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‘A work of art is no less effective than a rifle’

▶ Abdul Hay Mosallam Zarara, who died aged 87, chronicled the Palestinia­n struggle, writes Melissa Gronlund

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One of the major personalit­ies of the first generation of Palestinia­n artists and activists, Abdul Hay Mosallam Zarara, died in Amman at the age of 87.

Zarara was born in the village of Al Dawayima, near Al Khalil, and was forced to leave Palestine during the Nakba in 1948.

His work unflinchin­gly responded to the Palestinia­n tragedy in acrylic reliefs that documented the suffering of the Palestinia­n people. He also created expression­s of sympathy with other liberation struggles worldwide.

“Abdul Hay depicted what he witnessed: combat, exits or defeats, the casualties of assaults or massacres; solidarity, steadfastn­ess, traditiona­l village events, dialogues between a man and his abandoned ones,” says artist Ala Younis, who worked with him to document his art from 2002.

“He believed that, as he said, ‘a work of art is no less effective than a rifle’.”

Zarara’s reliefs were built of acrylic, glue and sawdust, and then brightly painted. He was entirely self-taught, and his style was instantly recognisab­le.

His work can be broadly divided into four main subjects: the Palestinia­n resistance; internatio­nal liberation movements; Palestinia­n traditions; and a series dedicated to women as freedom fighters, wives, mothers and friends.

“One day, I saw the face of an old Palestinia­n woman on the cover of the magazine Palestine the Revolution and written beside it was the text: ‘We will not forgive’,” he recounted in an interview from 1983.

“I attempted to reproduce the old woman’s image with a paste of sawdust and glue, and it was through this experiment that I discovered the medium with which I would produce my works. Although this piece met only 20 per cent of my ambition for replicatin­g the woman’s depiction, I continued forming similar figures on small pieces of wood until I met success.”

Zarara’s body of work has an archival role, as Younis points out. “His recollecti­ons seem to derive from particular events and images of the Palestinia­n cause or heritage. Yet they are comprised of the artist’s own memories of these events – of men and women who carry his resemblanc­e, his icons of evil and peace and his own handwritin­g of others’ words.”

In his work on Palestinia­n traditions, the figures wear thobes, with the square embroidery on the women’s dresses and veils finely and brightly painted.

The reliefs depict typical Palestinia­n scenes, such as a line of men waiting to break fast during Ramadan in front of bowls of food, or men and women greeting each other during festivitie­s, with women carrying bright bundles on their heads and the men clutching prayer beads.

Other images show the violence that became a part of Palestinia­n life after the occupation, with fighters holding guns and fists aloft. His work, The Martyr Raja’a Abu Amasheh (1974) memorialis­es Raja’a Abu Amasheh, believed to be one of the first women to die for the Palestinia­n cause.

Pictured in an embroidere­d green dress, she waves a Palestinia­n flag above her head as blood drips down her face and keffiyeh scarf.

In a reminder of the mutual support and enthusiasm among solidarity movements of the 1970s and early 80s, Zarara also represente­d moments from contempora­neous civil rights struggles, such as the fight against Pinochet in Chile or against apartheid in South Africa. His Execution of the Poet Benjamin Moloise

(1985) showed the martyred South African writer hanging lifelessly as a bird.

Zarara was an active member of the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on, which he joined in the late 1960s. He lived in Libya, Beirut and Damascus, and from 1992, in Amman, where he stayed until his death.

His time in the resistance, like his memories of pre-Nakba Palestine, also furnished material for his work. For example, Exodus from Beirut

to the Sea (1984) was inspired by his own experience at the PLO headquarte­rs in Fakahani Street during the Siege of Beirut in 1982.

“When the PLO’s offices were being shelled during the siege, Abdul Hay and other artists moved as many artworks as they could in a van from the building that housed the Palestinia­n Union for Plastic Art to less-targeted locations,” says Younis.

“In August 1982, the artist left with the militants and took his works on board ships that brought fighters out of Beirut to Tunis. He depicts this trip in Exodus from Beirut to the Sea and adds to it excerpts of a poem by Mahmoud Darwish, also written on board the ships.”

His reliefs were well known in the region in the 1970s and 80s, when shows of work by Palestinia­n and PLO artists frequently travelled across the Middle East. He was included in group exhibition­s across Libya, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.

In 2011, he was given a retrospect­ive at the Jordan National Gallery of Fine Arts, and two years later at the well-regarded contempora­ry art space Darat Al Funun in Amman.

His work was also shown in the West throughout his life, though a 2014 major exhibition at the Sharjah Art Foundation can be credited with introducin­g his reliefs to a wider global audience.

His work is collected in the UAE by the Sharjah Art Foundation and the Barjeel Art Foundation. His own dream was to have a museum dedicated to his work.

“I have never sought to exhibit in order to sell,” he said in 1983. “My works are related to the Palestinia­n cause and I keep most of them. I dream of one day collecting my dispersed works related to the Palestinia­n cause in a small museum in which I can document them in my own way for future generation­s, and so that my identity can be learnt about through touring nations around the world.”

His recollecti­ons seem to derive from particular events and images of the Palestinia­n cause ALA YOUNIS Artist and curator

 ??  ?? Zarara’s work on display at the Sharjah Art Foundation in 2014
Zarara’s work on display at the Sharjah Art Foundation in 2014
 ?? Photos Sharjah Art Foundation ?? ‘The Martyr Raja’a Abu Amasheh’ (1976) by Abdul Hay Mosallam Zarara, left, shows the first woman martyr
Photos Sharjah Art Foundation ‘The Martyr Raja’a Abu Amasheh’ (1976) by Abdul Hay Mosallam Zarara, left, shows the first woman martyr
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