The works in The Flying Poet span Morsi’s oeuvre from the 1960’s till the present moment – a time period reflecting the artists residence in New York City. Morsi was born in Alexandria, Egypt in 1930. Drawing on his memories of his upbringing, Morsi employs a series of surrealist motifs that appear to take a dip in the metaphysical. In an essay for Artforum, critic Kaelen Wilson-Goldie observes, “Morsi appears to proffer Surrealism - with its endlessly adaptable and perpetually useful language – as a bridge between the modern and the contemporary.”
His variously populated images seem to have origins in ancient Egyptian iconography - the sadness of his creatures derived by animating an ancient past with modern life. He does this by assembling his compositions as a series of continuums between different planes. The theatricality of his painted spaces is undeniable. Ambitious visual plains, characters in varying degrees of definition and a sense of pathos, all pointing to a moor that exists out of time. The oblong and angular heads of his subjects go a long way in underscoring the absurdity of the scene.
Installation photography by Sebastian Bach