Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is very pleased to announce Sherin Guirguis' A’aru // Field of Reeds: Gathering, an exhibition of carved paper, and mixed-media paintings. This will be the artist’s first solo exhibition with the gallery, and her first in Los Angeles since 2018.

Sherin Guirguis’ new works are an expansion of A’aru // Field of Reeds which the Egyptian-American artist exhibited during her 2023 residency at Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design in Honolulu, Hawaii. Continuing her dialogue with contemporary and historical antecedents, Guirguis posits cultural identity and intersectional feminisms through the integration of oral histories, abstracted motifs, and a consideration of minimalism and ornamentation in Egyptian aesthetics.

In this series, Guirguis draws inspiration from communal gatherings which she participated in during the COVID-19 lockdown—organized and guided by artist Amitis Motevalli—in which she and a group of women and women-identifying artists, poets, writers, and activists, from different backgrounds took turns reading Farīd al-Dīn Aṭṭār’s 12th-century Sufi poem, The Conference of the Birds (Manṭeq al-ṭayr). This epic Persian narrative tells the story of a group of birds who set out to find God and enlightenment. They journey through seven mystical valleys, each of which requires the birds to confront some inner weakness and moral failing.

Throughout the centuries, the poem has been adopted by generations of artists, writers, and poets who, inspired by their search for meaning, beauty, and truth, find a deeper universal message of personal development and discovery within their communities. In A’aru // Field of Reeds: Gathering, we experience the transformation in Guirguis’ artistic practice which was formed from these simple acts of communal care.

The artist channels her ancestors, personal experiences, and agency as a woman to draw parallels between Aṭṭār’sstory of self-awareness and kinship, and the mythologies of ancient Egypt’s sacred birds. Guirguis transforms designs of centuries-old Egyptian dovecotes (giant earthen towers built to house pigeons) into abstracted avian forms, bringing to light overlooked and silenced female voices.

The works employ an array of sumptuous inks, watercolors, opaque gouaches, and gold leaf on layers of hand-cut paper that are floated on painted panels—each work embodying an intimate vessel. The carved paper holds a distinguished presence with intricate patterns revealing an inner glow. Through these meditative and shifting patterns, adapted from ancient Egyptian architectural and literary motifs, Guirguis examines the intricate ties between people, collective trauma, and her newfound pursuits in understanding the past and envisioning the future.

Sherin Guirguis (b. Luxor, Egypt, 1974) obtained her MFA in painting from the University of Nevada in 2001 and her BA in art from the College of Creative Studies at the University of California Santa Barbara in 1997. Guirguis’ work has recently been featured in solo museum exhibitions nationally and internationally, including A’aru//Field of Reeds: Chapter I at Honolulu Museum of Art, Honolulu, HI, and an artist residency with a site-specific installation, A’aru//Field of Reeds: Chapter II with the Doris Duke Foundation at the Shangri La Museum, Honolulu, HI; Here I Have Returned, The Minnesota Museum of American Art, St Paul, MN; Bint El Nil, Tahrir Cultural Center, American University, Cairo, Egypt; We Must Risk Delight, Official Collateral Exhibition, La Biennale di Venezia, Venice, Italy; Of Thorns and Love, Craft Contemporary, Los Angeles, CA.