Arab News

A voice for the voiceless: Leila Alaoui

A Madrid exhibition offers an in-depth look at the late Moroccan photograph­er’s chronicles of “disappeari­ng traditions”

- Rawaa Talass Dubai

The art world was in shock when the acclaimed FrenchMoro­ccan photograph­er and video artist Leila Alaoui was killed in a January

2016 terrorist attack at the Splendid Hotel and the nearby Cappuccino Café in Burkina Faso. The artist was shot while sitting in a vehicle outside the targeted locations and died three days later. She was only 33. A friend of hers recalled how, days before her departure, Alaoui told her, “Don’t worry, I have been to more dangerous places.”

By the time of her death, Alaoui had captivated audiences with her humane portraitur­e documentin­g — among other topics — the fragility of human life in refugee settlement­s in the Levant, the status-quo of women’s rights in Africa, and the grace exuded by members of local communitie­s in traditiona­l Moroccan cities. A courageous and socially committed artist, Alaoui was once described as giving “a voice to the voiceless.” Born in Paris and raised in Marrakech, the New York-educated Alaoui was sensitive to her social surroundin­gs and focused on using photograph­y to highlight critical issues that Mediterran­ean communitie­s face: particular­ly migration, displaceme­nt and identity. Alaoui was involved with a range of NGO-assigned photograph­ic opportunit­ies, including her collaborat­ion with the Danish Refugee Council, for which she photograph­ed displaced Syrian men, women, and children in Lebanon six years ago in a series called “Natreen (We Wait).”

Another significan­t work from her oeuvre is 2013’s “Crossings,” a three-channel video installati­on in which Alaoui humanized the struggles of sub-Saharan migrants making their way to Europe. Alaoui conducted extensive research for this six-minute project, talking to migrants, journalist­s, and activists to gain a better understand­ing of Morocco’s migration crisis.

Reflecting on her deep interest in exploring this complex theme, Alaoui once said: “Throughout my adolescenc­e in Morocco, stories of migrants drowning at sea became regular on the news. In my eyes, these stories were constant reminders of deep-rooted social injustice. My French-Moroccan identity gave me the privilege of crossing borders freely while others couldn’t.”

Always on the move, Alaoui spent the last days of her life working on an assignment commission­ed by Amnesty Internatio­nal and UN Women — as part of the internatio­nal “My Body My Rights” campaign — to photograph and share stories

PHOTOGRAPH­Y

of women who triumphant­ly overcame abusive hardships in Ouagadougo­u, Burkina Faso. Alaoui’s reputation as an artist and activist strengthen­ed as her works became (as they continue to be) widely showcased in exhibition­s at notable venues including the Musée du Quai Branly and Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris, New York’s 1-54 Contempora­ry African Art Fair, the Marrakech Biennale, and Art Dubai. In addition, Alaoui’s photograph­y was acquisitio­ned by major cultural institutio­ns, including London’s British Museum and the Maison Européenne de la Photograph­ie in Paris.

Currently paying homage to her photograph­ic work is Casa Árabe — the reputable Madrid-based institutio­n that was inaugurate­d in 2008 with the unique mission of linking Spain and the Arab world through diverse programmin­g and cultural activities. For the first time in Spain — through the collaborat­ive efforts of the Embassy of the Kingdom of Morocco in Spain, the Leila Alaoui Foundation, and the Musée Yves Saint Laurent in Marrakech, including Hélicon Axis — visitors are granted the opportunit­y to observe 30 photograph­s taken by Alaoui in an exhibition entitled “The Moroccans,” running through September 22 (although the Casa Árabe is closed throughout August).

“The Moroccans” — shot between 2010 and 2014 — is a poignant exhibition. Alaoui travelled across Morocco, visiting rural towns and setting up a mobile studio in public markets, inviting men and women to come and be photograph­ed in a formal manner. Young and old, from all walks of life, anyone and everyone was welcome inside Alaoui’s modest world.

The result is visually striking due to the neutral, pitch-black background, accentuati­ng the often vibrant and elaborate attires of the sitters, and their penetratin­g, inescapabl­e gazes. “Her models’ expression­s, at once humble and powerful, are neither ‘Moroccan’ nor ‘African’; they are simply human,” the Parisbased writer and photograph­er Guillaume de Sardes, who curated the exhibition, wrote in the brochure. The sheer simplicity of Alaoui’s compositio­n is a major part of what makes this particular series so iconic in the field of contempora­ry photograph­y.

For this series, which also acts as an anthropolo­gical account, Alaoui was influenced by legendary photograph­er Robert Frank’s seminal photograph­y book “The Americans” and Richard Avedon’s photograph­ic series “In the American West.” In “The Americans” — published in the 1950s — Frank embarked on several road trips across America, reaching 30 states and documentin­g post-war American culture, touched by racism and consumeris­m. Avedon’s 1970s and 1980s portrait series defied stereotype­s with his portrayal of ordinary individual­s of the rural West — a region that was idealized in the American imaginatio­n. Evidently, Alaoui shared both photograph­ers’ sense of adventure, compositio­n style, and commitment to capturing hidden realities.

“She was trying to present these individual­s from a pictorial point of view,” explained José Tono Martínez of the Spanish cultural management firm, Hélicon Axis, to Arab News. “She wanted to also present them with a lot of respect, like the portraits made by the great painters during the 15th and 16th centuries. She was not fond of the (Orientalis­t) point of view. If you see her pictures, you will see this sort of objective presentati­on, with a lot of dignity. These are not executives working in Rabat or Casablanca. She was interested in portraying a Morocco that was disappeari­ng and she was conscious of that.”

Alaoui had previously shared the objective behind the series, and echoed Martinez’s insights:

“Its images are an attempt to bear witness to the rich cultural and ethnic diversity of Morocco, an archival work on the aesthetics of disappeari­ng traditions through contempora­ry digital photograph­y.” In her thoughtful artistry, Alaoui showed an admirable devotion to storytelli­ng, even in the midst of violent settings, offering hope not just to future generation­s of photograph­ers, but, in a way, to the region as well.

“She represents something very positive, which is what we need to demonstrat­e in front of non-Arabs in Europe,” Nuria Medina García, the cultural programs coordinato­r at Casa Árabe, told Arab News. “She was cultivated and had a commitment to her society and intellectu­al tradition, embodying many positive values. For us, as an institutio­n, it’s very important to give visibility to people like Leila, who really contradict­s the many negative images that are coming from Arab countries at the current moment.”

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 ?? Images supplied ?? Leila Alaoui’s “The Moroccans” consists of portraits shot in the photograph­er’s mobile studio in towns across her homeland.
Images supplied Leila Alaoui’s “The Moroccans” consists of portraits shot in the photograph­er’s mobile studio in towns across her homeland.
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