Skip to content
Recess homepage

Session

The Four Chambered Heart

Leila Hekmat

A photo of Leila Hekmat
A photo of Leila Hekmat

Due to the process-based nature of the Session program, this project will undergo constant modifications; the features of this page provide accruing information on the project’s developments.

Date:
November 8–December 11, 2011

Visitor info
To make an appointment, please sign up no later than 10 am the same day at recessartscheduling.as.me

Read our safety guideline

On November 8, 2011, Leila Hekmat will begin seven weeks of work at Recess as part of its signature program, Session. Session invites artists to use its storefront space as studio, exhibition venue and grounds for experimentation. Over the course of The Four Chambered Heart: Institute for Research, Understanding and Documentation of Love and Relationships, Hekmat will fuse the therapist’s office, researcher center, and performance set. Untrained and unlicensed as a counselor, Hekmat will offer the public complimentary love advice while documenting society’s influence on how we define our sexual selves and romantic relationships.

Within her visually rich, curated set as medical facility, Hekmat will generate a series of videos as well as written and photographic documentation. Costumes and props will be on hand to aid in role-playing and visitor anonymity. In this laboratory where private love lives are on view for public consumption, the artist will probe modes of self-representation and honesty while charting the ubiquitous performance we engage in on a daily basis.

Statement Of Intent From The Artist

The project titled The Four Chambered Heart has been taken from the 1959 Anais Nin novel of the same name. Nin extracts vignettes from her own life to reflect on emotions, doubts, decisions and her own sacrifices, inflecting the narrative with observations on love informed by social conventions.

It explores the complexity of identity and how social systems define and construct that identity. I am interested in the gap between our online selves (how we represent, maybe even expose ourselves to the world) and what we do/say in private. It is a space where the confessional is put on display. In this space the private becomes public and raises questions of self-representation, honesty (with others, as well as ourselves) and performance.

We are led to believe we are individuals in control of our own destinies, choices, desires, and our own expectations. But we are in part largely defined by a social construction of what we think we should be, want and expect from each other and ourselves. We believe we need certain security, certain comforts, and we come to demand these things and feel disappointed and conflicted when we do not have them.

I hope to create a place of healing through exhibition of one’s deepest questions, conflicts, and observations on love. I will not attempt to cure anyone’s love sickness, but to reflect on the healing power of inverting private spaces.

In many ways we become something constructed out of narratives we create about our lives. I hope to build an interesting document and portrait of how we see ourselves, how our relationships define us, and how social systems play a role.

Session invites artists to use Recess’s public platform to combine productive studio space with dynamic exhibition opportunities. Sessions remain open to the public from the first day of the artist’s project through the last, encouraging sustained dialogue between artists and audiences. Due to the process-based nature of Session, projects undergo constant revision and the above proposal is subject to change.

About the artist

Explore/Archive

See all

On view: October 5–November 23, 2024

Meter & Light: Night

Zain Alam

Enacts in miniature and in music the interlocking rhythms of time in Muslim life, specifically after sunset.

July 16–August 18, 2024

The Forever Museum Archive: Circa 2020_An Object 

Onyedika Chuke and Assembly

May 9–June 19, 2024

The Meeting Place

Helina Metaferia

A site for transformative gatherings by and for Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) women (cis and transgender)