The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) may cause infectious mononucleosis in adolescents and young adults. Most healthy persons who become infected with the CMV virus after birth have few, if any, symptoms and have no long-term effects on their health. The cytomegalovirus is actually a group of viruses in the herpes simplex virus family that often cause cells to enlarge.However, uninfected adolescents and young adults who come in contact with the virus may develop infectious mononucleosis in nearly 50 percent of exposures. When children are infected with the virus, they usually do not experience any noticeable symptoms. Most adults in the US have been exposed to the Epstein-Barr virus, which is a very common virus.Infectious mononucleosis is either caused by the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) or the cytomegalovirus, both of which are members of the herpes simplex virus family. Tuğçe Diri lives and produces in Istanbul.Infectious mononucleosis, also known as mononucleosis,"mono," or glandular fever, is characterized by swollen lymph glands and chronic fatigue. Exhibiting a synthesis spirit in her productions, blending the concepts of history, memory, culture and nature with the visual culture based on tradition, Diri collides cultural distinctions and similarities in the context of art and craft on a formal plane. Diri is influenced by a wide range of periods and techniques, from Arte Povera to Surrealism, from the dynamism of Abstract Expressionists to the design and text-painting traditions of Islamic Arts. Drawing is always at the core of her work. Working in series and using materials such as acrylic/oil paint, charcoal/ink pencil, collage, fabric, yarn, she holds drawing at the beginning of her production practice. In 2019, she completed her Master's degree from Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University Painting Department with the thesis "Reflections of Traditional Arts on Contemporary Turkish Painting". She opened her first workshop in 2010 and continued working. Tuğçe Diri’s solo exhibition Mono-Signs can be visited until Apat Anna Laudel Düsseldorf.īorn in Eskişehir in 1984, Tuğçe Diri graduated from Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University in 2010, with a degree from Applied Lithography Atelier and Painting. While doing so, Diri gives us clues to penetrate into the deep roots of an understanding rather than producing an art object. In the stack-compositions of the artist, which she creates spontaneously with a geometric and organic line, waste, litter, trash and garbage appear as heaps, recreating the image of natural disasters, catastrophes and destruction.Īround elements such as elegant handcraft, labor and productivity, the artist not only conveys the historical context of embroidery but also performs artisanal competence in working with materials and techniques. These images, evoking the representation of nature, the abstracted and transformed traces of garbage piles stacked on top of each other, become the landscapes of our age. In Mono-Signs the artist sets out with the idea that masses are a cultural phenomenon of consumption, and she physically and metaphorically divides these accumulations into pieces in her mind, then rearranges them on the painting surface by stacking, sorting, accumulating and filling, and combines them through repetitions. During the production process of her artworks, Diri blends the concepts of history, memory, culture and nature with a visual culture based on tradition, colliding cultural distinctions and similarities in the context of art and craft on a formal plane.Ĭonsidering cultural visual heritage as a layer of memory, the artist uses the traditional aesthetic as a language of expression that meets today's critical discourses and concepts.īased on the idea that representation of nature in art is directly related to social and political perceptions, Diri brings an eco-critical approach to her works in the exhibition, emphasizing the traces left by human actions on the ecosystem. The exhibition takes its name from the word mono, which in Turkish means uniqueness. Anna Laudel Düsseldorf presents Tuğçe Diri’s first solo exhibition in Germany, titled Mono-Signs between March 24 and April 30, 2022.
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