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Lebanese artist turns blast-damaged curtains from Beirut into community symbol of collective healing

▶ To create his new installati­on, Jad El Khoury offered residents new drapes in exchange, writes Maghie Ghali

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Lebanese artist Jad El Khoury is known for recontexua­lising abandoned buildings or architectu­re bearing the scars of past tragedies. In his latest work he presents the stories of the residents themselves, who are integral to his architectu­re-driven artistic creations.

Soft Shields, an immersive installati­on at Beirut’s Galerie Tanit, is the culminatio­n of months of field research in the areas most affected by the 2020 Beirut blast. The show weaves together the stories and testimonie­s of 13 survivors from different walks of life. They all had one thing in common – tattered balcony curtains.

Wandering the streets of city neighbourh­oods Bourj Hammoud and Karantina, the artist sought out homes and businesses with the area’s famous striped and colourful balcony curtains that were ripped and torn – remnants of the blast. Offering to replace them with new drapes, the old curtains have now become the centrepiec­e of his installati­on, acting as a common thread between the stories of their former owners.

“I’m using the curtains as a symbol and a metaphor of the social fabric of Beirut,” El Khoury tells The National. “I asked them if they wanted their curtains replaced and I was making sure they knew I’m not a charity. It’s a mutual interest. They get to have a new curtain and I get to use the old curtains for the gallery exhibition. These curtains were the first step, opening for me encounters with the people living in that house or shop. It’s relational art and it’s socially engaging, participat­ory work.

“The curtains led to the stories of the people they belonged to – mainly about the port blast, where they were at the time, how it affected them and how they deal with the aftermath today.”

El Khoury started his career by transformi­ng Civil Warera bullet holes and shell damage on Beirut’s buildings into urban graffiti works enveloping the ruined shapes. Working with fabrics then quickly became an integral part of Khoury’s practice – in this case drawn to the reversal of what was once a protective fabric now a visual reminder of violence.

He gained internatio­nal acclaim for this 2018 Burj El Hawa project, for which the artist transforme­d the abandoned and incomplete Burj El Murr into a choreograp­hed installati­on of balcony curtains hung on 400 windows dancing with the wind and giving life to the derelict building.

After installing it on the tower, he was awarded the Venice’s Arte Laguna Prize and was then commission­ed to create similar projects on abandoned buildings in Sicily, Corsica, Dunkirk, Stavanger and other locations. El Khoury also utilised Beirut curtains in his graduation project Healing Blanket (2022), graduating with a masters degree in art and public space from Oslo National Academy of the Arts.

In Soft Shields, 42 old curtains were cleaned and patchwork stitched together to create several banner-like drapes that hung from the gallery ceiling, creating an installati­on that viewers are invited to walk through and immerse themselves in.

“There’s also the metaphor of the ruined curtains that have no value, suddenly, when you put them in this white cube setting, everything transforms and you’re questionin­g what is valuable,” he notes.

El Khoury says that stitching the curtains together alludes to overcoming a lack of connection between people in a community. In relation to the aftermath of the explosion, many stories were born from people coming together to clean the streets, fix houses and share their trauma to help move forward. “The curtains are the centrepiec­e, but around that is the documentat­ion of the whole process. I think the actual art is the field research, the work that we did replacing people’s curtains, and all the encounters and stories I collected,” he says. “There are photograph­s by Sara Guldmyr, who joined me and documented the process. We printed photograph­s and projection­s with more pictures from the protests, and a map that shows the locations of where the interventi­ons happened.

“There was a guy who fixes cars, a guy who sells manakish and a woman who is a naturally good storytelle­r and has a lot of character,” he adds. “She starts telling her stories and her husband plays guitar and classical music like Tchaikovsk­y and Bach. It’s like finding gems in the city, all these people with amazing stories and background­s, who you would never have known.”

Shortly after the exhibit opened, El Khoury organised a walking tour for 10 people to see the interventi­on sites and meet two of the participan­ts. Rather than just play the recorded interviews at the gallery, he felt it was more authentic to allow people to hear the stories first-hand, as they all lived near the gallery.

“One of them, Iskandar Dagher, is a poet. He’s an old guy, 80-something [years old], living with his sister who’s also 80-something, and when I asked him where he was when the explosion happened, he started reading poems that he’d written about the event, and about the people who helped him the second day to fix his house,” El Khoury says. “That home visit during the walk with participan­ts was so moving.

“I learnt later that four of the visitors have organised themselves to visit him again, and to try to sponsor or find a way to publish his poetry in a book,” he adds. “It’s so touching that the project is continuing by itself, after my interventi­on. I couldn’t have hoped for more than that.”

The participan­ts of the walk have formed a social group with the home and business owners, which for El Khoury is one of the underlying aims of the project. The support and healing offered by speaking about traumatic events, and creating a positive outcome from tragic beginnings, is an essential part of this artistic process.

While not yet confirmed, he hopes to plan more walking tours for the exhibition, allowing more people to get to know the participan­ts first-hand and widening the support circle.

It’s so touching the project is continuing by itself, after my interventi­on. I couldn’t have hoped for more JAD EL KHOURY

Artist

Soft Shields is on show at Galerie Tanit, Mar Mikhael, Beirut, until December 29

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 ?? Photos: Sara Guldmy ?? The Soft Shields project weaves together stories and testimonie­s from 13 survivors of the 2020 Beirut blast. They all had one thing in common – tattered balcony curtains
Photos: Sara Guldmy The Soft Shields project weaves together stories and testimonie­s from 13 survivors of the 2020 Beirut blast. They all had one thing in common – tattered balcony curtains
 ?? ?? A closer look at the stitched curtains forming part of Jad El Khoury’s work. His Soft Shields exhibit is on show in Beirut
A closer look at the stitched curtains forming part of Jad El Khoury’s work. His Soft Shields exhibit is on show in Beirut

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