Overview

Kour Pour is an artist whose creative processes, source material and painting techniques stem from a wide range of cultures and histories. His experience as an immigrant and biography are the foundation of his work– Pour is of British and Iranian descent and grew up in a mixed-race household – but the artist is also newly American, having been granted citizenship during the pandemic. As a child Kour spent considerable time in his father's carpet shop, memories of which have become a central component of his practice. These cultural threads inform Pour's work and add to a wide range of visual languages, ranging from Islamic patterning to Japanese woodblock prints and Korean Minhwa folk art, that infuse his paintings and sculptures. The artist’s artwork is produced through diverse and layered approaches. Large hand-cut block prints and silkscreened images appear in many works, other paintings are rendered entirely by hand, and Pour often sands away large areas of his canvases to begin the dance again. The processes by which the paintings and sculptures are crafted are specific and intentional, tailored towards the iconographies of each piece.


The artist has quickly developed a reputation for meticulously composed and delicately rendered artworks which intersect diverse material and aesthetic traditions, allowing for a remapping of the standard understanding of Eastern and Western  cultural exchange. Fostering forms and techniques from numerous cultures and time periods, Pour’s truly global vision weaves together representational imagery, abstract patterning, and ornamental elements to create new hybrid artworks. Pour’s synthesis of image and process often connects different art histories in an attempt to highlight the cultural exchanges that lead to artistic innovation and disrupt the notion of singular originality.

Exhibitions
Biography
In September 2022, Pour opened Guest House, an arts program in his Inglewood studio complex, which hosts film screenings and exhibitions, most recently a show of seven Iranian American artists living in L.A. “Protests have erupted in Iran, and it’s become a place for people in the community to gather,” he says. The artist has an upcoming solo project at Sotheby’s in Hong Kong later this year as well as a solo exhibition at Kavi Gupta in Chicago. Recent solo exhibitions include New Homes, New Places, Gallery 1957, London, UK (2022); Familiar Spirits, Kavi Gupta, Chicago, USA (2021); Wild Garden, Shrine/Sargent’s Daughters, New York, USA (2021); Fallow, The Club, Tokyo, Japan (2020); Returnee, The Club, Tokyo, Japan (2019); Manzareh/Keshiki/Landscape, Ever Gold Projects, San Francisco, USA (2019); Abrash, Shane Campbell Gallery, Chicago, USA (2018); Polypainting, Gnyp Gallery, Berlin, Germany (2018); Polypainting, Pearl Lam Galleries, Hong Kong, China (2018); Onnagata, Feuer/Mesler, New York, USA (2016) and Onnagata, Gnyp Gallery, Berlin, Germany (2016). Selected group exhibitions include Flowers of Time, Hongwanji Dendoin, Kyoto, Japan (2022); A Boundless Drop to a Boundless Ocean, Orlando Museum of Art, Orlando, USA (2021) and Decoration Never Dies, Anyway, Tokyo Metropolitan Teien Museum, Tokyo, Japan Horror Vacui, or The Annihilation of Space, Misako & Rosen, Tokyo, Japan (2017). Pour has participated in the following fairs, Frieze London and New York; Art Dubai; Art Singapore; The Armory Show, and his third Art Basel presentation later this year.
News
Press
Art Fairs
Works
Home is Where I Lay My Rug, 2021-2022