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Ali Kaaf
Artist Ali Kaaf Exhibits at Darat al-Funun
By Muhammad Al-Ameri
Originally published in Al-Dustur, 9/8/04, on the
occasion of the artist’s 2004 exhibition at Darat al-Funun,
Amman
Republished with author’s permission
Translated for ArteEast by Rana Hajjar
The main hall of Darat al-Funun was clad with the
beautiful black, a black created by the artist Ali ‘Kaaf’,
who presents a particular way of thinking about ‘creative’
artistic work that is far from colorful. Ali studied at the hands
of the Syrian artist Marwan Kassab Bashy, who resides in Germany
and was affiliated with Darat al-Funun, an institution that through
its support of young artists gives ample space for free thought
in artistic work. However, it is clear that Ali has been able to
sincerely go beyond the influence of his teacher, and the influence
of color, to take from the deep black a refuge for an abstract expression
– a refuge akin to a Sufi haven from which he can examine
his soul and the life of the world, a life of the ‘mountain’
he lives in. In fact, the letter ‘Kaaf’ in his name
was not an accident but pays homage to the ‘Kaaf’ mountain
in Islamic history. For the mountain to him is a psychological and
emotional state far from its conventional shape, where we stand
in front of a collection of free exercises in black medium, pencil,
charcoal, asphalt, soot, gum, until ‘black’ becomes
a more majestic label to Ali’s state of revelation. This adventurous
experiment started to take its course through different forms of
expression in exhibitions of slides, photography, or free hand drawing,
and the point was to bring attention to the shocking difficulty
of finding personal space for the contemporary artist in the face
of an artistic heritage that appears to have accomplished everything.
In comes Ali ‘Kaaf’, to enter the stage of the artistic
voice and stay in his own path, the path of the self and its revelations.
In most of his work, he depends on locating new forms for interpretation
of the art work, such that each piece is called to the interpretation
of what is hidden in abstract shape. The face becomes a black domain
covered in fine hues of black; these works present a specific reading
which exposes the veil of the face, to suggest what might be beyond
the apparent black space. We see a clearer testament to this in
his photography that brings together the cover and the human body.
The cover is a central medium in the ‘mask’ of the canvas.
Sometimes it is a real cover, and other times it is imaginary….Understanding
it is a magnified understanding, akin to the Sufi philosophy of
reaching the pleasure of the peak of blackness, which is full of
light.
In another frame, we find that the surface of the
paper has been utilized to bear witness to the history of the hand
movement. This is a violent movement that tears the surface, making
holes that break the supremacy of the black, like light spots that
came from recording the instant of emotional reaction -- similar
to lightening in a dark night. To understand similar actions we
have to return a little to his photography as a key to the artist’s
thinking. We find the photography as if in a hermit state, where
the body is peaceful and quite, the body that is hidden behind a
black cloth and the freedom to be concealed from nakedness, pure
and sacred. We find this mood in his lines, which accurately capture
the state of drawing in that moment, the state of thought in breaking
the balance of things to find a new truthful equilibrium that reflects
the artist’s spirit.
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