23/02/2023

Zanele Muholi in Paris

 

At la Maison Européenne de la Photographie 




The exhibition opened early February, and last until the end of May.




Some of my favourite photos of her photos...












18/02/2023

'Beyond the Streets - London' - Saatchi Gallery

 

The exhibition opened on Friday.

I was at the press preview the previous day. Many artists were present too, including Shephard Fairey, Lady Pink, Futura 2000, Mode 2, Shoe, and legendary photographers Martha Cooper (from New York) and Beezer (from Bristol, UK).

And I interviewed Mode 2.... More on that next month. 

Here are a few video clips: 






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BEYOND THE STREETS LONDON



Exhibiting artists include: 

André Saraiva | Beastie Boys | C. R. Stecyk III | Charlie Ahearn | Chaz Bojórquez | Conor Harrington CRASH | Dash Snow | DAZE | Eric HAZE | Fab 5 Freddy | FAILE | Felipe Pantone | FUTURA2000 GOLDIE | Gordon Matta-Clark | Guerrilla Girls | Henry Chalfant | Jamie Reid | Janette Beckman | Jenny Holzer | José Parlá | KAWS | Kenny Scharf |LADY PINK | Malcolm McLaren | Maripol Martha Cooper | Maya Hayuk | Mister CARTOON | MODE 2 | Paul Insect | Robert 3D Del Naja | Shepard Fairey | Stephen ESPO Powers | SWOON | Todd James | VHILS | ZEPHYR | & MORE


(London, UK) - From defiant train writers to powerful large-scale muralists, Saatchi Gallery is thrilled to announce over 100 international artists to be featured in BEYOND THE STREETS LONDON, opening this February. 

The exhibition, supported by adidas Originals, will be the most comprehensive graffiti & street art exhibition to open in the UK, and is set to take over all three floors of London’s iconic Saatchi Gallery. 

Following successful exhibitions in Los Angeles & New York, BEYOND THE STREETS LONDON will feature new works, large-scale installations, original ephemera and extraordinary fashion that capture the powerful impact of graffiti & street art across the world. 

Curated by graffiti historian Roger Gastman, BEYOND THE STREETS LONDON will examine the fundamental human need for public self-expression, highlighting artists with roots in graffiti and street art whose work has evolved into highly disciplined studio practices, alongside important cultural figures inspired by this art scene. 

Each of the exhibition’s chapters will explore exceptional moments in the history of this artistic movement; including the emergence of punk; the birth of hip-hop - marking its 50th anniversary in 2023; and street culture’s strong influence in fashion and film.



11/02/2023

My article on Jerusalem-born Jaffa-based artist Dor Guez

 

Dor Guez frames intimate portrait of Palestinian pluralities 

The New Arab 

Culture 

Melissa Chemam 

01 February, 2023


Dor Guez seeks to challenge our perception of his homeland. Over the course of 50 solo exhibitions worldwide, Dor's personal gaze into Palestinian culture, history, and geography through photography, film and archive has been received with acclaim.



Dor Guez, Knowing the Land, London 2022 [photo credit: Dor Guez/Goodman Gallery]



“At the heart of my practice as an artist, I am a storyteller, so it felt natural to be interested in parallel and even conflicting narratives,” Dor Guez tells The New Arab, as his exhibition Knowing The Land at the Goodman Gallery in London concludes.

As we spoke, Dor's next exhibition had already opened at the Princeton University Art Museum in Princeton, New Jersey, USA, entitled Colony, with another exhibition reaching Germany in February at the Felix Nussbaum Museum from 11 February 2023.

All exhibits include photographs and three-screen film installations, elaborated from a collection of photos by Guez and fascinating colonial archives he’s been digging out of Palestinian and Israeli institutions for over a decade.

Dor's work intensively reflects on the visual representation of Palestine over the centuries, but also its topography and geography, its borders and its botanical identity.

“My new body of work, Knowing the Land focuses on varied mechanisms of producing knowledge by colonial structures,” he adds.

“The invasion of colonial power is relevant to my homeland, in particular, as well as the ‘Levant’ as a region. Photographers, archaeologists, topographers, and geographers came to 'The East' with measuring tools to map the area and to classify and arranged it according to ‘scientific’ definitions, terminologies, and categories. This information has been organised, by generals, priests, historians, and artists alike. Knowing the Land explores some of these methods.”

For all these reasons, Dor is hyper-aware of the importance of language, and visual representations of the region, which leads him to be naturally precautious while naming the sites, cities and nations themselves.

"The conversation about the biases built into our language extends from the field of gender to the field of geography,” Dor says. “Many use the term ‘Middle East’, which is Eurocentric in essence. The title I chose for the sculptural works in the exhibition is 90 Degrees From the Sun, which refers to the direction in which maps were facing in the past – east and not north, therefore, to this day we use the term ‘oriented' which derives from turning east and not north. When you say you're ‘oriented’, it implies that you have found the north.”

With photographs of maps deprived of their borderlines and plants plunged into colours, the exhibition offers the viewer to follow different types of lines: some indicate borders between countries and empires, some are the contour lines of plants and thus define their species, others show ways to map mountains and valleys, and some signal the oldest way to mark a straight line using a weight stretched on a string.


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Read the entire story on The New Arab's website here.



10/02/2023

100th Window - 10 February 2003 - 20 years


This record was released on 10 February 2003 - the one that sidetracked my life...


“I’m naturally quite a dark character inside and it was a dark time: post September 11 and the Iraq War,” described Robert Del Naja. “It was symptomatic of the isolation, of having to do it alone. It was painful but everyone was demanding a Massive Attack record." 

 - 'Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone', chapter 10


'What Your Soul Sings' - featuring the mighty Sinead O'Connor,
from Massive Attack's 4th album, 100th Window


In France, music journalist Bertrand Dicale wrote: “Everything is there: introspection and sharing, pain and relief, realism and compassion. iIt’s probably the most stimulating album of 2003, the most intriguing and the most important.” 

- 'Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone', chapter 10 


Horace Andy, like you never heard him
 'Everywhen'



“What really kick-started the making of 100th Window to me was September 11 and the terrorist attack on the Twin Towers in New York,” Neil Davidge told me. 

  - 'Massive Attack - Out of the Comfort Zone', chapter 10


Massive Attack - 'Special Cases'



09/02/2023

NO MORE WAR


 I'm writing further on the consequences of the war in Iraq.

More to come.

Here is an reminder: 



05/02/2023

2023 - Let's talk about Iraq, 20 years after the biggest Anglo-American mistake

 

Since July 2022, I've been thinking about the 20 years of the start of the war in Iraq, in March 2023, and suggested to my co-contributing editors at the Markaz review to dedicate an issue on the country.

I'm also preparing a few other articles.

In a previous post here, I also explained the link between my research on music history and politics, my book on Bristol, and my recent work for a couple of reviews and websites.

Read here: 2003-2023

As I wrote in this post, I went to the US, to Northwestern University's Journalism school, as the war was starting, in April 2003. In April 2016, I travelled to Iraq Kurdistan, while finishing the French version of my book, working for a charity helping women and displaced people on the ground, more on this work here: Iraq: Action in Kurdistan and Nineveh for IPDs. 

Now, thanks to months of dedicated work, TMR 28 is here !


TMR 28 • IRAQ



I asked my friend, the photographer Susan Schulman, who has spent time in Iraq recently, to write a text and share some photographs:

Writer-photographer Susan Schulman documents the climate devastation that has sent many Iraqis into internal exile.


I wrote about music and sound, after interviewing Hardi Kurda, 


Hardi Kurda: Archiving the Sounds of Northern Iraq



5 February, 2023  

Composer, sound artist and researcher Hardi Kurda is founder of Space21, a music festival operating from his hometown, Slemani (Sulaymaniyyah), in Iraqi Kurdistan. Kurda is at the heart of the Archive Khanah: Sounds from Iraq project, a community-based archive celebrating Iraq’s musical and sonic diversity, financially supported by the Arab Fund for Arts and Culture Fund (AFAC). To demonstrate connections between the musical traditions of Iraq, it digitizes selected records, has created an online interactive archival map, and may yet host a physical exhibition.



Read here.

All all the Iraq stories featured here on TMR Issue 28





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Post scriptum


Iraq - A bit of Recent History


The modern nation-state of Iraq was created following World War I (1914–18) from the Ottoman provinces of Baghdad, Basra, and Mosul.

It derives its name from the Arabic term used in the premodern period to describe a region that roughly corresponded to Mesopotamia and modern northwestern Iran.

Britain seized Iraq from Ottoman Turkey during World War I and was granted a mandate by the League of Nations to govern the nation in 1920. 

A Hashemite monarchy was organised under British protection in 1921, and on October 3, 1932, the kingdom of Iraq was granted independence. 

Iraq gained formal independence in 1932 but remained subject to British imperial influence during the next quarter century of turbulent monarchical rule.

The Iraqi government maintained close economic and military ties with Britain, leading to several anti-British revolts. 

A revolt in 1941 led to a British military intervention, and the Iraqi government agreed to support the Allied war effort.

In 1958, the monarchy was overthrown, and for the next two decades Iraq was ruled by a series of military and civilian governments.

In 1961, Kuwait gained independence from Britain and Iraq claimed sovereignty over Kuwait. A period of considerable instability followed.

With proven oil reserves second in the world only to those of Saudi Arabia, the regime was able to finance ambitious projects and development plans throughout the 1970s and to build one of the largest and best-equipped armed forces in the Arab world. 

The party’s leadership was quickly assumed by Saddam Hussein.

He led the country into disastrous military efforts: first the Iran-Iraq War (1980–88), then the Persian Gulf War (1990–91). 

On 6 August 1990, after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, the U.N. Security Council adopted Resolution 661 which imposed economic sanctions on Iraq.

The Gulf War thus started, as an armed campaign waged by a 35-country military coalition in response to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. 

Spearheaded by the United States, the coalition's efforts against Iraq were carried out in two key phases: 

-Operation Desert Shield, which marked the military buildup from August 1990 to January 1991; 

-and Operation Desert Storm, which began with the aerial bombing campaign against Iraq on 17 January 1991 and came to a close with the American-led Liberation of Kuwait on 28 February 1991.

Sanctions were still applied during the 1990s.

In 2003, in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks on New York city in 2001, an American-British coalition launched the Second Iraq War, on false allegations around the search for WMD, weapons of mass destruction.


01/02/2023

A recent review of my (not so recent now) book on Bristol, Massive Attack and their British counter-culture

 

Published in December 2022, on Goodreads: 


"I had a great time reading this book, it’s been truly insightful - insightful into a band that changed the course of British music history, into the socio-political and economic context of Bristol in the ‘90s and the impact the 60s Windrush had on the musical influences of the place around the time and into the connections and tensions between the band’s members. 

I was interested to read this book to find out more about the political and social context of the UK at the time and the impact it had on music, specifically on the underground - the book did not disappoint at all. It was a brilliant presentation of the context and the band, going back and forth between the two as you couldn’t have spoken about one without the other. 

Thoroughly researched and accessible, I feel I have learned a great deal about a group that I truly love and admire. 

A personal critique would be perhaps that the story seems to somewhat revolve around 3D / Robert Del Naja; while I understand he was the main creative and cog in the MA wheel, I wanted to know more about Daddy G and Tricky (particularly their Afro-Caribbean context and how this influenced their career paths in and outside of MA). 

Overall, a beautiful read.

 I would recommend to anyone who is a fan of the MA phenomenon, British underground and electronica - or simply interested to understand how a phenomenon of this calibre is born."





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I do want to reply to the criticism, as I heard that a couple of times:


I interviews over 30 artists for this book, and when I met Robert, he completely stood out. Our discussions helped me tremendously and his interest in activism was so genuine, I therefore decided to centre the whole story around his work, to anchor the different elements, music, arts, stage work and politics, around a strong axis. 

Otherwise, it would have been an impossible mission in terms of storytelling, and risked ending up sounding like a A to Z on the Bristol scene, with dozens of entries. I didn't want that.

I sometimes think that is why such a book never came to life before I started this work in 2015.

Robert helped me find the inspiration for a strong and unique narrative arche, and I was really grateful. 

If anyone want to take another angle, I'm sure, it could be interesting too. Look, Tricky wrote his biography, I reviewed it and interviewed him about it.

As for Grant Marshall (aka Daddy G), he swears he will one day work on a film project about his life... Be patient. Or not! 







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Another short review, extract from Crack Magazine:






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