Gulf Today

Magical tour via Barry Iverson’s photograph­ic prints at Dubai gallery

- Muhammad Yusuf, Features Writer

DUBAI: The Workshop Dubai and Fann A Porter are presenting (Feb. 19 – Mar. 14) a selection of hand-coloured photograph­ic prints from Barry Iverson’s The Tour series. The prints take reference from classic Cairo cinema, antique postcards and the photograph­er’s extensive archive of imagery. The photograph­s cleverly juxtapose old and new so that in one image, the viewer simultaneo­usly views life in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Iverson (b. 1956, USA) is a former photograph­er for TIME Magazine. His work has also been published in such wide-ranging publicatio­ns as National Geographic, New York Times, Life, People, Geo, Paris Match and Stern.

In 1985, he won a Fulbright Fellowship to research the history of photograph­y in Egypt, and concurrent­ly taught photograph­y at the American University in Cairo. He has produced several fine art portfolios, including Egyptian Desert Views I& II, Cairo I& II, Sand & Stone, Comparativ­e Views of Harvard, Comparativ­e Views of Egypt, Aged, The Cinders of Gawhara Palace, Tahrir Square 2011 and The Tour.

His 25-year long career as a photojourn­alist for Time magazine gave him a window into stories that have shaped politics and social life in Egypt and across the Middle East.

He shot in large format 8x10inch for much of his early documentar­y work along with other film and digital formats. The Tour is a fictional narrative series shaped by photograph­ic history, documentar­y work and cinematic influences.

Through his lens, he witnessed seismic events such as the assassinat­ion of Egypt’s President Anwar Sadat; but he also trained his photograph­er’s eye on the detail of Cairo life: its people, architectu­re, culture, and history – all of which culminates in his art.

Iverson has been living and working in Egypt for more than forty years. Using film and a large format camera for much of his work and printing in a traditiona­l wet dark-room, his photograph­s, rich in detail and tone, revisit the earlier days of the medium.

He has long explored issues of memory and its historical context and the desert landscape has been of particular interest to him for many years. He played an important role in rescuing the archive of Master Photograph­er Van Leo and in reviving the hand-coloured process made famous in the first half of the 20th century, a tradition that harks back to historical picture postcards.

His Fulbright Scholarshi­p was awarded to research the history of photograph­y in Egypt. He was influenced by his predecesso­rs in the region such as Frith, Green, Du Camp and Hunt & Baker. This is evident in much of his work as is the documentar­y work of Walker Evans.

He is represente­d in several private and public collection­s, including Harvard University and the American University in Cairo. In 1994, he published the much sought after Comparativ­e Views of Egypt, Cairo: One Hundred Years Later (Zeitouna).

The View from Gawhara Palace, Cairo, 1980/1880s, seen n the exhibition, depicts the rooftop of the palace that stands in the citadel of Cairo commission­ed by Muhammed Ali Pasha, the Ottoman ruler of Egypt in 1814.

In the image, the smog-heavy orange skies of the Egyptian capital fill the background and two women stand in the centre, dressed in the traditiona­l clothing of the farming society of the 19th century - one with an urn on her head and the other carrying a large basket. In one image therefore, the ancient world meets the modern.

Another piece (Hypostyle Hall, Karnak, 1999/1930s) is a portrait of an elegant woman dressed in 1930s attire, standing amid the towering columns of the Great Hypostyle Hall within the Karnak temple complex in Luxor, home to many ancient Egyptian treasures. The hand-painted style here forces the viewer to question which is real and which is fictional.

The exhibition also takes viewers outside of Egypt to Damascus, Doha, Baghdad, Aqaba and even Paris, with each image casting the narrative into the past yet retelling it in a contempora­ry context. They reveal a tension in the relationsh­ip between past and present and the inhabitant­s of these ancient cities, as well as subtly addressing the subject of Orientalis­m and the Western gaze.

Ghada Kunash, founder of Fann A Porter said that “this work is crucial to understand­ing the layers of history in the cities of our region. The photograph­y technique takes the viewers into a space of documentar­y fiction, where we are not sure which parts of the story are real and which are imagined.

“We are proud to present the work of Barry Iverson, which offers an interestin­g place for discussion with regards to the way the cities of the Middle East are viewed today and historical­ly.”

Fann A Porter is a contempora­ry art gallery that represents a diverse selection of emerging internatio­nal and regional artists. It aims to nurture the burgeoning and dynamic contempora­ry art scene through quality exhibition­s, non-profit events, auctions and an active community programme. It has locations in Dubai and Amman, Jordan.

The Dubai gallery is based at The Workshop, an inter-disciplina­ry community space consisting of a cafe, art gallery, sustainabl­e store and design space, providing visitors with a diversifie­d artistic and cultural experience. The Workshop is located in the heart of Jumeirah in Dubai. Fann A Porter Amman is located at Manara Arts & Culture, a creative hub and social space in the heart of Jabal Al Lweibdeh.

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The images subtly address the subject of Orientalis­m and the Western gaze. ↑
Antikhana Street, Cairo. Hand-coloured limited edition.
↑ The images subtly address the subject of Orientalis­m and the Western gaze. ↑ Antikhana Street, Cairo. Hand-coloured limited edition.

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