Palestinian creatives on whether art has a role to play in times of war

Palestinian artist Hazem Harb pictured in front of one of his works created in November for his 'Dystopia Is Not A Noun' series. (Supplied)
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Updated 13 January 2024
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Palestinian creatives on whether art has a role to play in times of war

  • As Israel’s assault on Gaza enters its fourth month, Palestinian artists discuss the impact it has had on their work, and the role the arts can play in times of war 

DUBAI: In times of war — when people are dying by the thousands and hospitals and schools are bombed, as they are in Gaza at this moment — it’s easy to wonder if the arts have any real relevance or role to play. In the face of such pain and destruction, art of any kind can be seen as a luxury enjoyed only by those fortunate enough to live outside of the violence. But history shows us that some of the world’s greatest artists have produced their most potent creations in the midst of horrendous suffering and socio-political upheaval.  

In 1937, for example, Pablo Picasso produced his nightmarish painting “Guernica,” depicting the bombing of a Basque town during the Spanish Civil War. And one of Iraqi pioneer Dia Al-Azzawi’s greatest works is his massive, emotionally-charged artwork based on the Sabra and Shatila massacre in Beirut in 1982.   




UK-based Palestinian oud player Reem Anbar. (Supplied)

As Israel’s military assault on Gaza enters its fourth month, Palestinian artists at home and abroad are using art to express their emotions and to raise awareness of the suffering their countrymen have endured. Recent exhibitions in Dubai and Beirut have shown solidarity by exhibiting works by Palestinian artists.  

Reem Anbar is a daughter of war. Born in Saudi Arabia and raised in Gaza, the musician reportedly became her town’s first female oud player, despite a lack of opportunities for studying music. Though Anbar, a Master’s student in music therapy, currently lives in Manchester, England, her memories of growing up in Gaza remain fresh. “I was raised with war,” she says. “I faced three of them. In every war, we lost our homes, neighbors, friends. . . We were literally living in a prison.” 

But she still found some hope. Aged 11, Anbar picked up the oud at a local center that offered summer activities, and it’s been her companion ever since. “I don’t know why, but I used to feel like it was a weapon for me. It allowed me to express myself and talk about my cause, my feelings, my life,” she says.  

Anbar went on to form Gazelleband in the UK in 2017. “I didn’t want to come here as a refugee and do nothing with my life,” she says. “I came here to work. I go from town to town to spread my Palestinian music.”  




Sliman Mansour's 1985 painting 'Symbol of Hope' —  Mansour says he finds himself sharing images of his older work online, because 'nothing has changed.' (Supplied)

Anbar has concerts coming up in the UK and Italy. She’s been asked about how she could play music when her family and friends are being killed. But to her, music is solace.  

“Even if a rocket drops, I will still hold on to my oud. Wars motivate us to sing and make more music. In the end, we Palestinian artists are carrying our cause wherever we go,” she says. “A message can be passed on through art.”  

Like Anbar, 24-year-old Malak Mattar hails from Gaza and has found refuge in England. She says she grew up in a household that appreciated poetry and art, and her colorful, women-centric paintings pay homage to Palestinian heritage and visual culture. In the past three months, though, her work has taken a new direction, seeing her produce raw, charcoal drawings of victims of the recent attrocities. She was actually visiting Gaza in October, leaving just the day before the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7.  

“It’s the worst period of my life,” Mattar tells Arab News. “My family is still in Gaza. Every day is a new tragedy. What’s happening is genocide. Nowhere is safe.” 




A recent drawing by UK-based Palestinian artist Malak Matar. (Supplied)

 In these new drawings, Mattar depicts helpless infants and animals, damaged buildings, and wailing women in striking monochromatic tones.  

“I think it’s my protest as an artist, using only black and white,” she explains. “To be honest, some of the works were hard to do, but it’s my way of documenting what I’m seeing on social media through journalists and photographers’ accounts. I’m drawing something that I don’t want to forget.”  

The drawings will be displayed in London’s art-residency program “An Effort,” for which Mattar was selected as artist-in-residence. The violence and displacement faced by her family in Gaza has, of course, had a huge impact on her, but she realizes the importance of continuing to create.  

“I believe in art. It has a role to play — documenting everything and expressing something in a humane, moving way,” she says. “I think it’s bad to forget. Forgetting means betrayal. What we’re seeing are war crimes. I’m not just in a state of sadness, but anger too. I can’t face the outside world, because it let us down.”    

Meanwhile, in Jerusalem, the veteran Palestinian artist Sliman Mansour is also preparing to showcase a new, surrealist-style canvas in a group exhibition at the end of January in Ramallah. These days, Mansour is taking things slow, not visiting his studio on a daily basis, and even when he does, it’s sometimes only to paint for an hour at a time.  




UK-based Palestinian artist Malak Matar. (Supplied)

“I talk to artists and friends and they all have the same problem: They don’t know what to do. There’s a kind of loss in this time period,” he says. “If I was to compare the situation we’re in right now and the First Intifada, the First Intifada had a stronger effect on art and culture. I think when people were participants in the battle, they were more creative. But, now, we are just viewers. We sometimes talk to artists in Gaza and their situation is terrible — they don’t have studios and their homes have been destroyed. When we told them about the Ramallah exhibition, they were very annoyed, saying: ‘We can’t find something to eat and you’re talking about exhibitions?’   

“It can seem as if art is not important during times like this,” he continues. “But I think it’s important — if not for this generation, then for future ones. Art reflects the soul of a certain time.” 

On Instagram, images of his melancholic figurative paintings are regularly circulated by younger audiences. Mansour finds himself sharing posts of his older work in the Eighties and Nineties. “Nothing has changed for us with the Occupation,” he says.  




The holy family under an olive tree (Acrylic and oil), Sliman Mansour, 2020. (Supplied)

Even though Dubai-based Palestinian artist Hazem Harb’s home in Gaza, which has belonged to his family for generations, has been destroyed, he — like Mansour — still believes that art has value in times like this. “I still can’t process that it’s gone,” he says. “Our whole lives and memories were in that house.”  

In November, Harb gave a live performance in Dubai, producing harrowing drawings of vulnerable faces on a huge canvas — part of his “Dystopia Is Not A Noun” charcoal series — accompanied by rousing music.  

“It was the first time in my life that I drew in front of people,” he says. “It was honestly a hard experience, but it was also expressive, letting out my feelings. Towards the end, I couldn’t handle it anymore. I was literally painting from my gut.”  

He hopes that his November canvas will find a public home, such as a museum, to serve as a reminder of the atrocities that his native city has been subjected to. 

“Art,” he says, “absolutely has an important role to play — to tell and record these stories.”  


Radiohead member rejects ‘artwashing genocide’ claim over Israel show

Updated 05 June 2024
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Radiohead member rejects ‘artwashing genocide’ claim over Israel show

  • Jonny Greenwood: BDS movement ‘silencing Israeli artists for being born Jewish’
  • He and Israeli artist Dudu Tassa performed together in Tel Aviv last month

LONDON: A member of English band Radiohead has rejected accusations of “artwashing genocide” after collaborating with an Israeli artist and performing in Tel Aviv.

Jonny Greenwood, 52, a founding member of the band, has performed with Israeli artist Dudu Tassa since 2008, The Independent reported.

In May this year they performed in Tel Aviv, and last year released an album of Arabic love songs, “Jarak Qaribak.”

A day before the concert in Tel Aviv on May 26, Greenwood attended a protest calling for the release of hostages from Gaza and the holding of new elections in Israel.

The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement said in a statement: “Palestinians unequivocally condemn Jonny Greenwood’s shameful artwashing of Israel’s genocide.

“We call for peaceful, creative pressure on his band Radiohead to convincingly distance itself from this blatant complicity in the crime of crimes, or face grassroots measures.”

Greenwood, who is married to Israeli visual artist Sharona Katan, has hit back at critics for the “silencing of this, or any, artistic effort made by Israeli Jews.”

His album combining “Arab and Jewish musicians” is “worthwhile,” he said in a social media statement on Tuesday.

“Reminding everyone that the Jewish cultural roots in countries like Iraq and Yemen go back for thousands of years, is also important,” he added.

“So that’s why I’m making music with this band. You’re welcome to disagree with, or ignore, what we do, but I hope you now understand what the true motivation is, and can react to the music without suspicion or hate.

“Silencing Israeli artists for being born Jewish in Israel doesn’t seem like any way to reach an understanding between the two sides of this apparently endless conflict.”

Radiohead has long enjoyed popularity in Israel. After a 2017 show in Israel, frontman Thom Yorke said the band “does not stand” with BDS, and “playing in a country isn’t the same as endorsing its government.”

The nephew of Greenwood’s wife was serving in the Israel Defense Forces when he was killed in Gaza this year, The Guardian reported.

After repeated Israeli performances in recent years, Radiohead came under fire from prominent musical figures, including Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters and Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore, through the campaign group Artists for Palestine.

British film director Ken Loach also wrote an opinion piece for The Independent urging Radiohead to join the cultural boycott against Israel.


Review: ‘Returnal’ is a thoughtful sci-fi adventure

Updated 05 June 2024
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Review: ‘Returnal’ is a thoughtful sci-fi adventure

LONDON: Right from the start, before you even take control of Selene Vassos, a reconnaissance scout who has crash-landed on a prohibited and mysterious planet, you are warned that “Returnal” (available originally for PS5 but now PC too) is “intended to be a challenging experience.”

Such difficulty may deter the casual gamer used to a steady progression of character and exploration through a game environment.

However, “Returnal” is a thoughtful and rewarding adventure that claims much originality of thought in its setup. The key theme is that when you die, you return — but not to the same environment you were in before. Instead, each new cycle poses new challenges and progress can only be made by unlocking upgrades.

Selene herself is a professional, unfazed character who does not appear too bothered when she soon comes across the body of her former self, who died in this strange world where the laws of physics and time seem not to apply. Staying alive is crucial, particularly as it allows her to retain better weapons for longer. In addition, avoiding damage allows for boosts of agility, vision and more, making for an overall more lethal Selene.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Housemarque (@housemarque)

The environment is varied and of course surprising with each incarnation, and the weapons on offer come complete with a range of exciting alternative fire mechanisms such as homing missiles or lasers. A hostile environment where even plants are a threat to life is mitigated by your technology, which you can improve despite the reset of deaths through fancy smart “xeno-tech” that becomes integrated with alien kit left around.

There is a paradox in “Returnal” described by Selene herself: She is trapped in an environment that is “always the same, always changing,” and players must be patient in the early chapters as they get used to the sapping dynamic of death and return.

Once that makes more sense, the loneliness of both her alien environment and the impossibility of even dying to escape it make for a pretty special atmosphere that a smart-shooting engine then complements.


Palestinian artist Dima Srouji explores ‘death and rebirth’ in latest show at Lawrie Shabibi in Dubai

Updated 05 June 2024
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Palestinian artist Dima Srouji explores ‘death and rebirth’ in latest show at Lawrie Shabibi in Dubai

  • Artist’s first solo gallery exhibition is titled ‘Charts for a Resurrection’

DUBAI: In contrast to the horrifying upheaval and violence in Gaza on news channels across the world, Palestinian artist Dima Srouji offers an uplifting dose of transcendence with her latest work.

Titled “Charts for a Resurrection” and on view at Lawrie Shabibi in Alserkal Avenue in Dubai until July 6, the multidisciplinary show offers some kind of imaginary liberation from the ongoing ruptures and tumult.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Dima Srouji | (@dimasrouji)

“There’s this idea of a return to life in this show,” Srouji told Arab News, stating how it coincidently opened during Orthodox Easter. “Some of us feel like we are returning to Biblical themes these days for obvious reasons. I’ve been thinking a lot about this relationship between death and rebirth,” she said.

Much of her work, she added, begins with a historical exploration of archeology in Palestine and finding ways to enter and explore a landscape — even from afar — through research and archival materials.

In the exhibition Srouji presents works in glass, stone and photography. Each of these is grounded in Palestine’s history, land, heritage, archaeology and living archives, to consider ideas of displacement and offer hope amid hardship.

The exhibition has two separate spaces: a larger “terrain” or land-focused area, and a more intimate “chapel” where installations and archival prints merge imaginary archaeological sites and historical artefacts.

“The reason they’re separate is to refer to this reality on the ground, of the land itself and the different lenses we view the land through, for example, through the history of glass, archeological excavations or stone,” explained Srouji. “All of it offers an intimate encounter with the land itself.”

“The other half of the exhibition offers this almost placeless space where spirituality takes over and this sense of liberation comes through. It’s almost like the process towards resurrection or at least a prayer for resurrection,” she added.

The “chapel” was a way to create a space that feels “somewhat physically safe and spiritually safe.”

An example of the mystical qualities found in Srouji’s work can be found in the larger room, which presents on one wall her delicate stone-carved windows with their distinctive colored-glass inlay. These are meant to reflect ideas of potential future archaeological monuments for the Palestinian landscape.

The creation of the windows themselves present possibilities for restoration and renewal. They are created using the traditional technique for Qamariyyah windows, often found in mosques and churches in Palestine, Yemen and Egypt.

Srouji has long collaborated with archaeologists, glass blowers, anthropologists and sound designers to create her installations, as well as for writing, product designs and architectural projects.

Through her work, which is made across a varied range of media, including text, archival materials, glass, maps and film, Srouji explores identity, displacement, globalization, the spirit of places, and people left behind often with little documentation. Through her art she gives new voice and meaning to the fractured, the displaced and what is seemingly forgotten.

Evocative works include “Maternal Labor,” a series of archival black-and-white prints on aluminum that champion real women often labelled as “basket girls.” They were hired by Western institutions during the 20th century to excavate the land in Palestine they owned and cultivated for centuries. Through their work they uncovered valuable artefacts that were subsequently displaced.

Another poignant work is “The Red River” comprising suspended hand-blown glass sculptures. This is a reference to the Belus River, where some historians say glass-making was first invented.

The evocative red color references the river’s pollution by nearby industries including the Rafael Advanced Defense Systems’ military factory.

The work also contains personal references including to the artist’s grandmother and her homeland of Palestine.

In the intimate dark space that evokes the idea of a chapel, floating replicas of ancient vessels historically given as gifts to the dead for their afterlives set another tone of spiritual resurrection and transcendence.

“There are ideas of healing here, meditation and the possibility of a new future for Palestine,” said Srouji. “We’re so connected to the land. I think there is this spiritual relationship to the land that often gets forgotten in relation to liberation.”

Srouji said the land connects all Palestinians, including those in the diaspora and martyrs. “All the works are inspired by archeological excavations in Palestine and those that actually did the excavations,” she added.

The works on show strive to find new life away from the violence and destruction on the ground “to foster this imagination of what liberation might feel like.”
 


Nicola Coughlan wears Sara Mrad to ‘Bridgerton’ premiere in Toronto

Updated 05 June 2024
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Nicola Coughlan wears Sara Mrad to ‘Bridgerton’ premiere in Toronto

DUBAI: Irish actress Nicola Coughlan this week stepped out in a head-turning gown by Beirut-based label Sara Mrad at the premiere in Toronto of season three of Netflix’s hit show “Bridgerton.”

Coughlan donned a lavender silk organza mini-dress paired with a red mikado petal-like cape from the designer’s spring 2024 couture collection. She accessorized with droplet-shaped earrings from London-based Ysso jewelry, which are hand-carved in Greece.

For her heels, she opted for a pair of Christian Louboutin open-toe shoes that were transparent and adorned with glitzy crystals.

Coughlan has shown support for Gaza by sporting the “Artists for Ceasefire” pin. (AFP)

Coughlan, who stars as Penelope Featherington in the series, posed for pictures with her co-star Luke Newton, who plays Colin Bridgerton.

He wore a pinstripe suit paired with a blue button-down.

The actress posed for pictures with her co-star Luke Newton. (AFP)

This is not the first time Coughlan has championed an Arab designer.

At the show’s premiere in Brazil in May, the actress wore a deep red gown by Lebanese fashion label Azzi & Osta. The gown featured an oversized hood, which she wore over her head, and long gloved sleeves adorned with gold embellishments.

Coughlan has shown support for Gaza by sporting the “Artists for Ceasefire” pin at several promotional events. This includes the premieres of the third season of “Bridgerton,” and her television appearances on “Late Night with Seth Meyers” and “Good Morning America.”

When asked about the pin during an interview with USA Today recently, the actress said: “It’s very important for me because I feel like I’m a very privileged person. I’m doing my dream job and I’m getting to travel the world, but then I’m hyper-aware of what’s happening in Rafah at the moment.”

Coughlan has helped raise just over $1.9 million for aid efforts in Gaza over the past seven months.

Meanwhile, season three of Netflix’s Regency-era drama has become the most successful one so far based on viewership numbers, Forbes reported this week.

With part two set to drop on June 13, the first half was the most-watched on Netflix between May 13 and 18, according to Variety. The first four episodes, released on May 16, reached 45.1 million views during its opening weekend.


Saudi Arabia to host WWD Global Fashion Summit and inaugural Fashion Awards

Updated 04 June 2024
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Saudi Arabia to host WWD Global Fashion Summit and inaugural Fashion Awards

DUBAI: Riyadh is set to host the Women’s Wear Daily (WWD) Global Fashion Summit and the first-ever Fashion Awards at King Abdullah Financial District on June 6.

The events, which are taking place in partnership with the Saudi Fashion Commission and King Abdullah Financial District Development and Management Company, will honor achievements in the fashion, beauty and retail industries, recognizing the contributions of designers and companies. 

This year, the event will spotlight local talents alongside international fashion leaders and will feature a series of workshops and conference sessions held at the KAFD Conference Center. 

In the evening, the Fashion Awards will celebrate the achievements of Saudi designers through a ceremony. Among the many accolades, KAFD will present the Designer of the Year award to a creative whose work has impacted the fashion industry.

“We are thrilled to witness the burgeoning fashion industry in Saudi Arabia gaining global recognition. Hosting WWD’s annual Global Fashion Summit for the first time in our region, right here in the heart of Riyadh, is an exciting moment,” said Burak Cakmak, CEO of the Saudi Fashion Commission. 

“The growing interest in the Kingdom’s fashion scene is inspiring, and we are particularly looking forward to the inaugural Fashion Awards presented by Chalhoub,” he added. This event marks a significant milestone for Saudi fashion, spotlighting the creativity and innovation flourishing within our community.”