Laila_Shawa

Laila Shawa

Laila Shawa

Palestinian artist (1940–2022)


Laila Shawa (4 April 1940–24 October 2022),[1] was a Palestinian visual artist whose work has been described as a personal reflection concerning the politics of her country, particularly highlighting perceived injustices and persecution. She was one of the most prominent and prolific artists of the Arabic revolutionary contemporary art scene.[2]

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

As a Palestinian living in the Gaza Strip for her formative years and the daughter of Rashad al-Shawa, activist and mayor of Gaza City, Shawa's revolutionary mindset was inculcated at a young age. Often her artwork, which included paintings, sculptures, and installations, worked with photographs that served as the base for silkscreen printing. Her work has been internationally exhibited and is displayed in many public (e.g. The British Museum) and private collections.[3][4][5]

Early life

Laila Shawa was born on 4 April 1940 in Gaza, Mandatory Palestine,[6] eight years prior to the 1948 Nakba and the founding of the State of Israel. Shawa was well educated; she attended boarding school at the Leonardo da Vinci Art Institute in Cairo from 1957 to 1958, then went to the Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma in Rome from 1958 to 1964, while also studying during the summers at the School of Seeing in Salzburg, Austria.[7]

In 1965, after finishing her schooling, Shawa returned to Gaza and directed arts and crafts classes in several refugee camps. She then continued to teach an art class for a year with UNESCO's education program.[2] She then moved to Beirut, Lebanon in 1967 for a total of nine years and was a full-time painter. After the Lebanese Civil War began, she returned to Gaza and with assistance from both her father and husband, Shawa founded the Rashad Shawa Cultural Centre.[8] Unfortunately, the center is not currently being used for what it was intended, as a cultural connection to Gaza through exhibitions and galas.

Hands of Fatima (1992)

The painting, Hands of Fatima, was created by Shawa in 1992. The height of the painting is eighty-nine centimeters high, and the width is seventy centimeters long. The museum number of this piece is 1992,0414,0.1, and is currently, not on display. It is positioned in a vertical composition. Shawa emolyed oil and acrylics on canvas.[9] The background of the painting is dark with a yellow moon crescent, but it is paralleled with bright and vibrant colors of women in niqabs with unique patterns in each. Their eyes filled in black, and there are open hands that have the sign of the evil eye, and have painted henna designs. The painting is considered to have been executed in a Middle East and North African Modern Art style.

The painting, Hands of Fatima is from Shawa's series called Women and Magic that reconnoiters a common practice of magic and witchcraft in the Middle East.[7] This opens the discussion on how people govern their destiny to unknown powers, and that the things people do come from a mysterious authority outside their own control. Moreover, the hands in the painting, are covered in henna and has the evil eye attached to it. According to Nadir Yurtoğlu in History Studies International Journal of History, the evil eye is a belief in many cultures in which, through envy, people can cause harm to one another.[10] By including the evil eye into her piece, Shawa is using that belief as the women in the painting are preventing harm that may approach them by using the belief that a higher power can do so. The women in the painting are also veiled, and in an interview with Muslima, Shawa explained how the veil is what she terms as a Bidaa, something which was introduced to Islam, but has nothing to do with Islamic teachings rather than a sociopolitical spectacle created to subdue women.[11] So, the women in this piece are essentially affected by that sociopolitical endeavor.

In the book, The Origins of Palestinian Art, the authors Bashir Makhoul and Gordon Hon present the ways in which Palestinian artists have altered a lot of the most intriguing approaches of contemporary art in ways that seem to carry these approaches into direct engagement with a very tangible and crucial political struggle.[12] In this case, Shawa is presenting to her audience the political struggle of being a Palestinian Muslim woman living in occupied Palestinian state, and relying on higher powers to carry their existence and faith.

Artistic career

In an interview with the Princeton University Art Museum, Shawa was asked what it is that inspires her, to which she responded, "My inspiration is my direct experiences. It's usually what I see, what's around me, so it is contemporary. I prefer to do the present, now, with issues that are very relevant...my artwork is a very creative process, a mixture of intellectual processes, observations, and I think it out very thoroughly."[13] Shawa's more thoughtful and creative approach in producing art is seen in all her various forms of artwork: painting, print, and installation. The overall configuration and detail of Islamic architecture influenced Shawa's later work as she incorporated significant cultural and ideological elements.[7]

Shawa's first show outside of the Middle East, Women and Magic, was in London in 1992.[14] She did not begin to find international acclaim until 1994, when she collaborated with Mona Hatoum and Balqees Fakhro in a show titled Forces of Change: Artists of the Arab World at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington DC.[15]

Her most well-known work in the 21st century is 2010's Walls of Gaza III, Fashionista Terorrista, which is a screen print originating from Shawa's photographs. The photo shows garments, a scarf and a sweater, which symbolize the Palestinian resistance decorated with a Swarovski crystal New York patch to visualize how the people of the west use the Arab struggle as a fashion statement.[16] In 2012 at London's October Gallery, Shawa's show "The Other Side of paradise” opened, about which she stated:

"In The Other Side of Paradise, I explore the motivations behind the shahida—the Arabic term for “female suicide bomber”—a question that few people would likely choose to consider. The core of the shahida model revolves around a troubling confusion of eroticization and weaponization. In this installation, I sought to assign to each aspirant an identity and wholeness that would otherwise be denied her in the routinely horrific media reports of female suicide bombers in Gaza."[17]

In 2012, to go alongside the AKA Peace Exhibition at the ICA,[18] Art Below showcased selected works from the AKA Peace series on the London Underground including artwork by Shawa. "AKA Peace", originally conceived by photographer Bran Symondson and now curated by artist Jake Chapman, is an exhibition of new works made specially for the Peace One Day Project 2012, bringing together a group of contemporary artists, all of whom agreed to transform a decommissioned AK-47 assault rifle, refashioning it into artworks.[19] For Shawa, this was no foreign object, but rather a quite common one in the West Bank. At the AKA Peace Exhibition, while standing next to her piece, she said, "I'm very familiar with AK-47s so for me it was not a very strange feeling to carry the gun, but my first question to Bran was 'how many people did this gun kill?'"[20] Shawa entitled her glamored rifle, Where Souls Dwell, a powerful name attached to an intensely charged piece of art. It is decorated with "rhinestones and butterflies and with the barrel sprayed gold."[20] This is only one example of the artwork by Shawa, but bears light into the pain each work displays.

Personal life and death

Shawa died on 24 October 2022, at the age of 82.[1][21]


References

  1. Basciano, Oliver (24 November 2022). "Laila Shawa obituary". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  2. Elazzaoui, Hafsa (9 July 2017). "Laila Shawa: Mother of Arabic Revolution Art". MVSLIM. Archived from the original on 27 April 2018. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  3. Contemporary Art in The Middle East, ArtWorld, Black Dog Publishing, London, UK, 2009.
  4. The October Gallery: Laila Shawa. October Gallery. Accessed Nov 2010
  5. Laila Shawa, Works 1965- 1994 AI-Hani Books, 1994
  6. Basciano, Oliver (24 November 2022). "Laila Shawa obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  7. "Laila Shawa, Gaza: Palestine". The Recessionists. 2009. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  8. LeMoon, Kim. "Laila Shawa". Signs Journal. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  9. "Collection object details". British Museum. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  10. Yurtoğlu, Nadir. History Studies International Journal of History.
  11. "The Political is Personal | IMOW Muslima". muslima.globalfundforwomen.org. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  12. Makhoul, Bashir (2013). The Origins of Palestinian Art. ISBN 9781846319525. OCLC 857110256.
  13. "Q&A with Laila Shawa". Princeton University Art Museum. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  14. "Artists". www.markhachem.com. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  15. Maymanah Farhat (2009). "Imagining the Arab World: The Fashioning of the "War on Terror" through Art". Callaloo. 32 (4): 1223–1231. doi:10.1353/cal.0.0556. ISSN 1080-6512. S2CID 154851076.
  16. "The life and work of Palestinian Islamo-Pop artist Laila Shawa". Middle East Monitor. 2 April 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  17. "Laila Shawa". Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 11 October 2012. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  18. "Peace One Day's 2012 Art Project". peaceoneday.org. 12 July 2012. Archived from the original on 12 January 2020. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
  19. "AKA BELOW". artbelow.org.uk. 27 November 2012. Archived from the original on 17 September 2016. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
  20. Collett-White, Mike (27 September 2012). "AK-47s get exreme makeover in new London art show". Reuters. Retrieved 15 April 2018.

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