Los Angeles Times

Palestinia­n turns to wire sculpture as a means of reporting

-

BILIN, West Bank — After 14 years as a photograph­er in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, one Palestinia­n man has found his second calling through sculpture, telling stories by recycling metal wire into art. He says that while the effect of a news photo can be fleeting, a work of art remains over time.

In the garden of his small house in the village of Bilin, Haitham Khateeb twists and binds wires into images of the Palestinia­n experience — both tragic and joyous.

Khateeb, 43, says that by working with metal, he’s giving a sense of permanence and durability to scenes of Palestinia­n daily life “because we need to convey it to the world and [future] generation­s.”

His artworks include pastoral scenes of olive harvests and farmers cultivatin­g their land. They also depict confrontat­ions with Israeli troops and the protests along the Gaza Strip’s boundary with Israel.

For more than a decade, Bilin was a flashpoint for protests against Israel’s separation wall, which cuts off many villages from their fields and pastures.

Starting in 2005, residents of Bilin began staging weekly protests against the wall that continued for several years. “I carried the camera, and I began documentin­g what was going on in my village, and sent it to the media,” he said.

At times clashes erupted, and two protesters were killed by Israeli fire. Activists from around the world and Israeli supporters took part in the demonstrat­ions.

But as the demonstrat­ions have quieted down in the last two years, “I started to think of another way to tell the news,” Khateeb said.

As a child, he learned how to use metal wire to make toys that he could not afford. “Today I use it differentl­y.”

Sometimes he goes back in history, building scenes from the war surroundin­g Israel’s creation, in which Palestinia­ns fled or were forced from their homes, or the uprisings against Israeli occupation.

His dozens of works include a portrait of the late Palestinia­n leader Yasser Arafat. He’s also sculpted refugees fleeing their homes and clashes between Palestinia­n stone throwers and Israeli troops.

Khateeb displays his works on social media, and is preparing for his first exhibition soon. He also hopes to do larger pieces that can be placed in public squares.

“I worked as a photojourn­alist for a long time, and now I found that art could be a more effective way of reporting,” he said.

 ?? Majdi Mohammed Associated Press ?? HAITHAM KHATEEB, after 14 years as a photograph­er, now tells Palestinia­ns’ stories through his art.
Majdi Mohammed Associated Press HAITHAM KHATEEB, after 14 years as a photograph­er, now tells Palestinia­ns’ stories through his art.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States