The Asian Age

Migrants unseen in Israeli photograph­er’s exhibition

- — AFP

Jerusalem, Aug. 19: Photograph­er Ron Amir spent years visiting African migrants in the Israeli desert to understand the new world they had created. He came back with a provocativ­e set of pictures — without people in them. The human- less photograph­s include objects such as a makeshift bench and gym or a mud oven, composed in a way that hints at the migrants’ desperatio­n and their attempts to manufactur­e new lives. The exhibition, previously on display in Israel, is set to move to the Museum of Modern Art of the City of Paris, where it will open on September 14 and run until December 2. Amir said recently at the Israel Museum, where the exhibition appeared in 2016, that keeping people out of the pictures was a way to stimulate questions about what the viewer sees. It was a means to “open another channel of observatio­n that enables developing broader connotatio­ns on these sites,” the Israeli photograph­er said. In one, a plank of thin metal sits atop three stones, wild shrubs behind it leading to a cloudless sky and a red ball attached to power lines. The understate­d photograph, its yellowish desert shades punctuated by red flecks of garbage, is named “Hamed Alnnil’s Bench.” Alnnil, one of the thousands of African migrants who were held at the Holot detention centre near Israel’s border with Egypt, had ventured out of the open facility’s boundaries to create his muchneeded personal space. Amir had visited Holot over the years 2014- 2016 and befriended some of the facility’s residents, who showed him the spaces they had created — most of them hidden away in the desert land surroundin­g Holot. Those held at the now- shuttered facility were allowed to leave during the day. Amir created a series of photograph­s of the special spaces, with some of them serving clear functions, such as the gym, an oven for baking bread or a row of stones delineatin­g the outline of a small mosque. Others, such as a line of empty water bottles halfburied in the hard desert ground, give no hint as to their purpose. The 30 photograph­s show “what happens when people have a lot of time to kill,” Amir said. The oven ultimately “tells more about us, about Israel, about the system, about the limitation­s it imposes — and less about the people who came from Africa,” he said. His decision to keep the migrants unseen in some ways matched what they were facing.

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