Introduction
The exhibition Made in Palestine chronicles the modern history of the Palestinian people from Al Nakba
(the Catastrophe of l948) to the present day. It gives a voice to a
people struggling to keep their identity in the face of terrible odds—a
brutal occupation by Israel punctuated by daily violence and daily
sorrow. The exhibition reveals with powerful clarity the Palestinian
side of the story. What is at stake here is of tremendous importance.
The lives as well as the traditions and culture of an entire indigenous
population are in grave danger of being extinguished.
Each
of the twenty-three artists in the exhibit focuses on a telling aspect
of the great calamity which has befallen the Palestinian people. A
major theme is the wonton destruction of the villages and the forced
relocation of the inhabitants into refugee camps. Emily Jacir makes
this tragedy come alive through the metaphor of a life-sized United
Nations refugee tent, Memorial to 418 Palestinian Villages which were Destroyed, Depopulated, and Occupied by Israel in 1948,
which has embroidered on it the names of the villages razed to the
ground during the Nakba and its aftermath. In his monumental canvas,
John Halaka memorializes the more than seven-hundred thousand
Palestinian men, women, and children driven into exile in 1948. The
black, shadow-like dresses by Mary Tuma as well as the ceramic sacks by
Mervat Essa dramatically remind us of the dispossessed. In Tyseer
Barakat’s installation, we follow the life of his father from the time
before he was expelled from his home to his death in a refugee camp.
His second installation is a tragic portrait of his mother.
Some
of the artists make vivid the destruction wreaked by the Israeli
military occupation. Rula Halawani’s powerful photographs show Israeli
tanks ravaging parts of Ramallah. Muhammad Abu Sall’s small paintings
document with terrifying reality the actual approach of an Israeli tank
in his neighborhood, destroying everything in its path. Abdel Rahmen Al
Muzayen’s superb pen and ink drawings tell the sorrowful story of the
recent destruction of the refugee camp in Jenin. Several of Abdul Hay
Mussalam’s relief paintings commemorate the 1982 massacre of women and
children in the Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps in Beirut, Lebanon.
There is a poignant installation by Vera Tamari which sets before us
the photograph of a great old olive tree and below it hundreds of small
ceramic trees, representing the destruction by the Israeli occupiers of
this staple food source that has traditionally sustained the
Palestinian people. In her extraordinary installation, Blindfolded History, Rana Bishara summarizes the fifty-five years of terror and destruction.
Life
in the refugee camps, the cities of the West Bank, and Gaza has become
intolerable because of increasing Israeli military pressure, the
establishment of new Israeli settlements, the Apartheid wall that
Israel is building, and the pervasive unemployment and poverty
resulting from the occupation. Popular resistance in one form or
another is inevitable. If the Palestinians did not resist the
occupation, their trials and agony would be unknown to the world. By
resisting they have become the target of two of the world’s most
powerful military forces, Israel and the United States.
The
painful daily experiences of the Palestinians who are harassed and
detained at the ubiquitous military checkpoints provide the subject of
Emily Jacir’s video installation. Another work of Jacir’s is a
collaboration with Anton Sinkewich: it is a barrier, both physical and
intellectual, made of serious books about Palestine by Palestinians.
Two artists focus on the courageous resistance of the Palestinian youth
to the occupation. Raji Cook’s work is an ammunition box filled with
stones, a meager weapon given the technologically sophisticated arms of
the Israeli army. Nida Sinnokrot’s rubber-coated rocks conjure up the
rubber-tipped bullets that the Israeli soldiers use to subdue or kill
rock throwing Palestinian children. His two other remarkable works deal
with issues of propaganda and surveillance.
In
the United States, pro-Israeli news and propaganda is pervasive.
Palestinians are usually portrayed as terrorists. Retaliation against
Israeli civilians is front-page national news, but the US media barely
acknowledges the Palestinian civilians that are killed and arrested
everyday—their children murdered or crippled, their homes desecrated
and destroyed.
To
several of the artists, the subject of the martyrs is an all-important
topic. A true martyr is anyone who gives his life in service of his
people, including the rock-throwing children and suicide bombers that
attack Israeli civilians. In addition, anyone senselessly or
deliberately murdered by the Israelis is called a martyr, but in an
honorific sense. Noel Jabbour evokes our compassion with her striking
portraits of families who have lost a loved one. We are assailed on the
other hand by Jawad Ibrahim’s horrific images of people already
martyred. There is one grim painting by Adnan Yahya that caricatures
the President of Israel as he is torturing a Palestinian child. The
frame bears the letters USA, implicating the United States government
in the Israeli occupation of Palestine.
The
first thirteen Palestinians who were martyred in the current Intifada,
all Israeli citizens, are memorialized in Ashraf Fawakhry’s double
portrait of a young rock thrower over a table with thirteen pierced
hearts. His marvelous donkey images are unforgettable symbols of the
persistence of the Palestinian people in their quest to survive. The
roses in Suleiman Mansour’s monumental installation Garden of Hope
pay homage to the heroic of the martyrs as the foundation of
independent Palestine. A second work by this great artist consists of
six life-sized earthen images of Ismael, the traditional ancestor of
the Palestinian people, in a transitory state between death and
rebirth. The work expresses the promise of the rebirth of Palestine
from the earth itself.
A
number of works give us a glimpse into the thinking and emotions of
artists imprisoned under the worst possible conditions in Israeli jails
and prisons. The works by Muhammad Rakouie and Zuhdi Al Adawi, done in
prison, prove that they have not been cowed by their long and brutal
incarceration. Hani Zurob, a professional artist imprisoned but never
charged, makes known the isolation and humiliation of his experience.
Samia
Halaby’s extraordinary abstract painting symbolizes the rebirth of
Jerusalem as the restored Palestinian capitol. This and her other
masterful paintings point to a time when her people will be free to
express the beauty that is within them and their culture.
The
tour de force in the exhibition is the mural-sized work by Mustafa Al
Hallaj that summarizes the history of the Palestinian people from the
ancient myths to their present tragic struggle.
Made
in Palestine exhibits a variety of artistic methods, materials, and
techniques. Along with the fine art, the exhibition features
distinguished poetry by Mahmoud Darwish, Natalie Handal, and Fadwa
Tuqan which further reveals the intimate, human side of the Palestinian
people. The documentary films, such as Jenin, Jenin by Mohammad Bakri, Gaza Strip by James Longly, Al Sabbar by Patrick Bürge, and Nightfall by Mohamed Soueid, and the Green Bird, by Liana Badr, expose the visitor to the everyday horror of the Israeli occupation.
In
the articles that follow, Tarif Abboushi writes a short, pithy history
of the Palestinian determination to be free and exposes the Israeli
falsehoods that justify the occupation of the land of Palestine. Tex
Kerschen, one of the three curators of the exhibit, supplies us with
first-hand information about his experiences in Palestine, an appraisal
of each artist’s works, and an account of the difficulties that the
curators had in organizing the exhibition. Salwa Mikdadi-Nashashibi, a
distinguished curator of modern Arab and Near Eastern art, presents us
with a scholarly history of contemporary Palestinian art. Allan Antliff
discusses the current crisis of occupation in relationship to the
paintings of Samia Halaby. Ileana Marcoulesco gives an in depth
analysis of the works in the exhibit and provides a critical appraisal
of the exhibition as a whole. Santiago Nasar examines the nightmare as
a metaphor for the Palestinian’s experience in the occupied homeland.
During
November and December of 2002, Gabriel Delgado, Tex Kerschen, and I
visited artists in refugee camps, towns and cities in the West Bank,
Israel, Gaza, Syria, and Jordan. We were committed to mounting an
exhibition that allowed these artists to tell their “truths.” We were
inspired by the writings of Edward Said and Noam Chomsky. We initially
became aware of Palestinian artists working in the United States,
Europe and the Near East thanks to Gabriel Delgado’s extensive internet
search for relevant information about their work. Samia Halaby made her
important art library available to us and let us read the text of her
remarkable history of modern Palestinian art in advance of its
publication. Samia Halaby also accompanied us to Palestine. This
exhibition could not have happened without her. Emily Jacir gave us a
critical list of artists and also introduced us to artists in New York
and in the West Bank. Raji Cook, a renowned graphic designer as well as
a fine artist, designed this book. It is our conviction that the
American public deserves to be made aware of Palestinian art as a
profound manifestation of the humanity of the Palestinian people.
This
exhibition is dedicated to Mustafa Al Hallaj, who passed away in
December, 2002. He opened his home and studio in Damascus to us, and
showed us decades worth of his work. A tremendously talented artist,
with a truly generous spirit and a far-reaching mind, he will be
remembered.
James Harithas