kushwah, 2023.
London-based artist Idris Khan was born in the UK in 1978. Since completing his Master’s Degree with a Distinction in Research at the Royal College of Art in London in 2004, he has received international acclaim for his minimal, yet emotionally charged photographs, videos and sculptures and is without question one of the most exciting British artists of his generation.
Drawing on diverse cultural sources including literature, history, art, music and religion, Khan has developed a unique narrative involving densely layered imagery that inhabits the space between abstraction and figuration and speaks to the themes of history, cumulative experience and the metaphysical collapse of time into single moments.
Whilst Khan’s mindset is more painterly than photographic, he often employs the tools of photomechanical reproduction to create his work. Photographing or scanning from secondary source material–sheet music, pages from the Qur’an, reproductions of late Caravaggio paintings–he then builds up the layers of scans digitally, which allows him to meticulously control minute variances in contrast, brightness and opacity. The resultant images are often large-scale C-prints with surfaces that have a remarkable optical intensity.
Khan’s oeuvre has expanded to include sculpture and painting. For sculptural works, using materials such as steel plates, cubes and horizontal stone slabs, Khan sandblasts the surface with templates of musical scores or prayers, continuing his investigation into the ways in which cultural, visual, cinematic and temporal memories coalesce into a dense, synesthetic whole.
In 2012, Khan was commissioned by the British Museum in London to create a new wall drawing for the exhibition, Hajj: Journey to the Heart of Islam. In addition to the wall drawing, Khan’s stunning floor sculpture, Seven Times, was installed in the museum’s majestic Great Court. In March of the same year, The New York Times Magazine commissioned Khan to create a new body of work that was published in their London issue.
In 2017, Khan was awarded the American Architecture Prize for his design of Abu Dhabi’s Wahat Al Karama. Commissioned for the United Arab Emirates in, the memorial park pays tribute to members of the UAE who lost their lives in military service was unveiled in November 2016. In 2018, Idris Khan was commissioned to create the British Museum’s first site-specific artworks as part of the new Albukhary Foundation Gallery of the Islamic World. He was also commissioned by The New York Times Magazine to create the cover for their Winter Olympics issue. In this series Khan utilizes his unique approach to creating densely layered imagery that inhabits the space between abstraction and figuration, collapsing time and cumulative experience into a single moment.
In 2024, Idris Khan had his first solo American museum exhibition at the Milwaukee Art Museum. Khan has also had solo exhibitions at international venues including The New Art Gallery Walsall, Walsall, England; Whitworth Gallery, University of Manchester, England; the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, Toronto, Canada; K20, Dusseldorf, Germany; and Gothenburg Konsthall, Sweden. He has also been featured in numerous group exhibitions at venues including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Tate Britain, London, England; Hayward Gallery, London, England; The Saatchi Gallery, London, England; Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton, Paris, France; Baibakov Art Projects, Moscow, Russia; the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, England; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and the Helsinki Kunsthalle, Finland. In 2017 Idris Khan was appointed an OBE for services to Art in the Queen’s Birthday 2017 Honors List.
His work is in the permanent collections of many institutions worldwide such as The Saatchi Collection, London, England; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel; the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the de Young Museum, San Francisco; and the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France.
Idris Khan lives and works in London, England.