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Mideast stock shots - minus war and tyranny

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  • Mideast stock shots - minus war and tyranny

    Mideast stock shots - minus war and tyranny

    REVIEW

    Newsday (New York)
    January 14, 2005

    BY ARIELLA BUDICK, STAFF WRITER

    Third World faces, battered by war and disaster, gaze out of the pages
    of the daily newspaper. Their pain is palpable, yet far away, a distance
    shaped by differences of dress and culture as well as a sheer quantity
    of miles. Our vision of the Arab world, and particularly Iraq, is now
    shaped by images of destruction. Pictures of ruined homes, blown-up cars
    and wailing civilians are now the principal filter through which we can
    understand this part of the world - or so it seems.

    The Grey Art Gallery means to issue a corrective to this skewed view of
    the Middle East with a show of 20th-century portraits taken in Lebanon,
    Egypt and Iraq. These formal, serious images offer a different panorama
    of that part of the world. The people staring seriously into the lens
    are neither random victims of violence nor grateful recipients of
    international largesse, but individuals self-consciously confronting the
    camera with unruffled dignity.

    The exhibit's two organizers, Walid Raad and Akram Zaatari, both
    contemporary artists, collaborated with a Beirut-based photo archive
    called the Arab Image Foundation to assemble a wide range of indigenous
    images.

    Most striking is a wall of some 4,000 ID photos by Antranik Anouchian
    (1908-1991), a Turkish-born Armenian immigrant whose studio was in
    Tripoli, Lebanon. Taken for passports, licenses, permits and the like,
    these portraits offer a kind of random cross section of Tripoli society.
    Oddly, though, Raad and Zaatari have mounted them into a mammoth mosaic
    that wipes out the singularity of the separate faces. It's a curious
    echo of the Western media's take on the Middle East, in which individual
    dramas are subsumed into larger stories of war, devastation and tyranny.

    The same kind of generalization takes place in another section of the
    exhibit devoted to group photos of Iraqi and Egyptian policemen and
    soldiers, produced between 1920 and 1940. Rather than simply mounting
    and framing these rather prosaic graduation pictures, Raad and Zaatari
    have chosen to display them, one after another, in a looped video. Here
    it is the changing fashions in uniform design and hairstyle that one
    notices rather than the specific faces, which tend to blend into one
    another. A 1927 group of graduates sports fezzes. Another group looks
    much more Western, dressed in Colonial khaki.

    What we see here is different from the usual newspaper fare, but hardly
    seems less dehumanizing. Another group of pictures, taken by the Sidon,
    Lebanon-based itinerant photographer Hashem el Madani, shows an array of
    interchangeable vacationers at the beach, all in bathing suits and
    virtually identical poses. What stands out is the formulaic quality of
    the shots, the way each person becomes a stock character in a generic
    depiction of leisure.

    Madani began shooting Sidon's citizens in 1948, a turbulent year that
    saw the founding of the state of Israel and an influx into Lebanon of
    large numbers of Palestinian refugees. Yet these photos convey few hints
    about the political or social context in which they were taken. Unlike
    contemporary news images, these pictures are about nothing but
    themselves. Their eloquence is muted by conventionality.

    WHEN & WHERE: "Mapping Sitting: On Portraiture and Photography, a
    Project by Walid Raad and Akram Zaatari" will be on view through April 2
    at Grey Art Gallery, New York University, 100 Washington Square East,
    Manhattan. For exhibition hours, call 212-998-6780 or visit
    www.nyu.edu/greyart.


    http://www.nynewsday.com/entertainment/galleriesandmuseums/ny-etart4112780jan14,0,6906765.story?coll=nyc-enthome-museums
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