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Palestinian Conceptual Art |
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Steve Sabella |
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For Walter Benjamin, reproducibility of art that was mainly triggered by photography withered its ‘aura‘, which in return reflected on its uniqueness and originality. He explained how “the instant the criterion of authenticity ceases to be applicable to artistic production, the total function of art is reversed. Instead of being based on ritual, it began to be based on another practice – politics”. This change of function will gain significance few decades later in the art movement, or phenomenon as some preferred to call it, Conceptual Art. Walter Benjamin observed how the physical change in the presentation of art influenced its perception; however, in the late 1960’s, there was a need to further stretch the democratization of the art space, to further explore and question its physical appearance, and to dig deep into its essence and function. Peter Osborne identifies six main kinds of Conceptual art in which artists challenged the aesthetic definition of artworks. Of particular interest are the two kinds, which were concerned with Politics and Ideology and Language. Palestinian artists just like artists from Latin America in the 1960’s and 1970’s who were concerned with the unstable political conditions in their countries, find in Conceptual art that is concerned with ideology and politics a means to take positions on political problems and widely raise political issues. Emily Jacir, who originally comes from Bethlehem, grew up in Saudi Arabia, went to high school in Rome, received her undergraduate and graduate studies in fine arts in America and then spent several years on the move living in Texas, Palestine, Colorado, France, and New York. She currently lives and works between Ramallah and New York City. Memorial to 418 Palestinian Villages which were Destroyed, Depopulated, and Occupied by Israel in 1948 (figure 1), which Jacir created in 2001, consists of a refugee tent like those the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) distributes to refugees. She then started with thick black thread to sew the names of these villages onto the tent. Realizing the enormous time she needed to complete her task, she opened her studio to anyone, including Israelis, to help her complete the sewing of all names. Eventually one hundred forty people participated in the project. The whole process was one of remembrance. Where We Come From is another artwork of Emily Jacir that has a title with strong political connotations. Creating it in 2003, the work is directed at Palestinians living in exile and is based on this question: "If I could do anything for you, anywhere in Palestine, what would it be?" The work consists of photos, related texts, and a DVD projection. Given that Jacir has an American passport, and hence no restriction of movement in Israel and Palestine she embarked in a mission to fulfill the people’s wishes. Understanding the context of the artwork is crucial in relating to the work as Palestinians are still under occupation and they are denied freedom of movement and the right of return to Palestine as well. Following are some examples: "Go to Haifa and play soccer with the first Palestinian boy you see on the street." In her installation, Jacir documents the wishes and the fate or current status of the people, and what she did in order to fulfill each wish. The presentation is simple and straightforward: photographs record a visa denied, a family separated, a bill paid, and so on. A text in Arabic and English records each request and its outcome (some requests have been impossible to fulfill). In these two artworks, Jacir gave form to her political attitude towards one of the most enduring conflicts. It is inevitable to be reminded of the very first exhibitions on Conceptual art such as the one that took place in Berne “When Attitudes Become Form” in 1969. One is also bound to realize that the context (or even the concept) carries the burden of meaning, rather than the actual presentation itself. This conforms to what critic Birian O’Doherty who wrote in Inside the White Cube: The Ideology of the Gallery Space (1970), “As Modernism gets older, context becomes content.” The context is essential in assessing Palestinian art today, and allows us to review artworks critically. Accordingly, the political environment that Jacir works in acts as a trigger to her creations, and as spectators we are expected to relate to these politics. Furthermore, there are two main factors emerging from analyzing these two artworks of Jacir. The first is the fact that both were collaborative experiences, and second the written and spoken words were the nucleus of the artworks. It could be argued that Jacir did not need to resort to photographic illustrations that materialized the people wishes, taking into consideration that Conceptual art de-emphasized the art object and explored the role of language (including the spoken language) in shaping our knowledge of the world and our conception of art. Conceptual art stressed on the idea that not all works of art need to ‘beheld’, to use a term Michael Fried advocated, or art can also be ‘anti-retinal’, in consistence with the legacy of Duchamp who is considered the Father of Conceptual art. By any means, the artist’s invitation to spectators to participate in the creation or completion of the work sheds light on the social aspect of Conceptual art. Given that spectators are given the opportunity to be involved in the work and often to complete it, whether physically, or imaginatively, this leads one to question the authorship of the work. Who is the author, or in other words, who is the maker of the work? Spectators have become coauthors of the work, something that characterizes artists working in a Conceptual manner. Because of the collaborative nature of Jacir’s artworks, and given that her themes are particularly sensitive, nostalgia is perhaps unavoidable. Nostalgia is a form of homesickness deriving from the Greek words for “pain” and “return”. “Artists who locate their work in linear time risk being dismissed as "merely" nostalgic.” In other words, "Nostalgia" suggests sentimentality, and in my opinion it overpowers the concept, as it starts to acquire a form by itself, taking away from the artwork major parts of its strength. The subjects that Emily Jacir handles in her artworks like those of borders, movement, dislocation, radical displacement, and resistance have been the focal point of many Palestinian artists in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and the Diaspora. In the process of national liberation, all of these subjects are of importance and they naturally acquire symbolic status. Artistically though, Palestinian artists who managed to escape nostalgic, illustrative, and symbolic attributions, I would like to propose the argument, are those who managed to produce a ‘form’ or a ‘structure’ that is distinctive and which adheres to the claim that “Conceptual art is made to engage the mind of the viewer rather than his eye or emotions.” Hence, Palestinian Conceptual art, which is geared by politics, becomes a question of ‘form’, and once the ‘form’ is carefully considered in consistence with the concept, the artwork transcends its locality to communicate to wider audiences. Therefore, to review artworks like those of Jacir, and because of the already stated intentions, one should see if all of the elements that make the work and the concept work coherently together. Perhaps a brief jump to the work of Conceptual artist Mona Hatoum, a renowned Palestinian artist, is necessary to illustrate this idea as “no one has put the Palestinian experience in visual terms so austerely and yet so playfully, so compellingly and at the same moment so allusively” like her. The form in her work continuously renews itself, and accordingly she insures the development of what could be termed as a new Conceptual art. When Emily Jacir liberates herself from nostalgic collaborative experiences, a clear shift occurs in her visual sophistication that wins her international recognition. The questions she poses in her work are more complex, and her presentation becomes extremely refined. This leads her to deal with the core issue, rather than the nostalgic side effects of the Palestinian Israeli conflict. Similarly, the viewer is drawn deeply into the artwork, and is intrigued to pose many questions. I find such kinds of work more revealing and daring. “On Monday October 16, 1972, Wael Zuaiter left Janet Venn-Brown's apartment and headed to his apartment at No. 4 Piazza Annibaliano in Rome. He had been reading A Thousand and One Nights on Janet's couch searching for references to use in an article he was planning to write that evening. He took two buses to get from Janet's place to his in northern Rome. Just as he reached the elevator inside the entrance to the building of the apartment block where he lived, Israeli assassins fired 12 bullets into his head and chest with 22 caliber pistols at close range. Wael Zuaiter had become the first victim in Europe of a series of assassinations committed by Israeli agents on Palestinian artists, intellectuals and diplomats that was already underway in the Middle East. A thirteenth bullet pierced his volume 2 of A Thousand and One Nights and got lodged in its spine. One of Wael's dreams was to translate A Thousand and One Nights directly from Arabic into Italian. He had been working on this project since his arrival in Italy in 1962. To this day an Italian translation from the Arabic does not exist. In 1979, Wael Zuaiter's companion of eight years, Sydney-born artist Janet Venn-Brown published For A Palestinian - A Memorial to Wael Zuaiter. Every language requires grammar to create meaning and enable communication. Writers and authors, for example, have to know the linguistic grammar in order to make structure and coherence. In the case of Hatoum or Jacir; ‘form’ becomes the grammar of the total work and the means for communication. It is like the skeleton of the work. Any ‘visual irregularities’ in the form weaken the coherence or unity of the whole work. Good Conceptual artists understand the danger “in making the physicality of the materials so important that it becomes the idea of the work.” It is precisely this change that occurred in Jacir’s work. * Steve Sabella is a London-based Palestinian artist who uses photography and photo installation as his principal medium of expression. He is laureate of the prestigious German Academy of Arts award in 2008. His international shows include: Neighbours in dialogue (Istanbul, Turkey 2007 and Sarajevo, Bosnia 2008), Gates of the Mediterranean (Rivoli, Turing, Italy, 2008); he is part of the Ars Aevi Museum collection in Sarajevo, Bosnia. Ann Goldstein and Anne Rorimer, Reconsidering the object of art: 1965-1975 (Museum of Contemporary Art; Cambridge, Massachusetts; London: MIT Press [distributor]; Los Angeles, 1995). Brian O'Doherty, Inside the White Cube: the Ideology of the Gallery Space (University of California Press; Berkeley, Calif.; London, 1999). Gannit Ankori, ‘Mona Hatoum: Nomadic Bodies, Exilic Spaces’, Palestinian Art (London: Reaktion, 2006). Charles Harrison, Essays on Art & Language (Blackwell; Oxford, 1991). Charles Harrison and Paul Wood, Art in Theory, 1900-2000: An Anthology of Changing Ideas (Blackwell Pub; Malden, Mass.; Oxford, 2003). Chiara Geraldine, ‘Memories in Exile’, www.columbia.edu/cu/museo/6/jacir/index.html. Debs & Co, www.debsandco.com/jacir.html Haupt & Binder Universe in Universe, ‘Emily Jacir: Where We Come From’, www.cuniverses-in-universe.org/eng/nafas/articles/2003/emily_jacir. Joseph Massad, ‘Permission to Paint: Palestinian Art and the Colonial Encounter Power’, Art Journal Vol. 66, no 3 (2007). Khalil Sakakini, ‘Emily Jacir’, www.sakakini.org/visualarts/jacir.htm. Liz Wells, The Photography Reader (Routledge; London, 2003). Material for a Film": Retracing Wael Zuaiter (Part 1), ‘The Electronic Intifada’ www.electronicintifada.net/v2/article7098.shtml. Michael Corris, Conceptual Art: Theory, Myth, and Practice (Cambridge University Press; Cambridge; New York, 2003). Michael Flanagan, ‘The Backward Glance - Nostalgia in Art", Art Journal, no. 15 (1996). Michael Newman and Jon Bird, Rewriting Conceptual Art (Reaktion; London, 1999). Mona Hatoum, Mona Hatoum: The Entire World as a Foreign Land (Tate Gallery; London, 2000). Peter Osborne, Conceptual Art (Phaidon; London; New York, N.Y., 2002). The Institute for Middle East Understanding, ‘Emily Jacir: Artist’, www.imeu.net/news/article003424.shtml Walter Benjamin, ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction’, Aesthetics: A Reader in Philosophy of the Arts ed. David Goldblatt and Lee Brown, (Prentice Hall; Upper Saddle River, N.J., 1996). Walter Benjamin, ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction’, Aesthetics: A Reader in Philosophy of the Arts ed. David Goldblatt and Lee Brown, (Prentice Hall; Upper Saddle River, N.J., 1996), pp 72-76. Walter Benjamin, ‘Extracts from the Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction’, The Photography Reader ed. Liz Wells,(Routledge; London, 2003), p 46. Alexander and Bonin, ‘Emily Jacir: Accumulations’, www.alexanderandbonin.com/exhibitions/Jacir/2005/accumulations.html (accessed 1/4/2008). The Institute for Middle East Understanding, ‘Emily Jacir: Artist’, www.imeu.net/news/article003424.shtml (accessed 4/5/2008). Joseph Massad, explains how Gannit Ankori in her book on Palestinian Art plagiarized the work of Palestinian author Kamal Boullata. The article ‘Permission to Paint: Palestinian Art and the Colonial Encounter Power’ appeared in Art Journal, Vol. 66/3 Fall 2007. Gannit Ankori, ‘Mona Hatoum: Nomadic Bodies, Exilic Spaces’, Palestinian Art (London: Reaktion, 2006), p 124. Chiara Geraldine, ‘Memories in Exile’, www.columbia.edu/cu/museo/6/jacir/index.html (accessed 28/4/2008). Haupt & Binder Universe in Universe, ‘Emily Jacir: Where We Come From’, www.cuniverses-in-universe.org/eng/nafas/articles/2003/emily_jacir (accessed 22/4/2008). Brian O'Doherty, Inside the White Cube : the Ideology of the Gallery Space (University of California Press; Berkeley, Calif. ; London, 1999), p 15. Michael Corris, Conceptual Art: Theory, Myth, and Practice (Cambridge University Press; Cambridge ; New York, 2003), back cover. Jeff Wall, ‘”Marks of Indifference”: Aspects of Photography in, or as, Conceptual Art’, Reconsidering the Object of Art: 1965-1975, ed. Ann Goldstein and Anne Rorimer(Museum of Contemporary Art; Cambridge, Massachusetts; London: MIT Press [distributor]; Los Angeles, 1995), p 253. Charles Harrison and Paul Wood, Art in Theory, 1900-2000: An Anthology of Changing Ideas (Blackwell Pub; Malden, Mass.; Oxford, 2003), p 863. Material for a Film": Retracing Wael Zuaiter (Part 1), ‘The Electronic Intifada’ www.electronicintifada.net/v2/article7098.shtml (accessed 05/05/2008).
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