
Susan Hefuna |
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Near:
Four Multinational Artists from the Middle East, at Detroit’s
Tangent Gallery
June 4th through June 20th.
Near runs through June 20 at
Tangent Gallery.
For more information, call 313.873.2955.
For REVIEWS, Click here
Representations of the Middle
East automatically offer scenes of political and religious fanaticism
that reinforce and increase the gulf, or the "distance,"
between the West and the Middle East. But in reality, you can go
from Paris to Beirut in four hours and the region is omnipresent
in Western daily news. This distance is elliptically implied in
"Near," the first in a series of ArteEast’s annual
art exhibitions.
The exhibition displays the works of Egyptian-German Susan Hefuna,
Palestinian Aissa Deebi, Palestinian Bashir Makhoul and Iranian
Mitra Memarzia,all of whom work and live both in the Middle East
and in Europe or the US. The selected artists’ works reflect
universal concerns that have led them to different explorations
of the region’s political and cultural conditions. Each artist
manifests in his or her work a different articulation of the relationship
of self, locality and globalization.
Despite a limited institutional infrastructure, Middle
Eastern artists deal with many of the issues that ring extraordinarily
familiar to the Western artist. Concerns such as identity, ethnicity,
socio-political relevance and, above all, the intermingling of cultures,
are similar to those that engage many artists operating in a variety
of social and cultural contexts. The exhibit illustrates the ways
in which people are engaged with every day ideas and concerns beyond
the media stereotypes of a Middle East mired in war, and plagued
by terrorists and fundamentalism.
NEAR CATALOGUE
Now available for purchase online
The 45-page catalogue accompanying ArteEast’s inaugural the
exhibition offers short critical essays by Aissa Deebi, Sarah Rogers
and Gordon Hon exploring the work of artists Susan Hefuna, Mitra
Memarzia, Bahir Makhoul and Aissa Deebi, while critically evaluating
the current position of contemporary fine art practices in the region
and reflecting on the social, cultural and political influences
that have shaped it.
Each artist’s work is profiled in the catalogue, which was
edited, designed and produced in-house by the exhibit curator, Aissa
Deebi.
Catalogue: $10 + $3.95 for domestic shipping and handling.
$10 + $6.95 for international shipping and handling.
Mail us a check, payable to ArteEast, to:
490 Third Street, #2
Brooklyn, NY 11215
REVEIWS:
TO BE NEAR YOU
by Natalie Haddad
natalie@getrealdetroit.com
From the Real Detroit Weekly, Volume 6, Issue 24,
"Stage and Canvas"
Of the obstacles facing exhibitions of international artists is
the potentiality that a broadened purview of the art world can be
a mirror of international stereotyping. Certainly, there are political
implications to Near -- a touring exhibition conceived in New York
of Middle Eastern artists -- that the participants are not only
aware of, but presumably anticipated and prepared to tackle. In
most cases politics has only a marginal voice in the visual arts;
and Near's salient topics are therefore the aesthetic tropes that
characterize Middle Eastern art in Western society and the reconciliation
of two ostensibly disparate cultures within a single contemporary
art sphere. Politics renders a slippery arena between the visual
and philosophical constitutions of art that's not easily balanced.
The four artists in the exhibition -- Aissa Deebi, Susan Hefuna,
Bashir Makhoul and Mitra Memarzia -- are far from Middle Eastern
traditionalists, despite the pivotal role of their heritages in
the exhibition. This is one of its crucial factors. Curator Deebi,
a native of Palestine, has dissected Middle Eastern politics before
-- he collaborated with an Israeli artist, Yuval Shaul, in an exhibition
entitled Terror earlier this year.
What Near tempers -- quite purposefully -- is the polarized frankness
of similar exhibitions with the frequently internalized aesthetic
of contemporary art. Hefuna, a multimedia artist of Egyptian-German
heritage, examines her cultures and gender with bleached-out, loosely
documental photographs, patterned ink drawings and layered, graphic
digital images -- suggestions, far more than realizations, of identity.
Makhoul, a Palestinian-born artist and head of the Department of
Art and Design at the University of Luton, U.K., approaches politics
with an uncomfortable distance: His 1998 installation, "Points
of View," re-imagined bullet holes as a decorative motif on
an interior wall. Iranian Memarzia constructs mirror-image photographs
of milling or interacting Middle Eastern people, most in modern
dress and engaged in the same daily activities that characterize
much of the world.
Certainly, Detroit is a logical market for the exhibition because
of the area's Middle Eastern population; yet it also has the capacity
to act as a sort of barometer of cultures. Global awareness or sensitivity
to non- Western cultures is an idealistic consideration in the United
States, particularly acute in metro Detroit. A real reconciliation
of extremes, however, is unlikely, and probably unnecessary. Instead,
modern society engenders an alternative species of culture -- and
in art, a relatively rootless perspective. Near, with the title's
geographical ambiguity, returns the pursuit of art -- and the sympathies
of artists around the globe -- to the anyplace from which it hails.
Arab contemporary
ACCESS brings Arabic art exhibit to Tangent
by Phaedra Robinson
From the Metro Times, Detroit, 6/16/2004
There is great need for such shows, cultural
bridges between the West and East.
Last week Detroit’s Tangent Gallery launched an exhibit of
four edgy, contemporary Arabic artists in a show that explores issues
of exile and identity, language and communication. With the exhibit,
New York/Palestinian artist and curator Aissa Deebi seeks to bridge
the conceptual gap between the Middle East and the West by probing
the relationship between opposing forces and perceived differences
and contradictions between the two cultures.
Thanks to ACCESS, an Arab-American cultural, economic and social
organization based in Dearborn, the exhibit, titled Near: Four Multinational
Artists from the Middle East, was brought to Detroit before heading
off to New York and other locations in an effort to educate and
bring together our multicultural community. The show has grand intentions
and is worth taking a close look at, with works that demand more
than the standard five seconds per piece for the viewer to really
absorb the layered meanings.
There is great need for such shows, cultural bridges between the
West and East. The art world, according to Deebi, is virtually ignorant
of new art from the Middle East.
“In terms of contemporary art, the Middle East is off the
map,” Deebi comments. “It may even come as a surprise
… that contemporary art is being produced there.”
Language plays an important role in the concept of the show. A thin
cultural barrier is left by the artists in many of their pieces,
reminding each viewer of their own identity in relation to the artist
and of the degree to which they understand or don’t understand
the artist’s message.
Artist Bashir Makhoul, a Palestinian living in the U.K., uses language
quite literally as a code you simply understand or do not in his
video piece, “The Darkened Room.” Tangent’s small
installation room works well for this piece, which contains a monitor
with a black-and-white close-up of the artist’s eye. The viewer
can hear a woman talking in an intimate volume in Arabic as the
pupil of the eye shifts and grows larger and smaller. Finally a
tear begins and the video stops and begins again. The impact of
this piece is significantly different when knowing that this is
the voice the artist’s dead grandmother, whom he never met.
It addresses the effects that exile brings to a family and a people.
And it underlines the concepts of alienation and “otherness,”
in that non-Arabic speaking viewers must guess at what is being
said and what is causing the tear, for not being able to understand
the spoken words.
This is a theme in Makhoul’s static work as well, in which
he uses the language of cultural and archetypal symbols to discuss
displacement and hereditary lineage. Both he and Deebi are artists
aware that “matter matters.” Not unlike his predecessor,
photographer Andres Serrano, Makhoul breaks his subjects down to
basic elements: blood, water, sand and tree. Place and subject are
inside and outside his body in a land that he may no longer physically
possess. A drop of blood under a microscope becomes symbolic for
individuality and group. He executes a strong balance between depth
of meaning and simplicity, breaking down the subject and using it
as material to build from and turn into a repeating motif, as in
“One Leaf of My Olive Branch.”
At first glance the flash of the large patterned photos appears
flat in meaning, but with a little time they are just as rich in
associations as they are in color.
Deebi’s work is the most successful in the exhibition at communicating
in a language Westerners will find visually familiar. His work shows
an awareness of Western pop culture and the use of tongue-in-cheek
double-entendre in modern and contemporary conceptual art. In Near,
he is showing work that is made specifically in reaction to the
culture and politics of Switzerland, where he spent time as a guest
artist, and the United States, where he lives now.
If his work is any reflection of it, Deebi appears to be having
a bit of sardonic fun. He exhibits photographs of naked toy soldiers
wearing only their gas masks, boots and guns, provocatively piled
onto each other and posed in the fore-, middle- and background.
The artist is cognizant of what he is doing and potentially saying,
playing with messages and images of homosexuality, military roles
of power/protection/abuse, the role of toys as military products
that function as propaganda, and race/nationality issues, in that
the toys are all white males. He allows for a slightly open-ended
statement, just enough to permit multiple interpretations —
basically, on many levels Deebi questions the role of the military
and of the toy soldier, and begs the audience to question those
roles as well. He has a confident grasp of the language of symbols
and employs them well, turning propaganda and symbols of security
or sweetness against themselves.
In Deebi’s video “Dead Sweet,” there is no ambiguity
about what roles are being taken and represented. In the vein of
Janine Antoni, a dark Swiss chocolate toy soldier is gripped and
voraciously devoured by a giant Irish-American-looking girl. I was
given the advice, “If you aren’t feeling too well you
may not want to watch that. …” (It’s a fair warning.)
Meanwhile, Susan Hefuna’s softly lit, organic black-and-white
photos are feminine and nostalgic, a sense augmented through her
process and tools. With a pinhole camera she photographs herself
within the traditional architecture of Cairo. She weathers the negative
to give the illusion of time but the result is not intended to fully
convince, and it doesn’t. As a person of Egyptian-German bicultural
heritage, her work reveals an awkward nature of not quite belonging
to any one group fully (nearly Egyptian and nearly German). Because
Hefuna, a German citizen, is dressed in contemporary Western clothing
— though modest and plain — in the photos, the works
read as of a certain time and place that the artist cannot belong
to, a setting (Egypt) she can visit and value but not be entirely
a part of. Her stance is stiff and posed and almost cryptic in its
gesture or lack thereof. These works find strength in their subtlety.
The duality of living within two worlds can be seen plainly in Mitra
Memarzia’s colorful horizontal photographs. The linear format
of these works speaks of time, but, as you reach the center, the
image mirrors itself on the opposite half, creating a time warp
and an invisible border where the two worlds meet. Memarzia, born
in Iran but living in Britain, explores concerns of self as a displaced
Iranian female. Her work provokes perspective on the female roles
within the setting of Iran. Her video, AlterNations, is a pulsing,
ritualistic, cyclic metaphor for transformation. It becomes meditative
as it loops on itself always returning to the original need to transform,
again and again.
By using just a handful of works, Near enables close examination.
All of the artists involved in the show have faced displacement
and identity crisis of some sort. This yields rich results for the
viewer, as the works illustrate a transformation, a search and exploration
for understanding the duality of being between two worlds.
The photography and video pieces are created from the worldview
of the “other” in the context of the contemporary art
world. This macrocosmic view, looking at the big picture, can be
expected of globally conscious contemporary photographers, and it
is comforting to see that these artists are speaking about universal
concerns through their personal voyages. This balance and acknowledgment
of the marriage of opposites, looking outside and looking in, informs
the work and gives it depth of meaning.
The curator, Deebi, born in Israel and based in the United States
and Britain for the past eight years, stresses that defining what
makes up identity is “very problematic.” Yet he says
that language is a major component, a “key to culture”
due to the inherent human need to communicate.
Alienation can result when language (visual or otherwise) is foreign
or offensive. In this show, any virtual wall left between the viewer
and the message is indeed intended. It acts as form in function,
placing the viewer in the shoes of the exile or the stranger.
Language also forms and reflects our way of thinking and our conceptual
limits, as illustrated in George Orwell’s classic novel 1984
— reduce the language and thereby reduce the freedom and range
of thought.
It is efforts such as Near that will help to eradicate stereotypes
and fear by placing Middle Eastern identity in the Western mind
by context of contemporary roles and structures. When it leaves
Detroit Near will travel to New York, where the new nonprofit arts
organization responsible for conceiving this show, ArteEast, was
formed. Through the collaborative efforts of Arts International
and the University of Luton this exhibit will then travel to either
Germany or Liverpool.
The title of this exhibition, Near, suggests a relationship between
contemporary Middle Eastern art and the Western viewer. It attempts
to humanize a people who have been de-humanized in popular political
and media rhetoric, and through centuries of Western propaganda.
The title sums up the exhibit’s agenda with hopes of dispelling
preconceived notions of distance between East and West. The suggestion
of closeness tests our own perceptions of identity — globally,
nationalistically and personally. It asks the question, “Near
what?” and answers, “Near you.”
Phaedra Robinson is an artist and curator in Detroit. Send comments
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