Artists
United States of America
Chloé Hajjar
10.03.25 10.04.25
Chloé Hajjar is a Detroit-based multidisciplinary artist investigating how ancient craftsmanship and technology intersect. She advocates for accessible art as a tool to empower individuals by supporting emotional and physical well-being. She received her BFA from The School of The Art Institute of Chicago, studied at Penland School of Craft, and currently works as an art facilitator for artists with mental health differences and disabilities.
As part of her residency and her time in Buenos Aires, Chloé spent many hours dancing tango and roaming the city, finding inspiration in its music, its people, and its rhythm. This was translated onto her sculptural pieces, which she built using copper plates that she worked on tirelessly. The result was an installation on the wall of the Dialogue Space that followed a certain rhythm and a kind of movement resembling those of tango.
ARTIST STATEMENT
Hajjar’s work spans metalworking, creative technologies, sculpture, and printmaking. By blending traditional and contemporary techniques, she contrasts the time-honoured practices of artisans with the rapid evolution of technological advancement. Her work examines narratives of innovation and obsolescence, echoing the rise and fall of civilizations. Her practice is an act of preservation, harmonizing hand-finished materials with modern tools to consider how craftsmanship is both endangered and revived through labor and creative technologies. She questions how automation can erode or extend human skill. Rediscovery permeates the laborious steps of her creative process, as she delves into the lifecycles of innovation, cultural memory, relics and nature. Reminded that what we leave behind continues to shape what we become.
BIO
Chloé Hajjar
1996 | Detroit, MI, USA
Lives and works in Detroit, USA
EDUCATION
2018 | BFA, The School of The Art Institute of Chicago, USA
EXHIBITIONS
2025 | Art In The Office. The Kresge Foundation, Detroit, USA
2024 | Cup of Sugar. PASC Detroit Gallery, Detroit, USA
2023 | Moving Forward. Accelerate Art, New York, USA
2022 | MDW Fair. Mana Contemporary, Chicago, USA
2021 | DigitalArt4Climate. United Nations COP26, Glasgow, Scotland
AWARDS
2024 | Award Winner, Detroit Artist Market, Detroit, USA
2023 | Dreams Come True Award on behalf of the Progressive Art Studio Collective, Detroit, USA
2021 | DigitalArt4Climate, Award winner displayed at the United Nations Conference COP26
2014 | SAIC Merit Scholarship, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, USA





Related Activities
´aceNITE, Exhibitions
Intimates Carthographies
Bogner-Hajjak-Mannas
09.04.25 23.05.25
Intimate Cartographies is not merely an ´aceNITE that shows the work of three artists—it is a compass that points not north, but toward connection. A space where winds, gestures, and marks trace new forms of proximity, reminding us that what we leave behind continues to shape what we become.
In a world increasingly shaped by uncertainty and distance, three artists from distinct geographies—Anna-Maria Bogner (Austria-Germany), Chloé Hajjar (USA/Lebanon), and Carol Mannas (Canada)—converge in Buenos Aires to create a sensory cartography of intimacy, atmosphere, and temporality. Through their unique practices, each artist offers a reimagining of space, the body, and the systems that invisibly connect us across time and territory.
Anna-Maria Bogner (Austria-Germany) presented her site-specific installation Common Sense in the Políglota Room, exploring spatial perception as shaped by cultural and historical contexts. Through minimalist interventions, she traces ephemeral lines in architecture, inviting us to reconsider our relationship with the spaces we inhabit. Her work creates a pause, allowing us to listen to space as a language, revealing new ways of perceiving form and void.
Chloé Hajjar (USA) intertwines metalwork, printmaking, and creative technologies in a practice that interrogates the dynamics of innovation and obsolescence. Echoing the rise and fall of civilizations, she harmonizes hand-finished materials with digital tools to consider how craftsmanship is both endangered and revived. Her pieces are contemporary relics—vestiges of transformation—inviting us to reflect on what is lost, preserved, and reinvented in an age of rapid technological advancement.
Carol Mannas (Canada) presented an edition of her piece Alisios, produced during her residency at Proyecto´ace, inspired by the winds and currents of South America. Alisios emerged from a meteorological insight on the Isle of Lewis in Scotland: that warm trade winds traveling from South America soften the climate of Northern Europe. Her work connects hemispheres and histories—winds, etching, the skin of the Earth and the skin of the body—becoming surfaces inscribed by weather, time, and experience. Through her work, Mannas highlights the intimate relationship between natural forces and the human body, making the invisible forces of wind and weather tangible and deeply personal.
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