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▶ Arts & Lifestyle,

- Alexandra Chaves

Beirut’s art galleries and museums are among the spaces that were heavily damaged after an explosion ripped through the city on Tuesday. Over recent decades, the city’s art scene has had to thrive on its own, with little cultural funding from the government. The economic crisis and now this devastatio­n have crippled gallerists and artists.

“It’s a tragedy. I was at the gallery at the time and everything just burst,” says Beatrice Safieddine, director of Mark Hachem Gallery. “All the windows and doors are broken, and some of the artworks have been affected as well. We were hiding in the kitchen. It was horrible.” She says no one in the gallery was severely injured.

“Now we are trying to clean the aftermath and organise ... I don’t want to say ‘get back to normal life’ because nothing is normal after this. It cannot be, given the tragedy of the death of so many people, but we try to keep on going,” she says.

Sfeir-Semler Gallery also suffered material damage, with its glass windows shattered and wall panels ripped off from the impact of the explosion. “Our team is safe and sound,” the gallery said in a statement. “Our hearts are full of sorrow and we mourn for Beirut.”

The gallery, which also has an outpost in Hamburg, Germany, represents establishe­d artists such as Etel Adnan and Yto Barrada.

The contempora­ry gallery Marfa (the name of which translates to port because it is in the vicinity) shared photos of its premises and artworks that are almost completely destroyed. Founded in 2015, Marfa is a non-profit gallery that works to help Lebanese artists build internatio­nal connection­s.

The Sursock Museum was also damaged. Its director, Zeina Arida, has said the cost of repairs is likely to fall into the millions of dollars, and that the space will take years to rebuild. While no staff injuries were recorded, a number of artworks were affected. In a statement on Instagram, the museum said that the space has been “severely damaged” and the team are still “in shock” following the explosion.

“Our thoughts and prayers go to the families of the victims, the missing and the wounded,” the statement reads.

“Although the museum was damaged severely, thankfully, and most importantl­y, our staff and visitors at the time of the blast are all safe.”

The Art Newspaper reported that an employee of Saleh Barakat Gallery is currently in intensive care and Galerie Tanit and Opera Gallery in Beirut were destroyed.

Artlab, which focuses on up-and-coming artists, told Art

Net website that reopening may not be an option because of the cost of repairs and Lebanon’s economic woes.

For artist Nadim Karam, whose large-scale sculptures have filled Beirut’s streets and public spaces, the incident has caused “disarray and confusion”.

“We are still wondering what happened to us,” he tells

The National. He opened his studio, A.MUSE.UM, to the public last year. Attached to his residence, it is where he houses his artworks for people to see. He says the main entrance doors of his apartment were blown off and the streets outside of his building are filled with broken glass and parts of people’s homes.

He highlighte­d the anger felt about Lebanon after what many see as negligence on the part of officials who have known about the explosive material for six years.

“[This is] total devastatio­n, much beyond wars, with which we are ‘familiar’. This is an exceptiona­l proof of corruption, negligence and rottenness of the Lebanese sociopolit­ical system,” Karam says.

Although his family is safe, he says he knows nearly 10 people who died in the incident, and he worries the death toll could continue to rise. “We are trying to put things back together, at least as much as we can.”

He sees the explosion – which is the latest in a list of problems that have confronted Lebanon over years – as a turning point for the country.

“Something like this can put a nation at a loss and create a feeling of defeat, or it can have the effect of creating a bigger counterbla­st: a huge fresh energy that permeates into the system and into each of us,” he says. “It can elevate us to a state of creative resistance larger than life itself – the more they destroy, the more we create.”

Art galleries and museums are among the spaces heavily damaged by the explosions

 ?? Sfeir-Semler ?? Sfeir-Semler Gallery’s windows were shattered and wall panels ripped off by the explosions
Sfeir-Semler Sfeir-Semler Gallery’s windows were shattered and wall panels ripped off by the explosions

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