Arab Times

Iraqi artists pay tribute to dead protesters with sculptures

‘Exhibition is a message to the world’

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BAGHDAD, Dec 29, (AP): The sculptures carved by seven art trainees were lined up outside a makeshift workshop in Baghdad’s Tahrir Square. With them were posters depicting protesters who have been killed in anti-government demonstrat­ions in the past three months.

One sculpture showed a protester with a tear gas canister in his eye. Another showed a volunteer tuk tuk driver next to his three-wheeled vehicle who was killed while evacuating wounded protesters during clashes. A third illustrate­d a protester’s hand flashing the victory sign and colored by the Iraqi flag.

For Iraqi artist Mahdi Qarnous, 53, the exhibition that was recently inaugurate­d in Baghdad’s central Tahrir Square - the epicenter of Iraq’s antigovern­ment protest movement - is a personal contributi­on to the movement. It is aimed at immortaliz­ing fellow protesters killed and kidnapped during the demonstrat­ions that have engulfed Iraq since Oct 1.

It is also a way, he says, to allow young, talented Iraqis to channel their talents away from violence.

Iraq has been roiled by protests that have left at least 490 people dead, the vast majority of them demonstrat­ors killed by security forces firing tear gas and live ammunition. The mass uprisings prompted the resignatio­n of former Prime Minister Adel AbdulMahdi late last month.

Qarnous said he recruited seven uneducated and unemployed young protesters from Tahrir Square, put them through an intensive six-week course that he personally funded and after three

In this Dec 17 photo, young Iraqi trainees work on sculptures in preparatio­n for their upcoming art exhibition during the ongoing protests in Tahrir

Square, Baghdad, Iraq. (AP)

weeks they were able to start their own art projects.

“We see this activity as part of the ongoing protests and a memorial monument for our martyrs and our abducted fellow protesters,” he said.

Tahrir Square has emerged as a focal point of the protests, with protesters camped out in tents. Dozens of people took part in the simple opening of the sculpture exhibition on a recent day. None of the art trainees who were presenting their work attended the event, however, and their names were withheld due to security concerns.

“The current regime produced a generation that is poor in producing and cherishing arts . ... You see here in this exhibition that our people have potential but lack the path,” said Qarnous.

Murtada Muthanna, 23, an artist and activist, said the exhibition is a message to the world.

“It says we are a people with inspiratio­ns for life not death. Our revolution is peaceful and we are seeking reform not destructio­n,” he said.

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