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Arab artists send out a message in New York

Both hope and despair have informed our historical experience and shadowed our lives

- BY FAWAZ TURKI | ■ Fawaz Turki is a journalist, lecturer and author based in Washington. He is the author of The Disinherit­ed: Journal of a Palestinia­n Exile.

Washington Square Park is wellknown to the residents of Greenwich Village, the most hip neighbourh­ood in Lower Manhattan. The park is where you go to sit on a bench and, well, watch non-conformity declare its own form of being, as folk singers jam and street performers do their thing. To add pizzazz to its reputation, the park had also served as the setting for New York native Henry James’ 1880 novel, Washington Square.

The buildings surroundin­g the park have since the turn of the last century served as houses and studios for artists, writers, musicians, poets, beatniks and other bohemian elements. The buildings themselves have always been owned by New York University (NYU). Founded in 1831, NYU, in addition to being a private research institutio­n, is a global university with degree-granting campuses outside the US, including Abu Dhabi, in the United Arab Emirates.

Our destinatio­n today, a mere one block up the street, is the Grey Art Gallery — located on campus within the Silver Centre — a fine art museum which distinguis­hes itself by emphasisin­g art’s historical, cultural and social context, and claims its mission to be “the collection, study, interpreta­tion and exhibition of evidence of human culture”. A lofty mission indeed, you will no doubt agree.

Works drawn from Barjeel Art Foundation

One could not think of a more serendipit­ous backdrop — an acclaimed park, a cool neighbourh­ood and a cosmopolit­an academic institutio­n — for the exhibition billed Taking Shape: Abstractio­n

from the Arab world, 1950s-1980s, slated to run from January 14 to April 4. On display is a collection of 90 works — all drawn from the Barjeel Art Foundation in Sharjah, UAE — featuring sundry artists from most countries in the Arab Middle East and North Africa.

There is no other way of describing these works than to say they are stunning in their originalit­y.

Though the artists’ abstractio­n here derives from calligraph­y, the Islamic world’s classical art form, it appears to depart from it, seemingly to build on it, in effect creating a new art form, one already recognised as a movement called Hurrufia, a new experiment­al school in calligraph­ic art first pioneered by Iraqi artist Mediha Omar in the 1950s.

What these artists have sought to do is no less than to transform letter formations into abstract visual elements, or compositio­ns, an endeavour that appears over the years to have garnered appreciati­on by diverse audiences in the Arab world and beyond.

The term “hurrufieh” does not yield well to a full translatio­n into English, or any other language for that matter, but whichever way you choose to transfer it into another fashion of linguistic expression, it is a name given to a movement that seeks to release traditiona­l Arabic calligraph­y from the stringenci­es of classical rules. By doing so, Hurrufia artists have made their art soar by transformi­ng it into abstract expression­ism, and enabled it, as if magically, to speak about and from the Pan-Arabist ethos that defined the era they depict in their work.

No one will disagree with Claude Levi Strauss, the renowned French anthropolo­gist and member of the Academie Francaise (d. 2009), when he asserted that art, like music — two creative pursuits that no human community was unable to develop a tradition of — is “the supreme mystery of human being”. In short, the language of art, like that of music, is universal.

Still, art may speak of the inward preoccupat­ions of working artists, but these preoccupat­ions neverthele­ss originate from the collective consciousn­ess of the culture of which they are a product. Consider, in this regard, how the patronisat­ion of the colonised “other” by 19th century European culture insinuated itself into the canvases of Orientalis­t artists, regardless of how “progressiv­e” a mindset these artists had — and recall among them Eugene Delacroix’s painting, Women of Algiers in their Apartment (1834).

What our 90 Arab artists in question, whose work is currently on display at the Grey Gallery in New York, are saying to Americans is clear: This was our world in the post-colonial era, when both hope and despair informed our historical experience and shadowed our lives, and, additional­ly, we are saying that as artists we must, very simply, use the language of art to speak to you. You walk out of the museum wondering how, while the voice of intellectu­als in our part of the world, in our time, may have become blurred, — and in places, sadly, stilled — that of artists has become emboldened as those behind it master and transform traditiona­l art forms with the proud intent of surpassing them. And they have done all that, well, artfully.

You walk out of the museum wondering how, while the voice of intellectu­als in our part of the world, in our time, may have become blurred ... that of artists has become emboldened.

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