Gulf Today

From Casablanca to Khaleej: SAF show fastens Maghreb to the Gulf

- Muhammad Yusuf, Features Writer

SHARJAH: Sharjah Art Foundation (SAF) is currently presenting the exhibition Casablanca Art School: Plaforms and Paterns for a Postcoloni­al Avant-garde 1962–1987, co-organised with Tate St Ives (Feb. 24 - June 16). On display at Al Hamriyah Studios and Old Al Diwan Al Amiri, Al Hamriyah, Sharjah, it features works that transforme­d Morocco’s visual culture in the 1960s and 1970s. Following its show at Tate St Ives, Casablanca is the first major museum exhibition of works of the eponymous School. In the exhilarati­on following Moroccan independen­ce in 1956, staff and students at the Casablanca Art School (CAS) instigated an artistic revolution. They integrated abstract art with African and Amazigh traditions, taking inspiratio­n from the region’s rugs, jewellery, calligraph­y and painted ceilings. (Berbers or the Berber peoples, also called by their contempora­ry self-name Amazigh or Imazighen, are a diverse grouping of distinct ethnic groups indigenous to North Africa).

Drawing on their multicultu­ral heritage, the art makers brought art into everyday life, utilising paintings, posters, magazines, outdoor murals and street festivals to do so. The Moroccan ‘new wave’ triggered a social and urban movement, eventually contributi­ng to artistic solidariti­es between Latin America, West Asia and Africa.

Casablanca explores a particular vision of modern life as seen by five influentia­l CAS artists and teachers: Farid Belkahia, Mohammed Chabaa, Bert Flint, Toni (Antonella) Maraini and Mohamed Melehi. Known informally as the Casablanca Group (or Casa Group), the legendary Moroccan art collective grew to include more members later.

The first museum exhibition at SAF of their art and legacy in the region features artworks by 21 CAS artist-activists from across generation­s. On view are abstract paintings and urban murals as well as crats, typography, graphics and interior design, displayed alongside rare print archives, vintage journals, photograph­y and film.

The artworks are divided into themes. Platform

0: Beginnings presents the emergence of the ‘Casablanca Trio’, Belkahia, Chabaa and Melehi, whose works offered an alternativ­e to state-organised exhibition­s. They empowered Moroccan artists and challenged colonial norms.

Plaform 1: Creating Collective­ly (1968) consists of collaborat­ive works, created by pioneering students under the leadership of director Belkahia and teachers including Melehi and Chabaa, that marked a transforma­tive new wave in Moroccan art.

Plaform 2: Making Art Public (1969) depicts the story behind the street exhibition Presence Plastique, initiated by CAS artists, to protest against the state-organised Salon du Printemps (spring fair) - a colonial relic that categorise­d Moroccan artists as ‘naive’ painters.

Plaform 3: Pan Arab Solidarity (1974–1979) features artworks such as the official poster design for the Internatio­nal Art Exhibition for Palestine in Beirut in 1978, demonstrat­ing collective resistance as well as fostering artistic and political solidarity across independen­t Arab nations.

Plaform 4: Open Air Museum (1978–ongoing) illustrate­s the transforma­tion of northern Morocco into an open-air museum with outdoor exhibition­s, murals and live performanc­es, as envisioned by the Cultural Moussem of Asilah festival founders Melehi and Mohamed Benaissa in 1978. Continuing to democratis­e art as part of CAS legacy, the annual event invites internatio­nal artists to bring contempora­ry arts to the community.

The exhibition also unveils three themes, namely, Patern 1: Afro-amazigh Heritage, which showcases the art school’s collaborat­ive approach under the influence of tutor Bert Flint that led to the revival of rural rugs and jewellery as teaching tools;

Patern 2: Design for Everyday which presents the integratio­n of art and crat and architectu­re by the artist students in collaborat­ion with architectu­ral studio Faraoui and de Mazieres where public art was hosted which transforme­d neglected spaces and districts; and Patern 3: Graphic Design which underscore­s how the art school leveraged graphic design as an accessible form of painting for the public, deloconisi­ng and democratis­ing Moroccan arts from 1966 to 1972.

The artworks included in the exhibition are by Carla Accardi, Malika Agueznay, Hamid Alaoui, Mohamed Ataallah, Herbert Bayer, Belkahia, Chabaa, Saad Ben Cheffaj, Ahmed Cherkaoui, Andre Elbaz, Abdellah El Hariri, Abdelkrim Ghatas, Mustapha Hafid, Anna Draus-hafid, Mohamed Hamidi, Mohammed Kacimi, Miloud Labied, Mohamed Melehi, Houssein Miloudi, Abderrahma­n Rahoule and Chaibia Tallal.

Organised by SAF and Tate St Ives in collaborat­ion with Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, the exhibition is curated by Morad Montazami and Madeleine de Colnet for Zaman Books & Curating, with Hoor Al Qasimi, SAF Director, May Alqaydi, SAF Assistant Curator and associate researcher­s Fatima-zahra Lakrissa and Maud Houssais.

The exhibition is also part of internatio­nal research into CAS initiated in 2020 by the KW Institute for Contempora­ry Art and SAF, in partnershi­p with Goethe-institut Marokko, Thinkart and Zaman Books & Curating. SAF is an advocate and producer of contempora­ry art whose initiative­s include the Sharjah Biennial, featuring contempora­ry artists from around the world; the annual March Meeting, a convening of internatio­nal arts profession­als and artists; grants and residencie­s for artists, curators and cultural producers; experiment­al commission­s and travelling exhibition­s and scholarly publicatio­ns. Opened in 1993 and expanded in 2017, Tate St Ives presents modern and contempora­ry art from the Tate collection alongside temporary exhibition­s, new commission­s, learning and research programmes. It manages the Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden, and is the only Tate gallery to have a dedicated Artist Residency programme. Tate St Ives was awarded Art Fund Museum of the Year 2018, the UK’S largest and most prestigiou­s museum award. Directed by Montazami and de Colnet, Zaman Books & Curating explores the counterhis­tories of visual modernity in the Arab, African and Asian worlds through monographs, artists’ books, thematic or collective works, and more.

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Installati­on view of artworks at the exhibition. ↑
Mohammed Chabaa’s untitled work.
↑ Installati­on view of artworks at the exhibition. ↑ Mohammed Chabaa’s untitled work.

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