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Ali Kaaf
Conceptualizing Materiality: The Work of
Alif Kaaf
By Sarah A. Rogers
The work of Ali Kaaf visualizes the simultaneous
emergence and dissolution of form, depth, and light. In the series
Aswad (2002-03), thick lines of black ink bulldoze across
white paper. Sometimes only a corner of the surface is left untouched
so that the thin paper curls under the weight of the pigment. In
the series Triangle (2002-04), the artist uses charcoal,
china ink, and spray paint to create a visual play of horizontal,
vertical, and diagonal lines which hint at triangular formations.
Setting the lines against and among clots of ink and spray paint,
Kaaf alludes to a sense of depth. The materials accumulate onto
the surface, as if transpiring with the paper. More recently, he
has begun to experiment with photography and video art, yet this
formal interest in visual contradictions- black and white, negative
and positive space, depth and surface- holds strong; each project
complements and complicates his previous explorations. I use the
word, 'explorations' intentionally because, unlike many contemporary
artists, Kaaf does not profess a specific agenda- political or otherwise-
in his work. Instead, he views his art as a series of ongoing discoveries
of the ways in which the material puts forth the concept of the
work.
Born in Algeria of Syrian descent, Kaaf spent his
childhood in Syria where he moved as a young boy. At the age of
eighteen, he left to study art at the Lebanese University in Beirut.
Completing his studies five years later, he traveled to Amman to
participate in Darat al-Funun’s summer art academy for young
artists. There, Kaaf had the opportunity to work with the internationally
renown, Berlin-based, painter Marwan Kassab- often known simply
as Marwan. The established artist took Kaaf under his wing, encouraging
the young man to return to Germany with him to study at the Hochschule
der Kunste. Kaaf would spend the next five years in Berlin, first
under the tutelage of Marwan and later under Rebecca Horn at the
Universitat der Kunste. It was during this period that Kaaf's work
came into its own, winning the Daad-Preis from the Universitat der
Kunste in 2004.
What Kaaf labels as his 'radical transformation'
came during the planning stages for his large scale paintings. Working
on a smaller scale, Kaaf came to realize that he was more engaged
with the preparatory sketches than the final painting. For him,
the process was the outcome of the work. This aesthetic embrace
of the sketch shares its genealogy with the nineteenth century French
Impressionists and 20th century Abstract Expressionism, yet the
relationship ends there. Despite the materiality of Kaaf's work,
the delicate, thoughtful compositions share little with the aggressive,
masculine language of the American action painters. According to
Kaaf, his formal investment in 'the preliminary stages' stems from
his interest in the fragility of the materials. In making his sketches,
for example, he would work with tracing paper, sometimes drenching
it in pigment; the tenuous materiality offered up the possibility
of a sustainable art and the freedom for poetic expression.
Although Kaaf's choice of scale differs from his
mentor, traces of influence remain nonetheless. This is most identifiable
in the series, Triangle III (2003). With charcoal, Kaaf
works fat, wavy lines into triangular formations. These lines visually
recall those often employed by Marwan in his depiction of the human
face- for which he is now famous. Moreover, Kaaf's body of work
continually investigates and develops the visual tension between
abstraction and representation. In that way, Kaaf shares much with
Marwan whose depictions of the human face ebb and flow from identifiable
representation. In certain works, the face is clearly discernible,
whereas in others the materiality of the paint pushes itself to
the forefront. As such, both artists grapple with the legacy of
modernism, yet Marwan through the human face and Kaaf through abstracted
geometric form.
Despite this concurrent interest, the work of the
two artists differs in its visual product. Marwan works in color,
which is built up, lending a more composed effect. Kaaf's black
and white work, on the other hand, is somewhat more whimsical. In
part, this is due to the freedom offered up by the preparatory process.
Yet this is not to say that Kaaf's work appears less finished, but
rather to hit upon the work's informal, poetic effectiveness. And
still the work- individually and collectively- retains a consistency,
a compositional balance. Each bold stroke and circular pool of black
ink finds its echo outlined on the page.
Kaaf recently returned to Beirut, where he has been
an artist in residence for the previous six months. Like many artists
of the Arab world, he finds in Beirut a flourishing artistic community
and an audience receptive to his work. To my mind, he has also produced
some of his most successful work in Beirut Series (2005).
Working with pigment, charcoal, and ink on paper, Kaaf creates transparent,
interweaving layers of white and black. What marks this series as
different from previous ones however is its forceful dynamism and
vitality: delicate cobwebs of pigment sprawl out; short, diagonal
lines centrally concentrated explode out to the page’s edge
like a firecracker against a white sky. In one vertically oriented
work, Kaaf paints ten black horizontal rectangles. Allowing paint
to vertically drip down from each rectangle, Kaaf visualizes- and
to a certain degree simulates- gravity as the drips pull the rectangles
from their places, ever so slightly morphing their linearity. He
has also begun to burn holes into paper; ironically the destruction
further layers the work’s depth as the viewer looks through
the representation to another visual field.
Kaaf's language of materiality and aesthetics of
form presents a welcome relief in a contemporary art world which
sometimes seems inundated with political manifestoes. This is not
to claim however that Kaaf's work represents a return to Greenbergian
Modernism with each medium’s retreat into its own specificity.
Taken as a body of work, Kaaf's continuing exploration into different
media- ink on paper, photography, and video- deny that. In his work
on paper, for example, depth and surface move through one another,
thereby creating and abstracting the visualization of movement.
In his photographs, a brilliant light disrupts the image. Thus the
light which produces the image is made to hinder its readability
as a complete, encapsulated world. In each of these projects, the
medium's representational limits, rather than its capabilities,
are pushed to the surface. The explicit sociopolitical and historical
probing currently fashionable in today's art world has been replaced
by an implicit semiotic and artistic one in Kaaf’s work. Choosing
to work in a series only reinforces this persistent endeavor. And
as his most recent work demonstrates, the simplicity of materials,
and choice of subject- form itself- is paradoxical to the visual
complexity and tension produced. In Beirut Series, Kaaf
mixes the density of black and the transparency of white pigment
to produce forms which pulsate across the paper. In a world where
media technologies can simulate just about any physical experience,
Kaaf’s studied, thoughtful approach and dynamic creations-
once again- hold tight to their artistic relevancy.
By Sarah A. Rogers
Department of Architecture, MIT |