Palestinian Artists Working under Siege
"The
vast majority of our people are now thoroughly sick of the misfortunes
that have befallen us. On the other hand, I have never met a
Palestinian who is tired enough of being a Palestinian to give up
entirely."
Dr. Edward Said
Upon entering the Made in Palestine exhibition one is immediately drawn
in by the sound of footsteps, slightly muffled by rain and occasional
traffic noise interspersed with muted conversations. The sounds emanate
from Emily Jacir’s video installation Crossing Surda. Jacir’s first
attempt to document the Palestinian experience at the Israeli
checkpoint Surda (which separates Ramallah from Birzeit University) was
foiled by Israeli soldiers who confiscated her film. On a second try,
using a hidden camera aimed at the ground level, Jacir was able to
capture the movement of anonymous pedestrians going in both directions.
The film is screened on two television monitors placed diagonally
opposite each other. The installation forces the visitor to turn his or
her body to view both screens, becoming part of a seemingly futile
journey back and forth as the pedestrians negotiate puddles of rain
water on a road pockmarked with holes. In order to interrupt
communication among towns and villages, Israeli military bulldoze
Palestinian roads and place rubble and concrete barriers to prevent
automobile traffic and further humiliate Palestinians. Irrespective of
health conditions, young and old Palestinians are forced to walk,
sometimes for about one kilometer, to reach a taxi.
The
canvas of Palestinian history has been repeatedly stained by Nakbas, or
catastrophes which have marked the lives of generations. My
great-grandmother shared with me her vivid recollections of the horror
of Turkish rule over Palestine, when Arab nationalists were executed
and excessive taxation drained the region’s economy. This led to famine
and the first wave of immigration to the West. My grandmother recalled
the revolt against the British colonialist mandate over Palestine, the
women’s demonstrations against British Mandate in 1921, with the
deportation and imprisonment of Palestinian leaders and intellectuals
including my father, who was imprisoned for four years for opposing the
British occupation. My mother’s memories include the loss of home and
country in 1948, when over 726,000 Palestinians were deported and more
than 500 villages were destroyed by the Zionists. I grew up in
Jerusalem and have lived to tell my children of the loss in 1967 of the
remainder of partitioned Palestine.
A
brief review of Palestinian art in the last six decades shows a
historical timeline of artistic production punctuated by Nakbas and
interspersed with short periods of near normal existence when artistic
production seemed more diverse in style and content, less focused on
the immediate daily tragedies that follow each Israeli military
incursion into Palestinian territories. It was during such intervals
between the Six-Day War and the first Intifada that artists joined
forces to establish art centers in Gaza, Jerusalem, Ramallah, and
Birzeit. Among those who worked tirelessly to establish these centers
were Vera Tamari, Suleiman Mansour and Tayseer Barakat.
Just
as art exhibitions were becoming a common feature of Palestinian
cultural life, Israelis began destroying efforts that promoted
Palestinian identity. Newly opened galleries were closed, paintings
burned or confiscated, the colors of Palestinian flag censored. Prison
art was created under threat of torture or further punishment. After
the establishment of the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and
Gaza, artists were finally able to travel and join other Palestinian
artists in exhibitions in Europe, United States, and other Arab
countries. Internationally renowned Palestinian artist Mona Hatoum
exhibited her work in Jerusalem, and for the first time Palestinian
artists carrying Israeli passports were able to exhibit in Jordan and
Egypt. In the de facto annexation of Jerusalem, the Israelis
confiscated land around the city and severed it from the rest of the
West Bank; as a result Vera Tamari and other artists, like all
Palestinians living in West Bank and Gaza, are forbidden entry to
Jerusalem. Tamari cannot pray in the Holy Sepulcher or join her
colleagues at exhibits at the very art center she helped establish.
In 1969, Palestinian artists in the Diaspora established the first art organization in Beirut.
Under
the auspices of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), their art
traveled around the world representing the Palestinian resistance.
Their works were popularized through hundreds of posters that were
distributed in the Arab world and abroad. Ismail Shammout, a leading
Palestinian artist, believes Palestinian art is directly linked to the
Palestinian cause. “The Palestinian art movement was strong and
self-aware when it first saw the light. It had organically linked
itself with the masses and it bore the burden of the struggle against
Israeli occupation. It is an art of resistance, with all that the word
‘resist’ implies.” Shammout, dedicated over five decades of work to
documenting Palestinian life before during and after 1948. For over
twenty years, as the Director of the PLO Center for Arts and Culture,
he organized exhibitions, conferences, and publications on Palestinian
art. Palestinian artists flourished in Beirut until the 1982 Israeli
invasion when many had to relocate to other Arab countries. Although
they lost the support of the PLO, these artists were active in local
Arab art scenes and began to interact with others working in the West
Bank and Gaza.
The
short-lived respite of semi-normal existence was broken by the steady
deterioration of peace negotiations. It finally ended when Ariel Sharon
and a large contingency of Israeli soldiers entered the Moslem shrine
of the Dome of the Rock in 2000. This blow to peace resulted in the
escalation of violence, the Jenin massacre, tragic loss of life on both
sides, house demolitions, the uprooting of over 200,000 olive trees,
and the total closure of the West Bank and Gaza. A twenty-foot high
apartheid wall now isolates the ever-shrinking Palestinian territories.
At the start of the second Intifada, Palestinian artists joined other
cultural activists in peaceful demonstrations calling for democracy and
secular government. Carrying paintings and brushes, artists demanded
the preservation of life and an end to martyrdom and death. Facing
bewildered Israeli soldiers they sang, played music and danced.
Compared
to artists working in other Arab countries, Palestinian artists are not
an elitist group. Their art reflects an awareness of their social
responsibility, dictated by the exigencies of their daily struggle to
survive. Their experience is more immediate and direct than their
fellow artists in the Diaspora. Almost all the artists participating in
Made in Palestine have experienced life under Israeli military
occupation. Normal life is unattainable for all Palestinians. Days pass
without running water or electricity. Food shortages, curfews, school
closures, road closures, and humiliation at check-points established at
random make daily life a nightmare for citizens of all ages. The fact
that artists, dancers, musicians and actors continue to work under
these conditions is a reflection of the indomitable strength of the
Palestinian people.
The
first and second Intifadas inspired several artists living in the West
to return to Palestine to exhibit and work with their colleagues. As a
result, the work of these artists has taken new direction. Some now
focus exclusively on Palestinian themes. Samia Halaby grew up in
Jerusalem and immigrated to the United States in her teens. Halaby’s
abstract expressionist work in a collage of color is intended to
represent the topography of Palestine, from the yellow desert
boundaries along the Jordan River to the turquoise blue of the
Mediterranean Sea. In Palestine, From the Mediterranean Sea to the
Jordan River Halaby’s canvas collage coalesces into a beautiful
landscape, split and shattered as a result of the unrelenting drawing
and redrawing of Palestinian boundaries. The artwork evokes memories of
the pre-1967 landscape of the hills around Jerusalem, where anemones
and poppies, thyme and rosemary, chamomile and mint once carpeted the
hills in seasonal panoramas of color. Now stark Israeli settlements and
commercial buildings encircle the Holy City.
Emily
Jacir’s refugee tent, Memorial to 418 Villages Destroyed, Depopulated,
and Occupied by Israel in 1948, is a symbol of the loss of historical
Palestine. It asserts the legitimate right of return for the 726,000
Palestinians dispossessed in 1948. The number of Palestinians living in
exile is currently estimated at almost 4 million. The tent also
symbolizes the lack of permanence that characterizes the lives of
refugees, a period of transition referred to as ghorba or living among
strangers and waiting for repatriation. Jacir invited friends in the
ghorba of New York to sew the names of Palestinian villages. This
collaborative work is an affirmation of Palestinian human rights. Free
of knots at beginning or end, the threads left hanging at the end of
each village or town’s name create an almost surreal image of villages
erased, yet ever present in the consciousness of Palestinians.
John
Halaka may not pay annual visits to his ancestral home, yet like many
others who are unable to visit as often as they would like, he retains
his cultural compass in his piece Stripped of Their Identity and Driven
from Their Land. A fitting background to Jacir’s tent, the drawing
depicts refugees and victims of ethnic cleansing in Palestine, Bosnia,
Kosovo, Armenia, Germany, the United States, and many others. The
imposing scale and depth of this work (8’ high and 22’ wide) and the
anonymity of the figures underscore the horrific outcome of
dispossessing, eliminating, or expelling inhabitants from their land in
order to replace them with other ethnic or religious entities. Human
figures are created from the repeated imprint of a single rubber stamp
that spells “Forgotten Survivors”.
Suffurya
by Mervat Essa, deals with the same theme. Her clay objects in the
shape of sacks or buqag hold only the most precious of all possessions
and lie at the base of a photograph of the depopulated and erased
village of Bir’am. The installation is dreamlike, an archeology of
memory not yet ready to be excavated. The sacks, fossils of lives
suddenly interrupted, await their owners return.
Rana
Bishara’s Blindfolded History contributes another narrative. Fifty
sheets of glass hang from the gallery ceiling, positioned in tenuous
close proximity and reaching eye level. Visitors are obliged to look at
each silk-screened image while carefully maneuvering between the glass
sheets in a heightened sense of discomfiting closeness. The images,
photographs of the Palestinian chronicle beginning in 1948 and ending
in the Intifada of 2003, are screened in chocolate. A common Arabic
phrase refers to the good times as dunia helweh, life is sweet. In this
work, Bishara juxtaposes sweet and sorrow, the subject of an earlier
work of hers involving opposites, cactus leaves half-dipped in
chocolate. Bishara’s successful use of medium as message is powerful
testament to her ability to transform materials.
Tayseer
Barakat’s work dedicated to his Father is an old filing cabinet
discarded by the Israeli army. The oversized drawers contained records
kept of the first European Jewish settlers arriving from Europe in the
1930s. Barakat imprinted the stages in his father’s life, from his
childhood in his ancestral home until his death as a refugee, in each
drawer. The burned figures evoke cave markings or steles, which he
believes echo stories of grief, defeat, or contentment.”
Barakat
is one of the many artists who uses natural local materials to
construct their work. Other artists experiment with local material
traditionally used in crafts such as olive wood, olive pits, vegetable
dyes, olive oil soap, leather, clay, and dry cactus, with its sturdy
web of fiber. Cactus, a hardy plant, was often planted in place of
fences to mark boundaries of properties and keep animals out. It
continues to be a common symbol of Palestinian Sumoud or steadfastness.
Sabar, which means “cactus,” also translates as “patience.”
Abdel
Rahmen Muzayen comes from a family of painters and poets, and he draws
in his art on his background in archeology and his extensive research
into Palestinian history and culture. Muzayen studied under Ismail
Shammout in the city of Lydd before their expulsion to Gaza in 1948. He
lost his entire life work first in 1967, then again in the 1982 Israeli
invasion of Beirut. In 1993 he returned to Gaza. His work Jenin 2002 is
a memorial to the Jenin massacre and destruction of the refugee camp in
Jenin.
His
exquisite ink drawings on personal and public narratives confirm that
he is a master of form. Using hardly any sharp or jagged lines, he
shapes, predominantly with curves, the compartments that tell each
story. The female figure of Anat, a Canaanite goddess, is central to
most of the drawings. Her body arches gracefully in the shape of a
crescent moon to protect the vulnerable Palestinian families, homes,
and palm trees. A resolute and steadfast Anat embodies hope for a
better future, always looking away from the demolished houses of Jenin.
The architectural details in Muzayen’s works are a tribute to
Palestinian stonemasons who skillfully sculpted rough stones from the
quarries in Bethlehem and Nablus. Before the occupation, the sounds of
metal shaping stone in rhythm were heard all over the West Bank. Now
the stone artisans are silenced and their work lies in rubble.
Palestinian
artist and art historian Tina Sherwell has investigated the
representation of women in Palestinian art. The pioneering artist
Ismail Shammout was the first to use the Palestinian woman as a symbol
for the homeland. References made to land in the shape of the female
figure dominate the art of two of the artists in this exhibition who
began painting in Israeli prisons. In the works by Muhammad Rakouie and
Zuhdi al Adawi, the female figure is adorned with the Palestinian flag.
In contrast, Mary Tuma’s chooses the shape of the traditional dresses
to render indirectly the reality of gender inequalities. Hung from the
ceiling, the dresses stand tall and proud. Sewn from one continuous
piece of black chiffon fabric fifty yards long, and stripped of the
colorful embroidery that adorns traditional Palestinian costumes, these
dresses embody the steadfastness of the Palestinian women in the face
of daily injustices at home and under occupation, and their response to
the loss of their children to martyrdom. This site-specific
installation was first exhibited at Al Wasiti Gallery in Jerusalem to
memorialize those born in the city but never able to re-enter it.
Abdul
Hay Mussalam, a sixty-nine year old self-taught artist, lives in a
refugee camp in Jordan and shapes figures on flat surfaces, using
sawdust and glue to portray memories of idyllic pastoral life in
Palestine. One work, full of colorful details, depicts a traditional
Palestinian wedding and contrasts with a monotone piece dedicated to
Palestinian women. In the latter, dated 1985, Mussalam includes the
following inscription in English: “The emancipation of women is not an
act of charity but a fundamental necessity of the revolution.” In a
video interview with the curators, he praised the Palestinian women’s
role and acknowledged his wife’s support for his work and their close
collaboration.
Mustafa
al Hallaj establishes a dialectical relationship between the mythical
and the real, between good and evil in his apocalyptic and monumental
work. Self-portrait as Man, God, the Devil is a frieze-like epic
consisting of masonite-cut prints hung in eight rows. It epitomizes the
Palestinian tragedy, and it chronicles the mythological figures of
Palestinian folktales, making references to ginns and ghouls. Hallaj
began his career as a sculptor. He studied in Egypt and was influenced
by the works of Alexandrian artist Effat Nagui and her husband Saad
al-Khadim, who studied Egyptian magic and folklore dating back to
ancient Egypt. Nagui’s metaphysical imagery included a mixed media of
magic symbols, including crocodile skins she gathered from Upper Egypt
and Ethiopia.
Ashraf
Fawakhry, like Rana Bishara and Mervat Essa, is a citizen of Israel. He
grew up in Haifa, a seaside town known for its large Arab population
and for the long tradition of peaceful co-existence between its Arab
and Jewish population. Fawakhry’s series of small images are decorated
with fragments of advertisement photos, cuts from packages, personal
collectibles, and embellished with Hebrew and Arabic script. A sort of
miniature Palestinian Pop Art, each piece bears the imprint of a
donkey-- long a symbol of endurance.
For
many years Adnan Yahya has produced numerous oil-on-canvas paintings
that depict a world of tortured, disfigured bodies. Within this Francis
Bacon-like vision of an almost uninhabitable world, many of these
figures embody personalities that we know and encounter. In the piece
USA, he depicts two figures, a caricatured figure of Ariel Sharon and
the graphic, severed, bloody head of a child.
Prior
to the end of the nineteen-century, most photographers whose subject
was Palestine were from Europe or America, and these photographers
constructed an Orient from the very images they produced. It was only
in the last century that Palestinian photographers began to document
their own society, and began a tradition of producing a photographic
record of Palestinian life. These photographers first focused on
portrait photography, then architecture and landscape, and more
recently on Palestinian life under occupation.
Noel
Jabbour’s Vacant Seats are intimate portraits of untold suffering.
Using light and shadow to avoid a documentary style, she portrays
anguished families mourning the loss of children, mothers, husbands,
and brothers. These families stare out beyond the camera taking the
viewer’s attention away from their immediate surroundings and into a
future that is uncharted and beyond their control.
Rula
Halawani maintains the tradition of documenting the occupation. Braving
Israeli bullets, she recorded the first instant in the life of a
devastated family who lost family members, all their life savings and
belongings, as well as their home. In this Negative Incursion series,
Halawani prints the images in negative which has the effect of leaving
the gruesome details of the massacre to our imagination and making the
viewer an active witness of the atrocities. The following lines by the
Lebanese poet Etel Ednan serve as an apt tribute for the survivors who
live the rest of the lives mourning family, neighbor, home, and life:
They started with the olive trees,
Then with the orchards,
Then, with the buildings,
And when all had disappeared,
They threw, one on top of the other,
The children, the old and the newly-weds,
In a mass grave,
All that to tell the world of the half-dead
That we didn’t exist,
That we have never existed,
And therefore that they were right
To exterminate us all.
Since the beginning of the Intifada, Palestinian art centers have
maintained their staffs and continued to operate. When curfews are
lifted and incursions stop, they invite visiting artists and organize
lectures, films and children’s art classes. For many, these centers
provide the only diversion, although, with 65% of the population
unemployed and 75% below the poverty line of $2.00 per day, hardly any
sales of art occur. Visual artists receive very little support from the
Palestinian Authority. A few non-governmental organizations and private
foundations offer some support in the form of exhibition space or
limited awards, the artists have to rely on their own resources.
Frequent closures isolate those living in other areas such as Gaza or
Bethlehem region. Unable to find or buy art supplies, several artists
have begun working with natural and local products. Suleiman Mansour
uses straw and mud, which he substitutes for imported oils and acrylics
as a form of resistance. In I, Ismael, his abstract human figures
recede into the dry caked clay, evoking the story of Hagar and Ismael
lost in the dessert without water. The roses growing in this desolate
environment symbolize young Palestinian lives shabab zay al-ward, or
the “flowers of youth” lost in the Intifada.
Palestinians
have an ancient tradition of pottery hand-made by women. Pottery was
first introduced to the Levant in the sixth century B.C. Examples of
works have been found in areas known for their good sources of clay,
such as Jericho. More recently, women began reviving this tradition as
a small source of income. Vera Tamari experiments with different styles
and type of clay and sculpts small intimate objects of figures. Her
installation Tale of a Tree consists of rows of six hundred miniature
clay trees, painted in pastel colors. These trees float on the top of a
Plexiglas shelf at the base of a black-and-white image of an old olive
tree. They represent hope for the future and confidence in the past.
Tamari’s miniature sculptures draw attention to the need to protect and
conserve the olive trees and natural resources. Israelis have targeted
olive production since the occupation began, cutting or burning the
trees, and preventing Palestinian farmers from picking the olives.
Olive oil is the main agricultural product for the Palestinians, and
the loss of olive trees has devastated the Palestinian economy.
In
2002, during the first major incursion into Ramallah, Israeli soldiers
destroyed over six hundred private vehicles including ambulances.
Tamari, who never builds large-scale sculptures, towed ten crushed cars
to a high-school playground and constructed an installation, wiring
loudspeakers and lights to the cars and decorating them with beaded
amulets like the ones drivers hang from rearview mirrors to protect
their cars from the evil eye. Her installation was in full view of the
soldiers. During the curfew, Tamari sat in her home across from the
school and watched with amusement the soldiers’ reactions to this huge
installation with its lights and blaring music. The jarring combination
of destroyed vehicles and joyful music was not lost on the soldiers.
This is another example of how living under occupation has led artists
to search for new materials and adapt to new situations. Not limited by
art movements or market demands; Palestinian artists feel free to
experiment and challenge existing trends.
Throughout
the history of colonized nations, culture has played a vital role in
shaping collective identity. The arts played an essential role in
portraying and promoting the peoples’ national struggle in Egypt and
Algeria. Visual arts as well as literature, especially poetry and other
arts, gave voice to the national aspiration of the oppressed. Egyptian
artists drew on symbols from Pharoanic Egypt and folkloric traditions
to emphasize national pride in their history and culture. Symbols of
Palestinian culture first became popular in poetry, and each one of
these symbols is pregnant with allusions and memories for millions of
Palestinians and others familiar with Palestinian culture. . Artworks
in the Made in Palestine exhibition make several references to
Palestinian cultural symbols; embedded in all printed and electronic
media, these symbols are now part of the Palestinian national psyche.
Among these iconic images are the Dome of the Rock, pigeons of peace,
the kuffiyah or checkered men’s headdress, and the map of Palestine.
For the last fifty years Palestinian artists have created a visual vocabulary of new symbols.
Palestinian
art is an assertion of identity and a beacon of hope for Palestinian
families. Almost every Palestinian home displays posters or small
inexpensive prints of original artwork that portray their struggle for
survival. These contain figurative images not dissimilar to those found
in Muzayen’s work or the prisoners’ art. The historical map of
Palestine is carved, painted, collaged, engraved, or embroidered, in an
endless variety of media and designs from gold, to olive wood products.
One can purchase these items at any craft shop in West Bank, Jordan,
Beirut, or as far west as Rabat, Morocco, and at every Palestinian
gathering in the Diaspora. A 1960s painting by Joumana Husseini, a
leading Palestinian artist, portrayed a wedding ceremony in the shape
of the map of Palestine, and forty years later, the shadow of the map
appears in the background of several layers of acrylic in her abstract
work. The historic map represents a potent symbol insofar as it refuses
to yield to partitions, settlements, road maps, or lands divided by
apartheid walls.
The
centuries-old Palestinian crafts of embroidery, hand-blown glass,
ceramics, and woodcarving are now exported as Israeli crafts, and the
history of these crafts is intentionally omitted from labels. Elements
of Palestinian culture are at constant risk of being transformed and
obliterated. Mahmoud Darwish believes that Israelis are in constant
denial of Palestinian culture: “Israelis accept us as an obstacle, as a
feature of the landscape, but culturally speaking, they don’t want to
accept us. They deny our existence in the past, as if the country was
empty for 2,000 years.” Israeli exhibitors generally sanction
Palestinian art that endorses the official colonial narrative, further
limiting Palestinian artistic expression. However, in recent years
progressive Israeli film festivals have begun to include films
representing the Palestinian narrative. Arian Littman-Cohen, an Israeli
artist who saw films by Elia Suleiman and Mona Hatoum (Measures of
Distance, 1988,) was moved by the power of their art: “ …as I stepped
out of the illusory space of Elia Suleiman’s excellent movie Chronicle
of Disappearance, I once again felt the enormous complexity of our
common existence. Today I realize that it was Mona’s [Hatoum] strong
visual language that triggered my desire to listen to her, and that it
was within and through the space of her artwork that I began to
empathize with her subjectivity.”
Exhibiting
contemporary art from the Arab world in the United States is a
challenge for any curator. Without extensive didactic text, the work
may give rise to misinterpretations or leave the viewers without a clue
as to its meaning or message. In spite of the universal themes in
Palestinian art, it is often usually misinterpreted as political
propaganda. While a similar exhibition from other minority cultures
maybe addressed in a straightforward manner, Palestinian culture is at
a disadvantage in the United States. For almost a century, Palestinian
and Arab culture in general has been misunderstood and unfavorably
portrayed in the Western media. Arab opinion is censored, much of what
is read about Arab culture is written by non-Arabs, and the
contemporary artistic production of the region is rarely if ever taken
seriously.
As
a result, exhibitions that open the way for others find it necessary to
educate and give a voice to the artists and the people.
What
is unique about the Made in Palestine exhibition is that, for the first
time, American curators took the initiative to visit Palestinian
artists in their studios, select the artwork, invite the artists to
speak, and ensure the integrity of the work. At a time of frequent and
intense Israeli incursions into Palestinian territories, the curators
risked their lives to meet the artists and learn about the conditions
under which they work. This exhibition is not a comprehensive survey of
Palestinian art but rather a selection of work by artists the curators
were able to reach despite the dangers posed by the threat of American
advances into Iraq and border closures by Israel.
The
art in this exhibition gives us insight into the humanity of the
Palestinian culture and legitimizes the visitors’ right to hear the
Palestinian narrative. We can only hope that the curators’ courage and
respect for human rights becomes contagious. As long as the
Palestinians continue to be dispossessed and dehumanized, Palestinian
artists will continue to give a voice to their people. Peace may become
a reality when both sides respect each other’s culture, when Israeli
children are allowed to read Mahmoud Darwish and visit exhibits such as
Made in Palestine, and Palestinians are free to visit galleries in
Jaffa and Tel Aviv.
Notes
Ismail Shammout. Written communication with the author. Kuwait, 1987.
Badil: Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights,
“Statistics”
[http://www.badil.org/Refugees/Statistics/GlobalPopulation-2001.pdf ,
(15 October, 2003)
Hind-Lara Mango, “New Visions of Palestinian Art,” The Star, Oct. 11, 1990, Jordan.
Etel Adnan, “Jenin,” unpublished manuscript, Beirut, 2001.
The Palestine Monitor, “Poverty” http://www.palestinemonitor.org/factsheet/Fact_Sheets_Poverty.htm], (15 October, 2003).
Lee Hockstader, “M. Darwish Poetry” Washington Post Foreign Service, March 13, 2000, pg 8.
Arian Littman-Cohen, “A Personal Note” in Terminal 7 ed. Rahel Suckman, March (1998): 26. |