Press Text -
Gallery is pleased to present the first Beirut
solo exhibition by Walid Raad titled: A History of Modern and Contemporary
Arab Art _ Part I _ Chapter 1: Beirut 1992-2005. The exhibition includes
six new works, including mixed media installations, sculptural works,
and photographs. Over the past ten years, the Arab world has witnessed
the emergence of a number of contemporary art festivals, art funds, cultural
institutions, art galleries, art fairs, and collectors of contemporary
art. Moreover, the planned construction of several large art museums and
art schools in the Arab Gulf raises a number of questions about how culture,
and in particular contemporary visual art will be conceived, made, distributed,
and consumed in the future, not only in the Gulf, but in the Arab world
in general, and beyond. Needless to say, these developments are part of
a broader economic trend whereby cultural tourism figures more and more
as an engine of economic growth, as has been evident in Europe, North
and South America, and the Near and Far East.
In 2008, Walid Raad initiated a research project about the history of
contemporary and modern Arab art. On the one hand, his project aims to
identify and unpack the ideological, economic, and political dimensions
of this recent fascination with visual art in the Arab world. On the other
hand, and proceeding from the writings of Jalal Toufic and his concept
of “the withdrawal of tradition past a surpassing disaster,” Raad intends
to examine whether and how culture and tradition in the Arab world may
have been affected, materially and immaterially by the various wars that
have been waged there by native and external powers.
Raad’s exhibition in the Sfeir-Semler Gallery is his first solo show in
Lebanon and the Middle East. The exhibition is titled A History of Modern
and Contemporary Arab Art _ Part I _ Chapter 1: Beirut 1992-2005. With
this exhibition, Raad presents the first chapter of his on-going art project.
The works concentrate on a range of concerns, from the above-mentioned
emergence of a high art infrastructure in Beirut over the past fifteen
years (the advent of not-for-profit cultural institutions, white cube
galleries, grassroots festivals, national biennale participation, etc.)
to a close study of the question of intra-art historical reference in
fellow artists’ artworks. In this sense, Raad presents two complimentary
propositions. He proposes an analysis of the local, regional, and international
“fascination” with artworks and artists form the Arab world and Lebanon.
And he creates works of art where the very buildings blocks of his images
and forms are precisely the elements (contemporary and historical) made
available by this emerging infrastructure for the creation, distribution,
and consumption of Arab artworks and artists. Moreover, he creates artworks
that attempt to be referential, in the sense that they hail other Lebanese
and non-Lebanese artists and artworks.
Raad’s exhibition is divided into 6 sections, each occupying a distinct
space in the gallery. The exhibited sections are titled:
- Preface: Title 23
- Appendix XVIII: Plates
- The Atlas Group (1989-2004)
- Museums
- Walid Sadek’s Love Is Blind (Modern Art, Oxford, U.K.)
- Index XXVI: Artists.
As such, the exhibition takes the form of an unfolding book or research
project, sections of which are made available in the gallery. Each section
considers an element of this amorphous field for the production, distribution,
and consumption of artists and artworks in Lebanon. For example, in the
section titled Appendix XVIII: Plates, Raad creates images using colors,
texts, and images extracted from various documents he has been gathering
over the past few years such as exhibition and festival catalogs, art
school mission statements, theoretical publications, museum proposals,
artists indexes, art historical dissertations and theses, and art market
data). These documents are here deployed as formal elements in six large
photographic triptychs (175 X 405 cm. each). Book and exhibitions titles,
book covers, and office stationary here become the building blocks and
forms for the creation of seemingly abstract and highly formalized images.
In the section titled Index XXVI: Artists, Raad displays the names of
over 150 artists who have worked in Beirut over the past one hundred years.
The names, barely more than two centimeters in height each, are printed
on white vinyl letters, and mounted in one of the gallery’s white walls
in a twenty-two meter straight line. The names literally disappear and
appear in the room, thus marking the white cube gallery space as the condition
of both the visibility and invisibility of the artist as a figure with
a name, a history, and a biography. With this exhibition, Raad expands
the investigation he began with his fifteen-year art project titled The
Atlas Group about the question of the document in media arts, violence
and its various physical, psychological and phenomenal forms, and the
possibilities and limits of creative acts. With The Atlas Group, Raad’s
exploration was concentrated on historical and fictional events and situations
about the wars in Lebanon over the past thirty years. In A History of
Modern and Contemporary Arab Art _ Part I _ Chapter 1: Beirut 1992-2005,
Raad’s objects of study are the notions of the modern and the contemporary
in Arab Art, and (following the writer and artist Jalal Toufic) how creative
acts by artists, writers, and other thinkers may help us think, feel,
and experience how and if the violence of the past decades in Lebanon
and the Arab world has affected citizens, cities, and objects but also
culture and tradition broadly, materially and immaterially.
Narrative Biography
Walid Raad is an artist and an Associate Professor of Art in The Cooper
Union (New York, USA). Raad’s works include The Atlas Group, a fifteen-year
project between 1989 and 2004 about the contemporary history of Lebanon,
and the ongoing project titled A History of Modern and Contemporary Arab
Art. His books include The Truth Will Be Known When The Last Witness Is
Dead, My Neck Is Thinner Than A Hair, and Let’s Be Honest, The Weather
Helped.
Raad’s works have been shown at Documenta 11 (Kassel, Germany), The Venice
Biennale (Venice, Italy), The Hamburger Bahnhof (Berlin, Germany), The
Museum of Modern Art (New York, USA), Homeworks (Beirut, Lebanon) and
numerous other museums and venues in Europe, the Middle East, and North
America. Raad is also the recipient of the Alpert Award in Visual Arts
(2007), the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize (2007), and the Camera Austria
Award (2005).
Raad’s works are included in the following collections: The Museum of
Modern Art (New York, USA), The Walker Art Center (Minneapolis, USA),
The Guggenheim Museum (New York, USA), The British Museum (London, UK),
Tate Modern (London, UK), Centre Pompidou (Paris, France), FNAC (Paris,
France), National Galerie (Berlin, Germany), Hamburger Kunsthalle (Hamburg,
Germany), MMK (Frankfurt, Germany), MOMAC (Vienna, Austria), Museion (Bolzano,
Italy), Kunsthaus Zurich (Zurich, Swtzerland), among others.
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