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  • New name, direction for Beirut Art Fair

    The Daily Star (Lebanon)
    July 4, 2012 Wednesday


    New name, direction for Beirut Art Fair

    by India Stoughton

    "What's in a name?" the star-crossed Juliet remarks in Shakespeare's
    "Romeo and Juliet." "That which we call a rose by any other name would
    smell as sweet."

    BEIRUT: "What's in a name?" the star-crossed Juliet remarks in
    Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet." "That which we call a rose by any
    other name would smell as sweet."

    The art fair formerly known as MENASAART (Middle East North Africa
    South Asia ART) appears to have taken this sentiment to heart. For its
    third go-round, the event will go by the moniker Beirut Art Fair
    (BAF).

    "The identity of Beirut Art Fair is already attached to the city where
    it takes place, Beirut, the millenary crossroads of all
    civilizations," BAF art director Pascal Odille said in a recent press
    release. "This is why we changed its name ... It is indeed a 'fair
    destination,' which couldn't take place in any other city."

    In person, Odille gives a somewhat simpler explanation. "When we used
    to say MENASAART it was a bit complicated to explain," he admits. "And
    afterward they didn't know where it was. This ... is Beirut Art Fair."

    The name change heralds several other, perhaps more significant,
    changes to the yearly event. The number of galleries participating has
    almost doubled, increasing from 25 in 2011 to just over 40 this year.
    Among these are seven European galleries representing artists from the
    MENASA region.

    "When we started MENASAART we were really attached to this geographic
    point," says Odille, "territories coming from Morocco, going through
    the Middle East and finishing with Indonesia."

    It seems this geographical focus is becoming broader. This year Sudan
    has been added to "North Africa," and Vietnam added to "South Asia" -
    contradicting the U.N.'s classification of the region.

    BAF doesn't consider Armenia to be part of MENASA, meaning that only
    Armenia artists with Lebanese citizenship can exhibit at the fair.
    This seems an odd decision, given Lebanon's reputation as a center for
    Armenian art and the support afforded Lebanese artists by the
    Boghossain Foundation - the Belgium-based Lebanese-Armenian foundation
    which aims to build East-West cultural links.

    Though BAF considers Turkey part of the Middle East, Armenia - a
    Caucasian state conventionally considered "Asian" - is designated part
    of modern Europe.

    "We must be attached to contemporary geography," explains Odille. "We
    don't draw the map. We don't take the decision to change the place of
    a country. We cannot do it. It's not our fault."

    That said, rules, it seems, can be bent when useful. A recent addition
    to this year's BAF, finalized in June, is the Portuguese Galeria
    Cordeiros. An exception has been made for the gallery (which will
    represent work by non-MENASA artists), Odille admits, because they
    agreed to exhibit a rare 1980s portrait by Andy Warhol.

    "She's coming with more important modern, contemporary, international
    art," says Odille. "For the first time in Lebanon you will have
    exceptional painting by Miquel Barcel? and a beautiful portrait by
    Warhol ... Not a Mao or not a Marilyn - a beautiful portrait.

    "We wanted to be sure that the gallery came with this specific piece,"
    he continues. "This will give [BAF] a more international ... feel, and
    say to people outside that something really happens in Lebanon.
    Because when a gallery like this takes the risk to come to Beirut to
    show a masterpiece - that is absolutely exceptional, it means that
    everybody believes that Beirut is really the place for art."

    BAF has also expanded its definition of what constitutes art. For the
    first time design galleries are invited to participate in the four-day
    event - this is not to be confused with Beirut Design Week (25-30
    June), which represents itself as a completely different event.

    The Tunisian Musk and Amber lifestyle concept store is as yet the only
    international design entity attending. It will be accompanied by eight
    Lebanese design galleries, among them the SMO Gallery and the Carwan
    Gallery, both of which participated in Design Days Dubai - which ran
    in parallel with ArtDubai last March.

    Odille stresses that BAF remains an art fair, not an art-and-design fair.

    "Design is art," he posits. "There is no question about it. A good
    designer is a good artist ... A great design is a sculpture, but you
    can live with it and use it."

    Though design pieces typically fetch less than artworks, he stresses
    that they will be featuring mainly limited-edition designs.

    "What is happening now in Beirut is really exceptional," he says. "You
    have really young and great designers with beautiful work that you
    cannot find everywhere - or anywhere really."

    A series of "roundtable" talks will be held to discuss issues relating
    to contemporary art production and dissemination. The formula echoes
    that of ArtDubai's Global Art Forum, but Odille says they will have a
    more practical outlook.

    "These are talks with real and important questions about the situation
    for the artists, about creation, about what is the foundation," he
    explains, "with very specific points and very important people ... We
    want talks, but not ... just to talk. We want proposals ... We want
    answers. We try to have a result."

    BAF will also have a "non-profit" section, "The Cultural Journey
    Program," which this year focuses on non-traditional contemporary art
    forms such as comics, graffiti and VJ-ing (live audio-visual
    manipulation).

    "In Europe, comics are a real art market, [but] not in the Arab
    world," says Odille. "For the moment they don't have the feeling that
    comics [are] art. Why? I don't understand ... Comics are a possibility
    for artists to express themselves on different subjects - political
    and social ... So comics had exactly the same evolution as the rest of
    the art. That's why we want to show original drawings."

    "For the street art," he continues, "I'm not interested in graffiti on
    canvas. Street art must stay in the street ... That's why we decided
    to do a retrospective of the last five years' more beautiful graffs
    [in] photographs. Outside you will have a wall, four meters long, with
    a collective of three young Lebanese artists [who will] work on it.
    And every night you will have a VJ ... to make people understand that
    creation can be inside, in the street. It can be attached to music.
    There's a lot of connections," he adds.

    Also new for 2012 is the first Byblos Bank Award for Lebanese
    photography, which will become a yearly fixture. The bank will select
    40 young photographers, 15 of whom will be exhibited at BAF. The
    winner, to be announced on the final day of the fair, will have a solo
    exhibition in the bank headquarters, and their work published in a
    catalogue.

    This year's Beirut Art Fair promises to be bigger and bolder than its
    previous incarnations, with more galleries, a new design element and a
    more varied program. As the team cements their direction, this year's
    BAF will suggest something of the fair's future shape.

    The 2012 Beirut Art Fair takes place at the Beirut Exhibition Center
    from July 5-8. For more information please see
    http://www.menasart-fair.com/.

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