Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Artist uses lens to challenge stereotype­s

PHOTOGRAPH­ER CHALLENGES STEREOTYPE­S WITH HER STAGED IMAGES

- By Keith Loria Keith Loria is a freelance writer.

Lalla Essaydi is an artist originally from Morocco whose experience­s have inspired her to create politicall­y astute work that deconstruc­ts and reimagines stereotype­s of Muslim womanhood.

“My work is highly autobiogra­phical,” Essaydi said. “In it, I speak my thoughts and talk directly about my experience­s as a woman and an artist, finding the language with which to speak from those uncertain zones between memory and the present, East and West.

“The models I use are often women who have had the same relation to the physical spaces as I’ve had. But we also work with younger women so that the setting becomes a platform for the creation of new memories and understand­ings.”

The Fairfield University Art Museum will showcase her work in the solo exhibition “By Design: Theater and Fashion in the Photograph­y of Lalla Essaydi,” which will highlight the artistic process behind the creation of the artist’s carefully staged photograph­s, on view between Jan. 29 and May 21.

“I hope people will be able to see that Arab women are having trouble with both worlds, Arab and Western,” Essaydi said. “The Orientalis­t narrative is being projected on them from both directions. They are either weak and in need of rescue or jezebels who need to be brought under control.

“In my photograph­s, I try to clear away these projection­s so that — here is my hope — they can be seen as the powerful presences in their own right.”

She describes her work as documentin­g her own experience growing up as an Arab woman within Islamic culture, spending her childhood and adolescenc­e in Morocco and living as an adult in Saudi Arabia for many years.

“All of it helped me gain a great understand­ing of the importance of architectu­ral space in Islamic culture,” Essaydi said. “In my photograph­y, I explore this space, whether mental or physical, and interrogat­e its role in gender identity making, while engaging with centuries of cultural heritage and artistic practices.”

Now living between New York and Morocco, Essaydi has also lived in Saudi Arabia and studied drawing and painting at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris and photograph­y at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

“Her experience­s traversing different

countries and cultures has inspired her work and have given her a unique perspectiv­e,” said Cynthia Becker, the guest curator of the exhibit.

“Also, she confronts Western stereotype­s of Muslim women and recounts her own experience­s growing up in Morocco. Her work tells a complex and nuanced story of Moroccan women’s lives.”

In total, 22 photograph­s will be in the exhibit. The artist’s work strives to break down stereotype­s that people in the United States might have about Muslim women as she confronts these stereotype­s in order to show women’s agency.

Becker noted that Essaydi is aware the complex relationsh­ip between cultures often leads to misunderst­anding and misinterpr­etation, and she confronts this idea in her photograph­y.

“This exhibition takes a unique

approach, as it highlights the design process behind the creation of Essaydi’s carefully staged photograph­s,” she said. “It specifical­ly concentrat­es on how her work crosses into theater and fashion. I also make a special effort to contextual­ize her work within Moroccan history and culture.”

For instance, in the photograph titled “Bullets #6,” she noted Essaydi crafted a richly detailed scene of highly ornate tiles, woodwork and clothing out of used bullet shells.

“In these glittering photograph­s, Essaydi comments on the violence that many in the United States and Europe associate with contempora­ry Middle Eastern and North African countries,” Becker said.

“Ironically, Essaydi transforme­d bullets into sparkling garments and intricate backdrops so that they are no longer recognizab­le as weaponry, illustrati­ng once again the tension inherent in her work that makes it so compelling.”

As an Arab artist living in the West, Essaydi noted, she has been granted an extraordin­ary perspectiv­e from which to observe both cultures, and has also been imprinted by these cultures.

“In a sense, I feel I inhabit, and perhaps even embody, a crossroads, where the cultures come together — merge, interweave and sometimes clash,” she said. “As an artist, I am inhabiting not only a geo-cultural terrain, but also an imaginativ­e one.

“This space continues to define itself, to unfold and evolve, and as an artist I feel it is my job — and my passion — to try and understand it, and to make work that flows from this continuing investigat­ion.”

Therefore, each series she does is conceived of as a book, in which the women have become pages and chapters, thus the segmentati­on of images.

“Sometimes the segmentati­on is to emphasize a particular theme, such as the presentati­on of three stages of a woman’s life, and the associatio­n of the veil with a woman’s coming of age. I have used a triptych to elongate the body so as to exaggerate the pose of a reclining figure,” she said.

As people view her work in the exhibit, Essaydi hopes they become sensitized to the voyeuristi­c, sexualized gaze of the Western Orientalis­t painters, but at the same time be enthralled with the authentic beauty of the culture these artists encountere­d in North Africa.

“Everywhere—in architectu­re, in the decorative surfaces of spaces, on furniture and women’s clothing — they found and recorded a world of exquisite beauty, quite in contrast with the drab bourgeois world these men left behind them in Europe,” she said.

“It is this beauty I wish to reclaim. But to do so is tricky because such beauty is also dangerous. It is what lures the viewer into accepting the Orientalis­t fantasies of women as sexual slaves — in harems and in the slave markets.

“My challenge has been to try to separate the beauty of the cultural surround from that of the women themselves, so seeming passive and receptive, so eerily like the furniture and the welcoming spaces.”

The exhibition will open with an online lecture by Becker on Jan. 28 and will be located in the museum’s Walsh Gallery in the Quick Center for the Arts and accessible through the museum’s website as a 3-D virtual tour as well as an audio guide.

 ?? Courtest of Lalla Essaydi and Edwynn Houk Gallery, New York / Contribute­d photo ?? Lalla Essaydi’s “Harem Revisited #31” is on display as part of the Fairfield University Art Museum’s exhibit “By Design: Theater and Fashion in the Photograph­y of Lalla Essaydi.”
Courtest of Lalla Essaydi and Edwynn Houk Gallery, New York / Contribute­d photo Lalla Essaydi’s “Harem Revisited #31” is on display as part of the Fairfield University Art Museum’s exhibit “By Design: Theater and Fashion in the Photograph­y of Lalla Essaydi.”
 ??  ?? Lalla Essaydi’s “Harem #14C” is one of 22 photos included in the exhibit.
Lalla Essaydi’s “Harem #14C” is one of 22 photos included in the exhibit.

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