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Eye of the beholder

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  • Eye of the beholder

    Eye of the beholder
    By ELAINE D'AURIZIO, STAFF WRITER

    NorthJersey.com, NJ
    March 13 2005

    Think that abandoned factories in Edgewater, oil tanks near the Pulaski
    Skyway or factory smokestacks in Paterson are real eyesores? Do you
    laugh at the razzing in movies and by comedians about the Garden State?

    It's all, as they say, in the eye of the beholder. To artist Dahlia
    Elsayed, they're beautiful monuments to be memorialized.

    "It's part of our history," said Elsayed, who lives in Palisades
    Park, where she grew up. "For the people of New Jersey, it's their
    landscape."

    Her work has connected with gallery owners and museum curators for the
    past 10 years and is on display until the end of April at Manhattan's
    Here Arts Center.

    One of her paintings shown as part of "Weird New Jersey: The
    Exhibition" is named "Favorite Ruins So Far." It's of abandoned radio
    towers along the turnpike.

    "[The towers] are outdated but dear to your heart," Elsayed said.
    "There are a lot of abandoned sites [in the state]. Everything in
    New Jersey has changed so."

    Elsayed is depressed when landmarks are torn down. So she documents
    them in pastel acrylic paintings. The abstract but often recognizable
    figures - buildings, rivers and highways - are accompanied by words.
    Poem-like, they are the artist's reflections and feelings and create
    a dialogue with the viewers.

    "I think of them as journalistic paintings," she said. "They really
    tell stories."

    Memories and experiences in New Jersey are relived with the artist.
    Thoughts, sounds and smells are stirred.

    "People recognize a place and say, 'I used to live there' ... or
    'My dad worked there,'~_" Elsayed said. "I love it. That's really
    satisfying to me. You want to see your experience on the wall. You
    want there to be some kind of connection."

    For the last four years, Elsayed has been on a state grant teaching

    in schools all over New Jersey, including Bergen, Passaic and Essex
    counties.

    "Schools have me come in to share my process with the children and
    do creative projects that are based in storytelling and their local
    environment," she said.

    The artist - a graduate of Barnard College and the Columbia University
    School of the Arts - writes on a manual typewriter before she
    paints. Then she puts "layers of washes of paint" on watercolor
    paper. "I combine the literary with visual arts," she said.

    When the environment changes as much as it does in New Jersey, there
    can be feelings of grief and loss.

    Elsayed fondly remembers a Howard Johnson on Route 46 in Ridgefield
    that was torn down.

    "My dad would take us there for ice cream when you'd win something
    or if a friend came over," she said.

    Her Egyptian father and Armenian mother immigrated to the United
    States and settled in New York City, where Elsayed was born in 1969.
    Growing up in Palisades Park, she strongly connected to her cultural
    identity.

    Elsayed loved listening to stories her mother, a librarian, and her
    father told of earlier days in Armenia and Egypt. Her grandparents
    lived with them and they spoke Armenian at home.

    "What became the family heirlooms were these places they had lived,"
    she said. "Their stories fascinated me."

    Strongly influenced by literature, she kept illustrated journals. She
    compares them to the rug work and embroidery her grandmother and
    great-grandmother did that was handed down from generation to
    generation.

    "Even though the materials are different and the work serves a
    different purpose, the expression still comes from the same place -
    the need to visually record and document your presence in the world
    around you ... to create a communicable history," she said.

    After 9/11, Elsayed feared a backlash against the heritage so dear
    to her.

    "As an Arab, you fear that the world is going to think of you one
    way," she said. And although her work had been exhibited before,
    she became even more sought out.

    "Suddenly I was in demand," said Elsayed, who has traveled the world.
    People wanted to buy her art. So did the government: The U.S.
    Department of State bought her works for its "Art in Embassies"
    program. She received prestigious grants and residencies from the
    New Jersey Council on the Arts, the Edward Albee Foundation, and
    ArtsLink. And she was sought out as a teacher, which she does about
    nine months out of the year.

    The grants and residencies have given Elsayed time to be alone to
    create in her studio, which is in a former silk mill in Union City.

    When she does, her work often links her two "homelands" - New Jersey
    and the Middle East, which she has visited.

    For example, one set of paintings is of a White Castle in Union City
    and a mosque she saw on a trip to Egypt. Another called, "Jersey
    City/Nasser City" are of residences here and near Cairo. The letters
    are on sticks, like the "Hollywood" sign in California.

    "It's a capturing of the human experience as a woman, as an immigrant
    artist," she said.

    Sensitive to what surrounds her, Elsayed took friends on a boat tour
    of the Hackensack River in the Meadowlands. It impressed her and
    resulted in a painting of a factory she saw along the shore and a
    tiny canoe in the water. It's called, "On the Turnpike."

    That doesn't mean Elsayed does not understand ribbing about the Garden
    State. She admits the Pulaski Skyway "is black and sooty."

    "But it's sculptural," she said. The artist and writer in Elsayed
    tries to see the beauty in what surrounds her.

    "Radio towers, abandoned factories ... I think they're aesthetically
    beautiful," she said. "When I see it, I'm trying to capture it ...
    the sounds, the smells, the colors ~E the feelings. It's my vision
    and I'm trying to pass that on."
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