Tales From The Caucasus: Group Show
Gazelli Art House presents Tales from the Caucasus, featuring four artists from Azerbaijan and the surrounding region working across painting and moving image. Reflecting on personal and societal transformation, they depict contemporary life through a figurative language rich in storytelling. The artists navigate everyday scenes, often infusing them with the fantastical elements of folk tales and myths. The emotional and psychological charge of specific moments and places forms the core of the exhibition — whether a domestic living room, a city park at night, or the shoreline of the Caspian Sea.
Tales from the Caucasus places regional traditions and histories within a contemporary, globalised context, creating connections between past and present. While many of the artists are based in Europe, their works draw on stylistic roots from the Caucasus, engaging contemporary perspectives shaped by migration, cultural exchange, and autobiography.
Agil Abdullayev’s practice is an ongoing inquiry into how the queer body archives and performs identity across multiple spaces, both physical and psychological. In a new series of paintings and recent video work Abdullayev explores the entanglement of queerness and public space in post-Soviet contexts. Their work offers intimate portrayals of private realities, respecting anonymity and foregrounding resistance to preconceived notions of masculinity and social restrictions in often conservative environments. Their award-winning three-channel film Radicals in Between Trees and Dicks (2024) follows individuals navigating ‘cruising’ culture in Azerbaijan and surrounding countries — societies where homosexuality remains taboo. Abdullayev has visited over thirty cruising locations, such as public parks or discreetly designated private sex spaces, documenting their own observations and recording the experiences of others in interviews, conversations, and visual recordings.
Ulviyya Iman focuses her attention on Azerbaijan’s social structures and cultural norms, shifting between self-portraiture and observational viewpoints. Her canvases heighten emotional intensity within mundane settings, as seen in The End (2025), which depicts a meykhana, a millennia-old Sufi tradition of social gatherings where improvised verses are performed to percussive rhythms, drawing parallels with rap battles of contemporary hip hop culture. Iman was moved by a video of the final meykhana of Aydin Khirdalanli, a performer famed for his skill, and saw that it mirrored the composition of di Vinci’s The Last Supper. In Self Portrait, Red (2025), Iman confronts the viewer with a direct gaze and vivid palette, conveying a scene charged with psychological tension.
Ramina Saadatkhan’s painted collages offer a vision of inseparability between nature and human experience. Drawing on Nietzschean ideas of the “creature and creator” within, she depicts animals and foliage as expressions of inner states rather than external landscapes. Experiment Number 3 (2025) is in dialogue with the Biblical scene of The Garden of Eden and interprets themes of temptation and betrayal. Together with Pomegranate King (2025), both engage mythic imagery and archetypes, staging dynamic tensions between the human and the animal, feminine and masculine, order and chaos, creation and destruction.
Primarily working with sound and moving image, Farhad Farzali combines traditional and marginal cultures with contemporary music and popular aesthetics. His practice is rooted in anthropological research into the neo-folklore of Azerbaijan and neighbouring regions. Echoactivism I (2025) is a collaborative project with Aiganym Mukhamejan (Echo Activism Collective) that comments on the paradox of hyper-connectivity and fragile human connection. The video documents a performance addressing the ecological crisis of the Caspian Sea, in which two performers positioned on opposite shores call to each other across the water using iPhones and Bluetooth speakers as modern shamanic instruments.
Bringing together shared cultural memory, evolving values, and striking generational shifts, Abdullayev, Farzali, Iman, and Saadatkhan each develop distinct visual languages that speak to the complexities of life in and beyond the Caucasus. Through these intertwined perspectives, Tales from the Caucasus explores questions of place, identity, and belonging in a rapidly changing world.
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Agil Abdullayev, Narimanov Park (Around 4), 2025 -
Agil Abdullayev, Samad Vurgun (Red Hoodie), 2025 -
Agil Abdullayev, Samad Vurgun (Around 2), 2025 -
Agil Abdullayev, Waiting, 2025 -
Agil Abdullayev, Radicals in Between Trees and Dicks, 2024 -
Agil Abdullayev, Hugging, 2025 -
Agil Abdullayev, Standing, 2025 -
Agil Abdullayev, Resting, 2025 -
Ramina Saadatkhan, Uomo Natura, 2025 -
Ramina Saadatkhan, New Dress, 2024 -
Ramina Saadatkhan, Bride, 2024 -
Ramina Saadatkhan, Pomegranate King, 2025 -
Ramina Saadatkhan, Union of Fire and Water, 2025 -
Ulviyya Iman, 2, 2025 -
Ulviyya Iman, Self Portrait, Red, 2025 -
Ulviyya Iman, Ashura, 2025 -
Ulviyya Iman, The End, 2025 -
Echo Activism Collective, Echoactivism I, 2025 -
Agil Abdullayev, Pretties from South Caucasus I, 2024 -
Agil Abdullayev, Pretties from South Caucasus III, 2024 -
Agil Abdullayev, Pretties from South Caucasus II, 2024
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Ulviyya Iman and Agil Abdullayev in conversation with Antonia Blocker
February 24, 2026Join us for a conversation with Agil Abdullayev & Ulviyya Iman who will discuss their practices and the ideas behind their new works in Tales...Read more -
Our Culture Mag | Tales from the Caucasus
January 5, 2026Our Culture Mag spotlights Gazelli Art House's upcoming exhibition Tales from the Caucasus, as one a highly anticipated exhibition to explore in London.Read more

