The Sun (Malaysia)

Afghan art gallery creates jobs, hope

- IN

a small art gallery in the Afghan capital, Marzia Panahi watches as one of the young artists she has just e mpl o y e d applies paint to a framed felt canvas propped up against a easel. Panahi, 21, set up the Namad Gallery at the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic in September.

Her aim was to revive the use of felt in art, to showcase her war-torn country’s creativity and to try to create jobs for young people hit hard by the pandemic and the economic crisis it has caused.

“When Covid-19 cases increased in Afghanista­n, I saw how unemployme­nt was getting higher, and when we realised how deadly poverty can be ... I put together a team of young people so that we could at least be useful to ourselves and those around us,” she said.

The internatio­nal relations student’s company now employs 10 people, including three artists, and sells paintings to local art lovers for between US$100 (RM407) and US$200 (RM814.50) each.

Afghanista­n, where more than 60% of the population is below the age of 25, has struggled with high youth unemployme­nt.

The pandemic has exacerbate­d its economic problems, with the World Bank predicting that more than 70% of the population will slip beneath the poverty line in 2020.

In addition to generating jobs, Panahi said she wanted to find a way of reintroduc­ing felt to traditiona­l arts and crafts in Afghanista­n. Historical­ly it had been produced to make carpets, she said, but in recent years its use had declined.

“Because people have turned to a more modern life and are no longer buyers of felt products, we wanted to make it possible to reuse felt in a variety of ways,” she explained.

Faiqa Sultani, a 27-year old artist, said she had initially felt depressed due to the lockdown and lack of opportunit­ies, but since joining Namad her mood had improved.

“When I paint, it is a kind of expression of my feelings on canvas, paper, or felt that I enjoy,” she said.

“Painting on felt means that we can revive the old traditions and show people that we can use our Afghan resources and make our lives more beautiful.” – Reuters

 ??  ?? Sultani at the Namad Gallery in Kabul, Afghanista­n on Nov 9.
Sultani at the Namad Gallery in Kabul, Afghanista­n on Nov 9.

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