on going
Drawings are lying in front of me
Black on white
Their vibrations sting my attention
They look familiar
Saturating
Contemplating on colour
Them forming space and density
There are these lines
Intimate lines, mutually shared
Common narration
Biased
Based on experience
Be it imaginative
Evidence without value
Reflected in press pics
Circulating the net
Accurately recording seconds, minutes, hours, days, months, years
Longitudes and latitudes
Track pads
Places
Evidences
All in all
Light, 15-67kb
For both
Drawings and press pics
No nails and pins needed
do (not) own them to share them
Spaces and bodies
Bodies in spaces
Spaces in bodies
Bodies of thoughts
Bodies of pain
The lines are intimate
Shared mutually
Memory
pain
The drawings, etchings and lithography of German painter, printmaker and sculptor Käthe Kollwitz, 1867-1945, depict life suffering in all its shades. She conveys strong emotions. Her artistic strategies and expertise reflect a powerful and lively expression as well as a profound study and understanding of people’s pains and politics .
In the mid thirties she completed her last major series of lithographs :: Woman Welcoming Death, Death with Girl in Lap, Death Reaches for a Group of Children, Death Struggles with a Woman, Death on the Highway, Death as a Friend, Death in the Water, The Call of Death.
Shortly after she and her husband were visited by the Gestapo in July 1936, who threatened her with arrest and deportation to a Nazi concentration camp; they resolved to commit suicide if such a prospect became inevitable.
A little later, 1937, the French painter and sculptor Pablo Picasso painted Guernica in responds to the German and Italian bombing of the Basque village Guernica in Northern Spain earlier on in April the same year. This painting became quickly THE charismatic icon of an anti-war position:
Type............Oil on canvas
Dimensions......349 cm × 776 cm (137.4 in × 305.5 in)
Location........Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid, Spain
In July 1937 a large mural was exhibited at the Paris International Exposition at the World’s Fair for the Spanish display.
At the United Nations
A tapestry copy of Picasso’s Guernica was displayed on the wall of the United Nations Building in New York City at the entrance to the Security Council room from 1985 to 2009. It was commissioned in 1955 by Nelson Rockefeller, since Picasso refused to sell him the original. The tapestry was placed on loan to the United Nations by the Rockefeller estate in 1985. The tapestry is less monochromatic than the original and uses several shades of brown. On 5th February 2003 a blue curtain was put up to cover the image Guernica when Colin Powell and other US diplomats argued for war in Iraq at a press conference in the very building.
(no further knowledge on the whereabouts of the original copy tapestry.)
“……… experiences of mixed feelings, fear rebellion freedom.
Since the conflict in Syria began to grow more and more painful, I express my thoughts, feelings, and criticism of the current violence with illustrations. The language of expression amalgamates my background in theatre, drama, animation and fine arts. …” says Sulafa Hijazi from Damascus. “I believe that, among all that is happening, art will always be a powerful and peaceful weapon."
- an energetic statement against a protracted processes.
The movement as such generates hope and high recognition values. It carries timelessness. Moments that do not end. This is on going. An ongoing experiment on life. On breathing. On public health.
It is not not there if you do not look at it. If you do not paint it, talk and sing about it. If you see it with your own eyes, you do not know if you see the truth. You dream about it. If it was true what you saw, with your own eyes, documenting randomly, activating senses. Your nose remembers, bears smells, bringing this very moment alive again, just when you settle in, become attuned. You paint and write and read and listen. Banging the head on a piece of wall. Splits of seconds halt. Caption reads: destruction plays it’s logic. Caption reads: Victory means to see you suffer. Caption reads:
illustrations by Sulafa Hijazi, 2011-2013, Damascus, Syria
text by Rayelle Niemann, March 2013
on going
ANOTHER PROJECT ON CITYSHARING
→ A Rug - Post-orientalism
RELATED WEB SITE
→ artist’s web site
[ Abou Naddara ]
[ Accessible Approach ]
[ Beyrouth ]
[ Cairo as Canvas ]
[ Dawam al hal min al muhal—No Condition is Permanent ]
[ De Montmorency à Metz ]
[ Dowry No ]
[ Fear of a Muslim Planet ]
[ Fragmented Letters ]
[ Gentle Wall project ]
[ Images and Images ]
[ Kafranbel ]
[ Leading a Smart Revolution ]
[ Lens of a young Person ]
[ Muraqabet amel jidariya—Watching the Creation of a Wall Painting ]
[ No Holy Cows ]
[ On Graphic Crimes and Visible Fractures ]
• on going •
[ PMS = Poster Message Service ]
[ Réconciliation ]
[ Rasael—Messages ]
[ Seipone ]
[ T.W.B.T.C ]
[ This is a picture book ]
[ Vitry ]
[ What remains and Things to come ]
for the time being
FEATURED THEME ON CITY SHARING
by ASUNCION MOLINOS GORDO
-
This project is an instrument for common critical analysis to help understand the reasons behind Egyptians’ diminishing …
by INAS HALABI
-
The project Letters to Fritz and Paul focuses on the expeditions of the Swiss cousins, lovers and scientists, Fritz and …
by SARAH BURGER
-
The planned modern city of Brasilia attracted me since a long time. Her defined shape, location and function proceded he …
by ADRIEN GUILLET
-
Youri Telliug talks with the artist Adrien Guillet about his project Citracit
Youri Telliug - What is Citracit …
by NIGIST GOYTOM
-
In 2013 more than 45 million people have been forced to leave their homes. This amounts to the biggest number of refugees …
by SULAFA HIJAZI
-
The on going debate on Arab identity and its (cultural) representation is strongly shaped by Edward Saidʼs formative …
by ASUNCION MOLINOS GORDO
-
WAM is a site-specific work that uses the historical trope of the cabinet of curiosities to explore the introduction of …
MORE CONTRIBUTIONS BY THE FOLLOWING