Babi Badalov

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Born(1959-06-18)June 18, 1959
Lerik, Azerbaijan SSR
KnownforVisual art, poetry
Babi Badalov
Babi Badalov in 2025
Born(1959-06-18)June 18, 1959
Lerik, Azerbaijan SSR
Known forVisual art, poetry
Websitehttps://babibadalov.art/

Babi Badalov (Azerbaijani: Babi Bədəlov; born 18 June 1959) is an Azerbaijani visual artist. Since 2011 he lives and works in Paris, France.[1]

Babi Badalov was born as Babakhan Badalov in Lerik, a small town near the Iranian border in the Talysh region of Azerbaijan, to an Azeri father and a Talysh mother. After serving two years in the Soviet Army, he moved to Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) in 1980, where he quickly became a leading underground artist and a member of the unofficial artists group the Association of Experimental Visual Arts [ru] (TEII).[citation needed] Badalov participated in numerous art shows with the group in Russia and abroad. In the late 1980s, he met artists Vadim Ovchinnikov and Timur Novikov, members of the New Artists Group, and became involved in various of their projects and art campaigns.[citation needed]

Badalov has created art objects, paintings, installations and live performances. He also worked on the movie set of avant-garde Russian film director Evgeniy Kondratiev.[2] In addition to his visual explorations, Badalov experiments with words and writes obscure poetry, mixing the languages and mentalities of different cultures. Even though Russian is not his first language, he won the Pushkinskaya 10 [ru] poetry contest.[citation needed]

Badalov created a series of ecological art objects called Dolls for Adults, where he isolated the plastic of nature inside his own clothes. He also worked on visual projects dedicated to linguistic explorations, questioning how a person can become the victim of a language barrier, trying to untangle the confusion of the Cyrillic/Latin mix.[citation needed]

In 2010, he took part in Manifesta 8 in Cartagena, Region of Murcia, Spain,[3] The Watchmen, the Liars, the Dreamers at Le Plateau – Frac Ile-de-France [fr], Paris[4] and Lonely at the Top (LATT): Europe at Large #5 (2010), with Vyacheslav Akhunov and Azat Sargsyan at M HKA, Antwerp.[5]

In 2011, Badalov was granted asylum in France due to threats of an honor killing in Azerbaijan because of his homosexuality.[6]

In 2019, his work was shown in the group exhibition Hotel Europa: Their Past, Your Present, Our Future at Open Space of Experimental Art, Tbilisi,[7] and in the two solo exhibitions Soul Mobilisation at La Verrière - Fondation d'entreprise Hermès, Brussels[8] and Het is of de stenen spreken (silence is a commons) at Casco Art Institute, Utrecht.[9]

Publications

References

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