The Star Malaysia - Star2

Cube of hope

Modern art, antiques on show at Lebanon cube museum.

-

At a new private museum in Lebanon, a contempora­ry sculpture of a mortar missile is displayed alongside millennia-old statues retrieved from the bottom of the sea.

Named after the Mesopotami­an god of wisdom, the Nabu Museum opened in late September to showcase the cultural wealth of an ancient region devastated by conflict.

Its inaugural exhibition includes 60 contempora­ry works, as well as around 400 antiquitie­s from Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, Egypt and Yemen.

“We have a more or less complete picture of what was once the cradle of civilisati­on,” says French curator Pascal Odille.

Next to a private beach in the village of El-Heri in Lebanon’s north, the museum’s collection sits in an impressive futuristic cube of steel, coated with a rusty orange patina.

A tall glass opening in the metal and concrete structure provides a view straight through the museum’s interior and out to the sea.

Designed by Iraqi artists, the museum for the first time opens up the private art and antiquitie­s collection­s of wealthy businessme­n to the public for free.

Drawn from the homes and warehouses of its patrons, the exhibits are displayed on two floors, floodlit by the sunlight streaming through the tall windows.

there are ushabti from Ancient Egypt, finely carved turquoise figurines traditiona­lly placed in coffins to ensure passage to the afterlife.

Nearby, a contempora­ry sculpture of a mortar missile by Lebanese artist Katya traboulsi is adorned with hieroglyph­s.

the artwork is topped by a sculpted bust of the ancient Egyptian god of the sky, Horus, instead of a warhead.

Visitors can see Lebanese artist Saliba Douaihy’s abstract landscape paintings, one largely red, the other bright blue.

But they can also admire terracotta statues harking back to the Phoenician period found during marine excavation­s off the southern coast of Lebanon.

“You can see the seashell and limescale deposits on them,” says Odille, of the figures from the sixth or seventh century BCE.

the museum’s founders – two Lebanese and a Syrian – want it to be a beacon of hope in a region scarred by conflict and the brutality of jihadists.

“Nabu is the god of writing and wisdom. Not the god of war,” says Lebanese cofounder Jawad Adra.

“We’re a ray of optimism in this region, amid all this obscurity,” says the 64-year-old, whose colourful, modern-art inspired tie contrasts with his grey suit.

the project cost US$7mil (RM29mil), the organisers say.

But the works on show only represent a fraction of its founders’ private collection­s, and there are plans to switch the exhibits every few months.

Adra’s personal collection includes 2,000 items from the Levant and Mesopotami­a regions, according to the exhibition’s catalogue.

the businessma­n says his hobby dates back to his childhood. “I’ve been collecting stamps and coins since I was 10,” says Adra, who now heads a Beirut-based polling company and owns quality control labs in the Gulf.

He says it is time to give back.

to set up the museum, he banded together with Syrian business partner Fida Jdeed, and fellow Lebanese entreprene­ur Badr El-Hage, who runs a rare book firm in London. “We’ve all reached an age where we’re starting to ask ourselves,‘What have you done? What have you given your country?’,” he says.

Lebanon’s interior minister recently attended an evening inaugurati­on ceremony at the Nabu Museum.

In Lebanon, a 2016 law demands all priowners vate of antiquitie­s register their items with the ministry as part of its efforts to combat illegal traffickin­g.

Adra says that “a large part” of his collechas tion been declared to the authoritie­s, and he is registerin­g the rest.

In recent years, part of the region’s cultural heritage has been damaged, destroyed or looted by armed groups including jihadists.

the Islamic State group in particular swept across large parts of Syria and neighbouri­ng Iraq in 2014, wrecking countless historical sites in territory it controlled.

Mahmud Al-Obaidi, who designed the museum building with fellow Iraqi artist Dia Azzawi, sees the project as compensati­on for years of loss.

“I feel this place is payback for everything that has been destroyed,” says the 53-yearold, who left Iraq in 1991 for Canada.

With government­s in the region busy battling troubled economies and poverty, personal initiative­s are key to preserving culture, he says.

“Our states don’t take culture seriously,” says the artist, dressed in a light blue linen shirt and dark blue jacket, whose work is on show inside the museum.

Yet, passing civilisati­ons live on in their art, Obaidi says.

“they don’t realise that everything fades away, but it’s the books, paintings and antiquitie­s that remain,” he adds. – AFP

 ??  ?? A view of of the museum from the inside overlookin­g the Mediterran­ean Sea. This is the first time the private art and antiquitie­s collection­s of wealthy businessme­n have been accessible for viewing by the public for free. Nabu Museum, in Lebanon’s el-Heri village, north of Beirut, is a new private museum. It is named after the Mesopotami­an god of wisdom. — Photos: AFP
A view of of the museum from the inside overlookin­g the Mediterran­ean Sea. This is the first time the private art and antiquitie­s collection­s of wealthy businessme­n have been accessible for viewing by the public for free. Nabu Museum, in Lebanon’s el-Heri village, north of Beirut, is a new private museum. It is named after the Mesopotami­an god of wisdom. — Photos: AFP
 ??  ?? A clay cone bearing Mesopotami­an writing on exhibit at the Nabu Museum. The museum’s founders hope it will be a beacon of hope in a region marked by decades of conflict.
A clay cone bearing Mesopotami­an writing on exhibit at the Nabu Museum. The museum’s founders hope it will be a beacon of hope in a region marked by decades of conflict.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia