The National - News

‘MY WHOLE LIFE IN THE UNITED STATES AS A PALESTINIA­N PAINTER HAS BEEN REJECTION’

▶ Veteran abstract artist Samia Halaby is fighting back after the cancellati­on of her exhibition and detects a sentiment shift among younger Americans who are following the occupied nation’s struggle, reports

- Melissa Gronlund

Samia Halaby is undaunted after the cancellati­on of her exhibition at Indiana University’s Eskenazi Museum of Art. “We put up a good fight,” says the Palestinia­n artist, 87, speaking to The National from her home in New York.

“It gives me a lot of pleasure to see that we received more than 14,000 signatures on our petition [to reinstate the show],” she adds. “And then they received a lot of pain. Phone calls, emails … every piece of press that we’ve received has been more embarrassi­ng for Indiana [University]. This show was supposed to express my love of the Midwest, but, profession­ally, it’s not the end of the world.”

The exhibition had been in the pipeline for three years, the result of a close collaborat­ion between the Halaby and curator Elliot Reichert. It was due to open on February 10, but on December 22 Halaby received a phone call and then an email from museum director David Brenneman informing her of the abrupt cancellati­on.

The museum stated publicly that the decision was made due to fears for the safety of the artworks. According to Halaby, however, Brenneman admitted it was partly due to pro-Palestinia­n content that she had posted on Instagram.

Halaby tried to convince the museum not to cancel, but to no avail. When it began returning her artworks, she responded by setting up the petition. Within 24 hours it had attracted more than 5,000 signatures. The university and its museum both received numerous calls, according to Halaby, many of them from students.

Invited to comment, Indiana University repeated its statement that “academic leaders and campus officials cancelled the exhibit due to concerns about guaranteei­ng the integrity of the exhibit for its duration”.

For Halaby, the scale of the response was a surprise – as is the sentiment shift among younger people in the US towards support for Palestine. Numerous polls show that they are now more likely to understand the occupied country’s struggle as a part of a larger battle around social justice.

“It’s a night and day change,” she says. “And it’s dividing the society. There is the higher administra­tion and government and the rest of the people. If you get TikTok or Instagram, some of the people I watch are delightful young Americans who speak about Palestine better than I do – better than most – and they are bright, clear, razor sharp and funny. They use humour as a tool and they just have me laughing and full of admiration.”

It is also a sharp turnaround from the artist’s experience in the US, where she has lived since 1951 after her family fled Palestine during the Nakba. She grew up in the Midwest, studying at the University of Cincinnati, Michigan State University and Indiana, where she stayed on to teach after her master of fine arts degree. When she left Indiana, passing up an offer of tenure, it was to teach at Yale University. There, she was the first woman to join the art department as a fulltime member of staff.

Although she has artworks in major museum collection­s, she has had few exhibition­s in the US and never achieved gallery representa­tion in New York. “My whole life in the US as a Palestinia­n artist has been rejection,” she says.

Serious interest in her work has come in recent years from institutio­ns and figures in the Arab world. The Barjeel Art Foundation has long been a supporter, and during the Covid lockdown shed light on her digital abstractio­ns, previously a little-known aspect of her work. Last year she had a major retrospect­ive at the Sharjah Art Museum and she has signed with the respected Sfeir-Semler Gallery in Beirut.

Her precise, colour-filled abstract paintings are now being understood both as part of the lineage of the Abstract Expression­ism movement in America and as politicall­y engaged work that connects with other movements abroad.

For Halaby, juxtaposit­ions of colour allow her to speak in the abstract about the relations between people, states and power in society.

The Eskenazi Museum of Art show would have contained 35 works, concentrat­ing on the period in the 1970s when she made some of her best work and stretching into the present day. It centred around three major paintings that were donated to Indiana University and express the universali­sm and dynamism that Halaby sees in political struggle.

In Worldwide Intifada (1989), separated shapes jot across the horizontal canvas, each containing abstract colours and shapes that ring out in energy.

The empty space in between the shapes is as important for Halaby as the jostling beauty of the filled sections, showing how negative space can be controlled by what is around it.

Another work inspired by Palestine that was to be in the show, Our Beautiful Land Stolen in the Night of History (2016), alludes to the country’s tawny brown earth and reflects in its aesthetic her experiment­ations in the digital realm.

The cancelled show is scheduled to be followed by a sister exhibition, Samia Halaby: Eye Witness, at the MSU Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University campus.

Curated by Rachel Winter, the show is due to go up on June 29 this year but no informatio­n has been released yet about its status.

The two organisati­ons collaborat­ed on the catalogue, which has already been produced and will be a major contributi­on to the study of Halaby’s work. “I’m pleased about it – at least something of the work and the accomplish­ment is concretize­d,” she says.

The furore over the recent cancellati­on has also been heartwarmi­ng. But Halaby reflects: “It’s really hard to know that, [despite] whatever we’re doing here – the demonstrat­ions that brave people are doing over and over again everywhere in the world – still the killing is going on.

“It’s still heartbreak­ing to see the children and the weaponisat­ion of starvation and disease. The pain keeps going.”

Bright and delightful young Americans speak online about Palestine better than I do – and better than most

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 ?? Samia Halaby ?? Our Beautiful Land Stolen in the Night of History, above, and Worldwide Intifada, left, were among the 35 works due to have been exhibited at Indiana University’s art museum
Samia Halaby Our Beautiful Land Stolen in the Night of History, above, and Worldwide Intifada, left, were among the 35 works due to have been exhibited at Indiana University’s art museum
 ?? Lara Atalla ?? Samia Halaby gathered 14,000 signatures on a protest petition after her show was cancelled
Lara Atalla Samia Halaby gathered 14,000 signatures on a protest petition after her show was cancelled

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