Just in:
Hong Kong Unveils April 30 Launch for Landmark Crypto ETFs // CBN Targets User Accounts // UAE and Ecuador Set Course for Economic Pact // Middle East totters on the edge of a cliff // Booming Region Fuels Innovation Surge // Lee Chong Wei Shows Up On Chinese Hot cultural Talk Show “SHEDE Wisdom Talents”, Talking About “Crossing The Hill” // Empty Promises Haunt DAO Maker Hack Victims After Three Years // UAE Scrutinizes Report on Racial Discrimination Treaty // Andertoons by Mark Anderson for Wed, 24 Apr 2024 // PolyU forms global partnership with ZEISS Vision Care to expand impact and accelerate market penetration of patented myopia control technology // Octa crypto snapshot: investors behavior predictions after Bitcoin halving // Central Bank of Nigeria Debunks Rumors of Crypto Account Freeze // Sharjah Census Gears Up for Final Enumeration Phase // Prince Holding Group’s Chen Zhi Scholarship Clinches Silver Stevie for CSR Excellence at Asia-Pacific Stevie Awards // ESG Achievement Awards 2023/2024 is Open for Application, Celebrating Innovative Sustainable Practices and Responsible Risk Management // Cairo Recognizes Arab World’s Creative Luminaries at Award Ceremony // New Dynamics in Cryptocurrency Security: ZUHYX Builds the Strongest Fund Protection System // Congress in firefighting mode amid row over Pitroda remarks // UAE President, Spanish Prime Minister Hold Phone Talks // Quality HealthCare Partners with eHealth to Enhance Patient Treatment Efficiency //

CORRECTED – Get your own facts, ignore media, Palestinian artist Halaby tells successors

ADVERTISEMENT

(Corrects name of gallery in paragraph 3 to Ayyam)

By Tarek Fahmy.

DUBAI Palestinian painter Samia Halaby has blunt advice for aspiring Arab artists – get your inspiration first-hand, whether from ordinary people or historical documents, avoiding the “lies” of the media.

Halaby, who made her name with abstract paintings, drew on both kinds of source for her most overtly political project, a series of drawings of the 1956 massacre of Palestinians by Israeli border police at Kafr Qasem.

The drawings, and a separate exhibition of her multicoloured abstracts called “Illuminated Space”, make up a Halaby double bill on display at Dubai’s Ayyam Gallery for Dubai Art Week.

“My advice to young aspiring artists in the Arab world and other similar countries that are torn by political, economic and social problems caused by imperialist challenges is to concentrate on history and its details, and to not follow the existing media, because there are a lot of lies,” she told Reuters.

“They should be attentive to their surroundings and their societies … specifically the common class of society.”

The Kafr Qasem project grew out of a visit in 1999 to the village where, on Oct. 29, 1956, Israeli border guards killed 48 people and an unborn child.

More than half the dead were women and children.

The victims were returning home from work across the de facto border between Israel and Jordan, unaware that they were infringing a military curfew declared on the eve of war with Egypt. Israel’s late president, Shimon Peres, formally apologised for the massacre in 2007.

“I started to draw about my experience and, as time went by, I realised that it was an extremely significant experience,” Halaby said.

She started not only drawing more but also interviewing villagers and seeking documentation.

The book that emerged last November, “Drawing the Kafr Qasem massacre”, is more than a collection of drawings; much of it is devoted to interviews with the survivors.

So how does this political engagement fit with the better known abstract works of an artist who was born in Jerusalem in 1936, but left her homeland upon the creation of Israel in 1948, and has made her life in the United States?

“Palestine is very present in my life, but when you ask me where it lies in my paintings – it exists, but you wouldn’t find one of my abstract paintings about Palestine, you can’t find Palestine in the paintings’ titles,” she says.

“But it has affected me differently, by making me politically progressive, which made me think about art and what it is … Hence my choice of abstract art – because it is an optimistic kind of art, a futuristic one rather than an art that lives in the past.”

(Writing by Rose Wyatt and Kevin Liffey, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

-Reuters

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT
Just in:
UAE President, Spanish Prime Minister Hold Phone Talks // ZUHYX Exchange: Embracing Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Future // Election Commission Has A Dismal Record On Acting Against Modi’s Breaches Of Poll Code // Leading with Compliance, ZUHYX Earns the Canadian MSB License // Andertoons by Mark Anderson for Thu, 25 Apr 2024 // Telecom Giant Du Eyes Crypto Integration for FinTech Platform // Congress in firefighting mode amid row over Pitroda remarks // Andertoons by Mark Anderson for Wed, 24 Apr 2024 // New Dynamics in Cryptocurrency Security: ZUHYX Builds the Strongest Fund Protection System // Dubai Gears Up for Second FinTech Summit as Funding Surges // PolyU forms global partnership with ZEISS Vision Care to expand impact and accelerate market penetration of patented myopia control technology // Booming Region Fuels Innovation Surge // ESG Achievement Awards 2023/2024 is Open for Application, Celebrating Innovative Sustainable Practices and Responsible Risk Management // Sharjah Census Gears Up for Final Enumeration Phase // Lai & Turner Law Firm PLLC Welcomes Eric Strocen as Director of Family Law Division // Quality HealthCare Partners with eHealth to Enhance Patient Treatment Efficiency // Cairo Recognizes Arab World’s Creative Luminaries at Award Ceremony // Prince Holding Group’s Chen Zhi Scholarship Clinches Silver Stevie for CSR Excellence at Asia-Pacific Stevie Awards // Cobb’s Game-Changer: Introducing One-Stop Event Transport Management Solution // UAE and Ecuador Set Course for Economic Pact //