Archive for the ‘Iraqi’ Category
Posted by artradar on July 23, 2009
IRAQ ART REVIEW
Around 80 per cent of Iraq’s artists now live elsewhere but many are still driven to explore events in their former homeland, as is shown in Creativity vs Destruction, a group exhibition of Iraqi art in Edinburgh, part of the Reel Iraq Festival. A review in the Scotsman explains that although the title pits creativity against destruction, the work displayed suggests a more subtle relationship between the two.
Here is an extract from the review:
Hanaa Mal Allah, who is regarded as one of Iraq’s foremost female painters, left Baghdad in 2006 under the Scholars at Risk Scheme which helps academics whose life or work is threatened in their home country. Her two large canvases, from a series called Vivid Ruins, are creative works born of destruction – canvas which has been burned, cut, patched together and pierced with threads and twigs. Hung in the middle of the Roxy’s subdued, ecclesiastical space, they are both painful and beautiful.

Hanaa Mal-Allah, The Map of Iraq 2008
In a small, darkened side chapel, she presents three smaller works, including a book in which the pages, though similarly damaged, show fragments of Arabic writing and patterns. They speak of the way a culture is destroyed by the looting of its artefacts and wrecking of its sites; how its sense of itself is reduced to fragments. This is complex, mature work, elegiac rather than angry – all the more remarkable for being achieved in the midst of ongoing destruction.
Wafaa Bilal takes a more confrontational approach. Arrested and tortured for his political artwork under Saddam Hussein, he now lives in the United States. He lost his father and brother in the most recent war.

Wafaa Bilal dodges paintballs
In Domestic Tension: Shoot an Iraqi, an interactive performance work, Bilal lived in isolation for 31 days in a Chicago gallery where visitors – or viewers online via a 24-hour webcam and automatic setup – could operate a paintball machine to fire at him at any time. The response was immense, and polarising. More than 60,000 shots were fired, while a group of self-appointed “protectors” worked shifts online to point the gun away from him.
The project received overwhelming worldwide attention, garnering the praise of the Chicago Tribune, which called it “one of the sharpest works of political art to be seen in a long time,” and Newsweek’s assessment “breathtaking.” It spawned provocative online debates and ultimately, Bilal was awarded the Chicago Tribune’s Artist of the Year Award.

Buy book here: Wafa Bilal's life journey Save an Iraqi
In the film shown here, he speaks matter-of-factly about that experience while dodging a barrage of paintballs behind a plastic shield. The work captures something of the sense of living under fire, while showing that interactive art, when it is done well, can do what good art has always done: make us understand something important in a new way.
Sama Alshaibi, an Iraqi-Palestinian artist who is now a naturalised American, uses her work to explore the complex issues which arise from her nationality. Her film Diatribes, which intersperses her own dialogue with US broadcasts from the time of the bombing of Baghdad, feels raw and unresolved – understandably so.

To Eat Bread, Sama Alshaibi
Her photographs use more oblique means. In her Birthright series, which focuses on Palestine, and Between Two Rivers, about Iraq, she uses her own body as a symbol of a country subject to damage.

The Loss, Sama Alshaibi
Contemporary art is sometimes described as self-indulgent, but the pressure of the political circumstances give the works in this show an urgency and vitality. Yet it’s wrong to expect artists to produce answers; these are individual responses, each is the product of the artist’s own experience and concerns.
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Posted in Activist, Collaborative, Collage, Human Body, Interactive art, Iraqi, Nationalism, Participatory, Performance, Photography, Political, Reviews, Shows, UK, War | Tagged: Creativity vs Destruction, Domestic Tension Shoot an Iraqi, Hanaa Mal Allah, Iraq art, Iraq art book, Iraqi contemporary art, political art, Sama Alshabai, Save an Iraqi book, Vivid Ruins, Wafaa Bilal | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on February 26, 2009

Kader Attia, Ghost, Installation
SAATCHI MIDDLE EAST ART SHOW
Unveiled: New Art from the Middle East, Saatchi Gallery, London to 6 May 2009
Advertising mogul and art patron Saatchi is a master at generating extensive high profile media coverage for his shows giving us an uncommon opportunity to synthesise the critics’ views of individual Middle Eastern artists and the show overall. Here are the highlights:
- critics were kind: Saatchi is “back on form” in a show which is “impressive” , “extraordinarily good”
- Tala Madani received rave reviews: “I haven’t come across a young artist this original witty and talented in twenty years”
- Kader Attia’s installation Ghost was the show stopper artwork for most critics
- painting section of the show was weaker than works in other media
- sculpture and installations garnered most critical attention receiving mixed reviews
- varying views were expressed about the success of the organisers’ claim to overturn the cliched idea that the Middle East is synonymous with violence and intolerance
Ranking of artists by number of mentions (positive or neutral unless stated)
- Kader Attia – (5) – Independent, Reuters, Telegraph, Standard (thumbs down), Bloomberg
- Tala Madani – (5) – Time Out, Independent, Guardian/Observer, Telegraph, Standard
- Marwan Rechmaoui – (4) – Time Out, Independent, Guardian/Observer, Standard
- Sara Rahbar – (3) – Time Out, Independent, Reuters
- Rokni Haerizadeh – (3) – Reuters, LA Times, Standard
- Ramin Haerizadeh – (3) – Guardian/Observer, LA Times, Telegraph
- Wafa Hourani – (3) – Time Out, LA Times, Standard
- Ahmed Alsoudani – (3) – Time Out, Standard, Independent
- Halim al-Karim – (3) Reuters, Telegraph, Standard (thumbs down)
- Shirin Fakhim’s – (3) Reuters, Telegraph, Bloomberg
- Diana Al-Hadid – (2) Time Out, Telegraph
- Shadi Ghadirian – (1) Bloomberg
- Hayv Kahraman – (1) Independent
‘Unveiled: New Art From the Middle East’ at London’s Saatchi Gallery – LA Times – Henry Chu – Feb 11 2009
The usual Middle East-related topics of religion and war are not to be seen in this exhibition which is instead dominated by themes of sexuality, gender and religion says Chu. His story focuses on the struggles of the artists with censorship and the threat of officialbacklash. Despite this a thriving art scene is developing in some cities and – surprisingly – Tehran now has over 100 commercial galleries. Artists mentioned include the Haerizadeh brothers Rokni and Ramin (Men of Allah) and Palestinian Wafa Hourani’s whose Qalandia 2067 is a ‘striking’ small-scale model of a refugee camp half a century in the future.
Unveiled: New Art from the Middle East at the Saatchi Gallery – Telegraph– Richard Dorment – Feb 4 2009
Dorment pooh-poohs the ‘sunny’ assertion by Lisa Farjam in the exhibition catalogue that it is a cliche to associate the Middle East with political oppression, religious intolerance and terrorism. He ‘profoundly disagrees’ saying this show is replete with references to bombs, religious police and the denigration of women. The most ‘remarkable’ artists are Kader Attia, Halim Al-Karim (Hidden War) and Diana Al-Hadid (Tower of Infinite Problems) because their work transcends the political. However Dorment finds himself most interested in some of the other artists. Ramin Haerizadeh’s strutting pouting Men of Allahis not the strongest work he says but one of the bravest and suggests the psychosexual motivation of fundamentalism. He mentions work by Shirin Fakhim and refers to Tala Madani (Tower Reflections) ” I haven’t come across a young artist this original witty or talented in 20 years”. Despite the weakness of the painted works, overall the show is much stronger for being ‘less slick and commercial’ than its predecessor, a show of Chinese art.
Unveiled: New Art From The Middle East – Time Out– Ossian Ward – Feb 3 2009
Saatchi has no truck with the high-minded concerns of the academics and curators which is a good thing says Ossian Ward. It means he does not try to provide an explanation for his unapologetic grouping of artists who come from lands which are bewildering in their diversity.
“The sculptural works shine but the paintings disappoint” as does some of the works which border on “gross-out territory” reminiscent of YBA (Young British Artists). Artists discussed include Marwan Rechmaoui (Spectre), Diana Al-Hadid, Wafa Hourani, Ahmed Alsoudani and Tala Madani.
Unveiled: New Art from the Middle East, Saatchi Gallery, London – Independent– Charles Darwent – Feb 1 2009
An ‘impressive’ and ‘extraordinarily good’ show says Darwent in which the united and divided cultures of the West and Middle East are laid bare. Rich with historical and art references, Darwent gives thoughtful reviews of works by Sara Rahbar, Hayv Kahraman, Ahmed Alsoudani, Tala Madani, Kader Attia, and Marwan Rechamoui. Sara Rahbar’s work Flag #19 is singled out.
Noting the interplay of West and Middle East evident across the works, Darwent comments that thartists are Middle Eastern but ‘not quite’ and in fact only 11 of the 19 – and only 2 of the 7 women – artists now live in the region.
The veil is lifted on hidden talent – Guardian/Observer – Laura Cumming – Feb 1 2009
At its best says Cumming this ‘candid collection from the Islamic world is inventive and truly fearless’ though some of the work is a ‘shambolic hybrid of eastern content and western style’ which ‘plays hard to the international art fair and biennale market’. But no matter there are some independent minds: among them are Ramin Haerizadeh- whose satirical sexually-charged photo works are ‘gleefully savage’ – Marwan Rechmanoui and the ‘prodigiously gifted’ and ‘original’ Tala Madani (Holy Light, Elastic Pink). Overall says Cummings it is amazing how far into politics this art goes and points out that the publicity shot of TalaMadini has been treated to conceal her identity despite making her home in Amsterdam.
Subversive Beauty in Unveiled – Standard (This is London) – Ben Lewis – Jan 30 2009
London’s great art entrepreneur is back on form says Lewis and the works by artists from Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, Iran and Iraq are “thrillingly topical and often brilliantly executed”. There is an excitement in seeing politics through the language of contemporary art rather than the familiar TV images. Highlights are paintings by 3 artists Ahmed Alsoudani, Rokni Haerizadeh and Tala Madani. Marwan Richmaoui and Wafa Hourani are mentioned. Kader Attia is slammed for being “excessively shiny and large” and Halim Al-Karim is also given a thumbs down.
Saatchi show unveils vibrant Middle East art scene – Reuters– Mike Collett-White – Jan 29 2009
This provocative show will test the tolerance of some says Collett-White in a rare opinion at the beginning of this facts-dominated piece covering the inspiration for the show. The recent unrecognised flourishing of artistic communities in Tehran and Beirut is the rationale for the show explains Rebecca Wilson head of development for Saatchi. Apart from French-Algerian Kader Attia and his ‘striking’ piece (Ghost), other artists mentioned include Rokni Haerizadeh (Typical Iranian Wedding, Beach at the Caspian), Halim al-Karim (Hidden Prisoner 1993), Shirin Fakhim’s work about prostitutes incorporating kitchen utensils and Sara Rahbar.
Saatchi shows veiled women made of foil, Iran sex-worker dolls – Bloomberg– Martin Gayford – Jan 29 2009
Full of “brash, sometimes shocking Saatchi-type art” this is clearly a display of one man’s tastes and there is nothing wrong with that says Martin Gayford. Saatchi has a propensity for figurative art “though frankly none of it is that exciting” but it is the sculptures and installations that grab attention and Kadia Attia’s Ghost is a show-stopper. Other artists address women’s issues too and Gayford highlights Shirin Fakhim (Tehran Prositutes) and Shadi Ghadirian’s photographs (Like Everyday Series).
Related links: Saatchi website
Related categories: Middle Eastern art, Iranian art, gender in art, political art, reports from London
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Posted in Collectors, Feminist art, Identity art, Iranian, Iraqi, Islamic art, Lebanese, London, Middle Eastern, Painting, Palestinian, Photography, Political, Prison, Religious art, Reviews, Saatchi, Sculpture, Shadi Ghadirian, Social, Syrian, UK, Women power | Tagged: Ahmed Alsoudani, Beach at the Caspian, Diana Al-Hadid, Elastic Pink, Halim Al-Karim, Hayv Kahraman, Hidden War, Holy Light, Inveiled, Kader Attia, Like Everyday Series, Marwan Rechmaoui, Men of Allah, Qalandia 2067, Ramin Haerizadeh, Rokni Haerizadeh, Saatchi art, Saatchi Middle East, Sarah Rahbar, Shadi Ghadirian, Shirin Fakhim, Tala Madani, Tehran Prositutes, Tower of Infinite Problems, Typical Iranian wedding, Unveiled New art from Middle East, Wafa Hourani | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on December 29, 2008
ART BIENNIAL AFRICA EGYPT
The opening ceremony of the 11th Cairo International Biennale took place on 21 December 2008. Past versions of this state-organised biennial have been slammed by critics:
The 10th edition of the Cairo International Biennale could have very well been the 8th or 9th….(and)once again highlights the division that exists in the local art circuit between the establishment, namely state-sponsored arts institutions including that of the Biennale, and the private or so-called independent art sector. Moreover, like it’s predecessors, a clear lack of curatorial direction in the selection makes the range of works on exhibition seem disconnected from each other as well as from international contemporary art practices from which the Biennale organisers claim to be operating from within.
NAFAS art magazine
We will have to wait for all the reviews to come in before we can determine the consensus view of the 11th edition but, whatevever the outcome, there is interesting art to explore. Here are Radar’s favourites:
Adel Abidin (Iraq 1973) – film sculpture. Now lives in Helsinki. He has exhibited in the Venice Biennale and MOCA Taipei and has been featured in international publications including Le Monde, Guardian, New York Times www.adelabidin.com
- Kimsooja (Korea 1957) multimedia from video to sewn works, exhibited at Sao Paolo Biennial and Venice Biennale Kimsooja’s website

Lotus
The principles of harmony and oneness are reflected in Kimsooja’s installation Lotus Zone of Zero, 2008, currently housed at Rotunda at Galerie Ravenstein in Brussels through January 18, 2009. The site specific installation consists of approximately 2000 lanterns shaped as lotus flowers. The visual is accompanied by sound in the form of Tibetan, Gregorian and Islamic chants that merge in the center of the space. Honoring a vision of peace, the work embodies the dance between individuality and universality, yin and yang, and a potential future for planet earth.
Evilmonito.com for featured artist review
Find below a complete list of artists from the Asian continent:
Azerbaijan: Adil Yusifov
Bahrain: Waheeda Malullah
Bangladesh: Firoz Mahmoud
China: Qiu Anxiong
Egypt: Adel Amien Al-Siwy, Arman Agoub Gubian, Essam Mohamed Maarouf, Hanafi Mahmoud Khalaf alla. Wael Kamal Wahby Fahmy Darwish
Iraq: Adel Abidin, Ali Assaf El-Gabry, Tamara Nouri
Japan : Haruko Yamashita

- Hani Hourani
Jordan: Hani Hourani
Korea: Kimsooja
Kuwait: Shorouk Amin
Lebanon: Khaled Ramadan, Salwa Zeidan
Libya: Ali al-Abani
Palestine: Hani Zurob
Qatar: Salam Al-Malek, Youseff Ahmed
Saudi Arabia: Ahmed Mater Al-Ziad, Fahd al-Hijilan, Faisal Samra
Syria: Buthayna Ali, Sabhan Adam
Turkey: Gulsun Karamustafa
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Kimsooja Bottari Truck
Posted in Azerbaijani, Bahraini, Bangladeshi, Biennials, Chinese, Egyptian, Emerging artists, Events, Iraqi, Japanese, Jordanian, Korean, Kuwaiti, Lebanese, Libyan, Palestinian, Qatari, Saudi, Syrian, Turkish | Tagged: Adel Abidin, Adel Amien Al-Siwy, Adil Yusifov, Ahmed Mater Al-Ziad, Ali al-Abani, Ali Assaf El-Gabry, Arman Agoub Gubian, Azerbaijani art, Buthayna Ali, Essam Mohamed Maarouf, Fahd al-Hijilan, Faisal Samra, Firoz Mahmoud, Gulsun Karamustafa, Hanafi Mahmoud Khalaf allah, Hani Hourani, Hani Zurob, Haruko Yamashita, Khaled Ramadan, Kimsooja, Qiu Anxiong, Sabhan Adam, Salam Al-Malek, Salwa Zeidan, Shorouk Amin, Tamara Nouri, Wael Kamal Wahby Fahmy Darwish, Waheeda Malullah, Yousseff Ahmed | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on December 20, 2008

Cai Guoqiang
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
Helpful sources of objective and rigorous judgement, museums provide an independent voice in an art world populated by more unscrupulous personalities and poor research than is ideal. But how can we find out what the top museums are acquiring and what they are holding in their storage rooms?
Public institutions are often happy to share this information if you give them a call though of course this is not necessarily the case with private museums. Some institutions are now giving the public digital access to their entire collections and the Pompidou Centre is one of these. Its collection comprises over 61,000 works by more than 5,500 artist around the world making it the largest collection in Europe of modern and contemporary art.
The collection is dominated by French works (24,000) and there is a substantial group of US works (9,000) with the bulk of the remainder coming from Europe. It seems that the Pompidou has been active in acquiring Chinese, Indian and Iranian works recently. We have made a list of links to some Asian artists’s works in its holdings:
Chinese modern: Zou Wou-ki, Walasse Ting, Xu Beihong and a number of other 1930s born artists
Chinese contemporary: Cai Guo-qiang, Kai Cui, Georgette Chen, Chen Zhen, Cui Xiuwen, Fang Lijun, Huang Yong Ping, Li Yongbin, Liu Wei, Wang Du, Wang Jian Wei, Wang Jin, Weng Fen, Yan Lei, Yan Peiming, Yang Fudong, Yang Jun, Yang Zhenzhong, Zhang Huan, Zhang Peili, Ming Zhu.
Hong Kong: Man Ip

Yuki Onodera

Shadi Ghadirian
Indian: Subodh Gupta, Ansih Kapoor, Sonia Khurana, Satyendra Pakhale, N Pushpmala, Raghu Rai, Amar Sehgal, Tejal Shah, Bethea Shore, Velu Viswanadhan
Indonesia, Cambodia catogories contain works by Europeans rather than by native artists
Iraq: Jananne Al-Ani, Abraham Habbah, Jamil Hamoudi
Iran: Jalai Abbas, Nasser Assar, Shadi Ghadirian, Ghazel, Abbas Kiarostami, Nathalie Melikian, Shirin Neshat, Serge Rezvani

Shirin Neshat
Israel: Most works Ron Arad furniture design
Japan: 16 pages of works including 1960s photography and architectural works and furniture from 1960s to 1980s, Yayoi Kusama, Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, Rika Noguchi, Yoko Ono, Yuki Onodero, Hiroshi Sugimoto
Thailand: Apichatpong Weerasethakul
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Posted in Acquisitions, Chinese, Collectors, Hong Kong Artists, Indian, Iranian, Iraqi, Japanese, Museum collectors, Shirin Neshat, Subodh Gupta, Zhang Huan | Tagged: Abbas Kiarostami, Amar Sehgal, Anish Kapoor, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, art collection, Bethea Shore, Cai Guoqiang, Chen Zhen, Cui Xiuwen, Fang Lijun, Georgette Chen, Ghazel, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Huang Yongping, Jananne Ali-Ani, Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, Kai Cui, Li Yongbin, Liu Wei, Man Ip, Ming Zhu, museum collection, N Pushpamala, Nasser Assar, Nathalie Melikian, Pompidou, Pompidou Centre, Raghu Rai, Rika Noguchi, Satyendra Pakhale, Serge Rezvani, Shadi Ghadirian, Shirin Neshat, Sonia Khurana, Subodh Gupta, Tejal Shah, Velu Viswanadhan, Walasse Ting, Wang Du, Wang Jianwei, Wang Jin, Weng Fen, Xu Beihong, Yan Lei, Yan Peiming, Yang Fudong, Yang Jun, Yang Zhenzhong, Yayoi Kusam, Yoko Ono, Yuki Onodero, Zhang Huan, Zhang Peili, Zou Wouki | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on October 12, 2008

COLLECTOR SHOW CHINESE ART
Influential British art collector
Charles Saatchi is back after three years out of the limelight, opening a major new gallery in central London showcasing some of China’s hottest artists reports
Reuters. The man who introduced the world to Britart stalwarts like Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin has been largely absent from the art scene since his gallery was forced out of its previous home on the River Thames in 2005. Now he is back with a huge new exhibition space in upmarket Chelsea, where he hopes free entry to the imposing former headquarters of the Duke of York will attract passers by.
Critics have lauded the imposing three-storey building with its glass and white-walled interior, and welcomed back one of contemporary art’s biggest players. But the inaugural show, opening on Thursday, has earned mixed reviews.
“The Revolution Continues: New Art from China” is dedicated to Chinese artists including established stars like Yue Minjun, Zhang Xiaogang and Zeng Fanzhi, whose painting fetched $9.7 million in May, a record for Asian contemporary artwork.
Some critics have categorized the crazed, laughing men of Yue or the gray, stylized portraits of Zhang as repetitive, even “mass production” art.
Generally more popular were the sculptures, particularly an installation piece called “Old Persons Home” by Sun Yuan and Peng Yu, involving 13 aging men on wheelchairs moving randomly around a large basement room. Their striking resemblance to late world leaders turns the work into a commentary on the pitfalls of power and conflict. The gallery calls it “a grizzly parody of the U.N. dead.”
But the gallery’s head of development, Rebecca Wilson, said Saatchi’s target audience was less the experts — critics, collectors and curators — and more the general public, most of whom are unfamiliar with contemporary Chinese art. “There was a feeling that all of these artists were suddenly emerging from China, doing very well at auction, there were the Beijing Olympics coming up,” she told Reuters. “There was this kind of convergence of interest in China, so we felt it should be the exhibition that we open with.”
IRAN, IRAQ ART TO COME
Early next year the Saatchi Gallery will put on a show dedicated to contemporary Middle Eastern art, including from Iran and Iraq, by artists never seen in Britain before.
“None of those artists have been seen in this country before and will be very little known elsewhere in the world as well,” said Wilson. “I think Charles has been searching for months to try to find interesting works.”
Saatchi sells some art after an exhibition ends, partly to fund his enterprise. Auction house Phillips de Pury is supporting the gallery to ensure entry will be free.
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BBC coverage:
Only free contemporary art museum in world
The BBC reports that the Saatchi gallery claims to be the only completely free entry contemporary art museum of its size in the world. Simon de Pury, of auction house Phillips de Pury & Company, who is sponsoring the exhibition, said they expected “millions” of visitors.
Ground-breaking school education programme to come
The gallery said it was seeking to establish a “ground breaking” education programme “to make contemporary art even more accessible to young people.
“It is anticipated that the facilities that the Saatchi Gallery plans to offer – at the gallery, via its website and the gallery’s own classroom – will ensure that teachers receive the best on-site and outreach support for their students.”
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Artists: Zhang Dali, Zeng Fanzhi, Wang Guangyi, Zheng Guogu, Zhang Haiying, Zhang Hongtu, Zhang Huan, Qiu Je, Xiang Jin, Shi Jinsong, Fang Lijun, Yue Minjun, Li Qing, Wu Shuanzhuan, Shen Shaomin, Li Songsong, Zhan Wang, Liu Wei, Zhang Xiaogang, Zhang Xiaotao, Cang Xin, Shi Xinning, Li Yan, Bai Yiluo, Sun Yuan and Peng Yu, Zhang Yuan, Yin Zhaohui, Feng Zhengjie
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Posted in Chinese, Collectors, Cultural Revolution, Gallery shows, Individual, Iranian, Iraqi, London, Mao art, Middle Eastern, Political, Sculpture, UK | Tagged: Add new tag, art collectors, art education, art for schools, art reviews, Bai Yiluo, Cang Xin, Chinese art, Collectors, Collectors of Chinese art, cynical realism, European art collectors, Fang Lijun, Feng Zhengjie, free museums, Iranian Art, Iraqi art, Li Qing, Li Songsong, Li Yan, Liu Wei, London galleries, London museums, New gallery, Peng Yu, Phillips de Pury, Qiu Je, Saatchi, Saatchi Gallery, Saatchi gallery reviews, Shen Shaomin, Shi Jinsong, Shi Xinning, Sun Yuan, Wang Guangyi, Wu Shuanzhuan, Xiang Jin, Yin Zhaohui, Yue Minjun, Zeng Fanzhi, Zhang Dali, Zhang Haiying, Zhang Hongtu, Zhang Huan, Zhang Wan, Zhang Xiaogang, Zhang Xiaotao, Zhang Yuan, Zheng Guogu | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on September 29, 2008

Sara Rahbar Flag 19 Mixed media
ACQUISITIONS MIDDLE EASTERN ART
As financial markets roil , art collectors seeking a safe haven eye up opportunities in the Middle East. If anything, some players expect an even stronger market in the Middle East than in China, because so many of the art initiatives-to showcase the region’s artists as well as import Western art-have the direct backing of the government or royal families. Abu Dhabi is planning to spend $50 million to fill its Louvre.
While galleries are increasingly showing Middle Eastern contemporary art, especially in London, it is still uncommon in Western collections says Conde Nast’s Portfolio. Most of the artists are unknown outside of the Middle East.
That could be about to change as British art collector and marketing guru Charles Saatchi makes his interest in Middle Eastern art known. A recent addition to his planned exhibiton list is Out of Arabia: New Art and New Perspectives in which he showcases artists from Syria, Iraq and Lebanon and predominantly Iran.
At time of writing artists include:
- Iran: Sara Rahbar, Tala Madani, Laleh Khorramian, Rokni Haerizadeh, Ramin Haerizadeh, Ali Banisadr
- Lebanon: Jeffar Khaldi
- Iraqi: Halim Al-Karim, Ahmed Alsoudani
- Syria: Diana Al-Hadid
For most recent list of artists, bios and images visit Saatchi online , latest news on Middle Eastern art, Islamic art, thread art, feminist art, identity art.
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Posted in Acquisitions, Collectors, Galleries, Gallery shows, Identity art, Individual, Iranian, Iraqi, Islamic art, Lebanese, Painting, Surveys, Syrian, Thread, West Asian | Tagged: Ahmed Alsoudani, Ali Banisadr, art Middle East, Collectors, Emerging artists, emerging Middle Eastern artists, Flag art, Halim Al-Karim, Iranian Art, Iraq art, Iraqi art, Jeffar Khaldi, Laleh Khorramian, Lebanese art, Middle East art news, Middle Eastern art, private collec, Ramin Haerizadeh, Rokni Haerizadeh, Saatchi, Saatchi Gallery, Sara Rahbar, Syrian art, Tala Madani | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on August 28, 2008
EMERGING ARTISTS MIDDLE EAST
Saatchi Online magazine showcases five up and coming artists from the Middle East.

Nadine Kanso
Nadine Kanso
Lebanese collage artist Nadine Kanso has her second solo show in B21 comprising 20 mostly monochromatic works. She explains “I work a lot on socio-political messages, such as combining fashion and a photo of less fortunate people and someone like G.W Bush”. “Collage is a special form of art, especially if it is done in a funky way, where it is loud and bold,” says Kanso.
Hayv Kahrman
The twenty-seven year old Iraqi artist, who shows a series of drawings at Dubai’s The Third Line gallery, gathers inspiration from traditional Japanese prints, art nouveau, Persian miniature painting and fashion imagery. Describing her references, she says, “One of my major inspirations is avant-garde fashion photography. And I try to be ‘current’ with the designs etc. My pieces may have an ancient or historical background, but I like to have them be related to today, with the usage and implementations from contemporary art and design.”
Laleh Khorramian
Tehran-born and New York-based, this artist produces mixed media works in which visual references from her homeland are combined with influences from Western art history, opera, pop culture, Disney and her personal experiences. Khorramian says, “I don’t think of myself as fitting in with the Middle Eastern art scene.” Khorramian explains by email from her Brooklyn studio, “My work is not overtly about political topics, regional issues or my issues with being Middle Eastern. I think my work is about broader events and the universal forces of love, death and creation. ”

Youssef Nabil:
Youssef Nabil
Egyptian-born and New York-based photographer Youssef Nabil’s makes hand-painted images with old film-star glamour. Nabil, who has shot Tracey Emin, Nan Goldin, David Lynch, Louise Bourgeois and Kate Moss, often bathes his subjects in buttery gold light and thereby declares his work as a product of the region.
Hilda Hiary
The thirty-nine year old Jordanian-born and Dubai-based artist has had paintings collected by Queen Rania and Queen Nour, along with members of the Italian Parliament and significant museum curators. Hiary maintains that the roots of her abstract art are firmly in the region where she is represented by Dubai’s XVA Gallery “I believe abstract art did not originate from the West, ” she asserts. “Even at the beginning of Islamic art, you can see that abstraction was a clear component. But what is really interesting in Middle Eastern art right now, is that we have many different schools and trends, all gaining attention at once.”
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Posted in Egyptian, Emerging artists, Iranian, Iraqi, Islamic art, Jordanian, Lebanese | Tagged: B21, Dubai gallery, Emerging artists, emerging Middle Eastern artists, ermerging photographer, Hayv Kahrman, Hilda Hiary, Islamic art, Laleh Khorramian, Nadine Kanso, The Third Line Gallery, XVA gallery, Youssef Nabil | 1 Comment »