Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The east comes to the biennale

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The east comes to the biennale

    The east comes to the biennale
    By Jackie Wullschlager

    FT
    June 13 2009 02:51

    If McQueen's Giardini and Nauman's `Topological Gardens' announce
    closing time in the gardens of the west, the east is hammering on the
    global gate and Venice, nexus of ancient trade routes and a city
    dripping with oriental reference, is a piquant backcloth. This year
    sees the strongest ever presence of Middle Eastern and south-west Asian
    states, including offerings by Palestine and the United Arab Emirates,
    Mona Hatoum's solo exhibition and noteworthy national pavilions.

    I loved Eygpt's `Lightly Monumental'. Solemnly vertical abstracted
    paintings of everyday Cairo types ` dressmaker, barber, mother and shy
    teenage son ` in a luminous gold and black tonality reveal Adel El Siwi
    as a figural painter of Modigliani-like grace, while enormous,
    pared-down palm leaf sculptures ` `The Worshippers', `The Lovers', `The
    Bread Peddlar' ` by Ahmed Askalany captivate with their lightness of
    being and tread a defiant line between classical sculpture and folk
    art.

    As distinctive, and lit by a dovetailing of east-west traditions, is
    the retrospective of Armenian painter Gayane Khachaturian, who died
    last month, at the lovely Palazzo Zenobio: though a fantastical
    storyteller ` silvery lute player, red-haired jugglers ` Khachaturian
    is also as abstract and tragic in her use of colour and form as her
    countryman Arshile Gorky.

    Hers is an individualistic, sincerely expressive art, unfashionable at
    international biennales but finding a place in the diversity of
    off-site Venice. So too, for different reasons, with Palestine c/o
    Venice on the tranquil Giudecca island: its achievement is to be here
    at all. The title implies the chronic impermanence faced by Palestinian
    artists; the work mirrors that instability and marginality. Taysir
    Batniji's `Hannoun' is a large floor of pencil shavings. Shadi
    HabibAllah's doodled figures animated on a pale screen is called `ok,
    hit, hit but don't run'. Sandi Hilal and Alessandro Petti's sound piece
    entraps visitors in a claustrophobic padded cell. Small statements,
    each speaks forcefully in the context of Jawad Al Malhi's panoramic
    photograph of a West Bank settlement `House No 197', and Khalil Rabah's
    A Geography: 50 Villages ` 3rd Riwaq Biennale, a film accompanied by 50
    help-yourself postcards giving precise identity to Palestinian
    villages. The place was packed, there was a rush on the postcards, and
    reactions were more animated than almost anywhere else in Venice.

    www.labiennale.org
    Exhibitions run throughout the summer
Working...
X