Kuwait Times

To reclaim Baghdad, Iraqi artists grapple with ghosts

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Dressed in a multi-coloured beanie and grey sneakers, Zaid Saad had just finished setting up his contempora­ry art exhibit on Baghdad’s sandy riverbank when police showed up. The piece was part of a two-day walking tour of Iraq’s capital, an effort by young artists to address social dilemmas and reclaim Baghdad’s identity after more than a decade of violence. But at virtually every turn, organizers came up against some of the very stereotype­s they sought to break down, from blast walls to jumpy security guards and skeptical members of Iraq’s conservati­ve society.

Saad’s art, for example, was set up in a highlysens­itive area: directly across the Tigris River from Baghdad’s Green Zone, the walled-off enclave housing parliament, other government offices, and numerous embassies. Police officers arrived as he was preparing to unveil his work, leading to a flurry of phone calls and handwritte­n authorizat­ions before Saad was finally able to introduce the piece to an audience of around two dozen. “Sanduq” or “Crate” in Arabic brought together 11 cardboard boxes, each representi­ng an Iraqi who risked the sea route to Europe. A radio nearby blared testimonie­s of relatives or friends who wished them well.

“I want to deliver the message that we should stay here. We should build our country first, and then go to other places,” Saad, 27, told AFP. “They left because of the pressures and everything that happened here, which turned Iraq into an unlivable country. The main reason is the government present in the Green Zone,” he said.

‘Better than nothing’

Art, he insisted, could be a way to address the toughest challenges facing Iraq today: waves of emigration, the aftermath of the Islamic State group, poverty and pollution. “Iraqi society has gotten used to all forms of demonstrat­ions and protest. It wants something new,” said Saad, a member of Iraqi art collective Tarkib. “Art, especially contempora­ry art, is new here. So it’ll have an effect,” he added. Iraq has been rocked by waves of instabilit­y, from the 2003 US-led invasion to years of sectarian violence and bombings, to the three-year war against IS that ended last year. Those 15 years have scarred the capital, with many streets sealed off by police and blast walls surroundin­g any building deemed to be a possible target. One segment of the “Baghdad Walk” ran parallel to a stretch of protective concrete T-walls separating a bustling open-air market from a public bank. Hussein Matar, the stocky photograph­er leading this portion of the stroll, was unphased.”Everything negative in the city is just skin-deep. We can change it,” he told AFP.

Matar had shot new versions of decades-old photograph­s of Baghdad’s heralded past, hanging the paired pictures on the dilapidate­d classical Iraqi homes of Rasheed Street. Despite his optimism, most of Baghdad’s heritage has been permanentl­y “disfigured,” warned Caecilia Pieri, associate researcher at the French Institute of the Near East. And initiative­s like the walk, while an improvemen­t, were only reaching a small segment of Iraqi society. “There are more cafes with young people, more creative initiative­s, but it is in the restricted realm of educated urban bourgeoisi­e,” said Pieri, a specialist in Iraq’s modern urban history. “It’s better than nothing, but not enough to irrigate the whole society.”

History ‘stronger than art’

Indeed, the scrums of shoppers along Rasheed were more interested in the tables of watches, shimmering carp, and fake Adidas than the public art exhibit. “Are you Iraqi?” one asked the walkers, as puzzled passersby looked on. As the sun set on Baghdad’s Tahrir (Liberation) Square, artist Luay Al-Hadari erected his contributi­on: a pink statue of a woman with snapped chains dangling from each wrist. Draped in a plastic sheet modeled after a traditiona­l robe, the figure represente­d women IS had abducted and sexually exploited during its reign over parts of Iraq. “I cut the chain, her hands are up in the airthere’s hope in the piece,” said Hadari, who told AFP he chose Tahrir Square because the artwork was about liberation.

Hours earlier, he had to make last-minute adjustment­s to the statue’s makeshift robe to cover more of her body. “Most people won’t understand the concept and will consider it nudity,” Hadari said in a nod to Iraq’s conservati­sm. Ali Amer, a 34-year-old engineer attending the walk, said the onus was on Iraqi society itself. “Our city’s filthy? We’re the ones who dirtied it. It isn’t safe? We’re creating the problems,” he told AFP. “Today was an attempt to solve these problems, that’s why I wanted to take part.” Abu Adhraa AlRubaye, a burly man selling phone accessorie­s near one of the art installati­ons, was less sure. “We grew up on violence. There’s no hope it’ll change through art,” he said. “War, after war, after war-history is stronger than art.” — AFP

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 ??  ?? An artist practices at the AbuNuwas Theatre that was destroyed in 2003 during the war in the Iraqi capital Baghdad. — AFP photos
An artist practices at the AbuNuwas Theatre that was destroyed in 2003 during the war in the Iraqi capital Baghdad. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Artists practice at the Abu Nuwas Theatre that was destroyed in 2003 during the war in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
Artists practice at the Abu Nuwas Theatre that was destroyed in 2003 during the war in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
 ??  ?? Artists practice at the Abu Nuwas Theatre that was destroyed in 2003 during the war in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
Artists practice at the Abu Nuwas Theatre that was destroyed in 2003 during the war in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
 ??  ?? Zaid Saad (center) talks to spectators in the Iraqi capital Baghdad after a contempora­ry art exhibit on the banks of the Tigris River.
Zaid Saad (center) talks to spectators in the Iraqi capital Baghdad after a contempora­ry art exhibit on the banks of the Tigris River.
 ??  ?? Zaid Saad talks to a reporter in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
Zaid Saad talks to a reporter in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.

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