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September 2005
By Ica Wahbeh

Amman
– A rich, interesting visual stimulation is offered by Darat Al Funun’s latest showing, a combination of works from the Khalid Shoman private collection, a video art film by Mona Hatoum and an architectural exhibition by Sahel Al Hiyari.

Coinciding with the end of the project involving general restoration within its upper area, this art place thus offers a novelty to old and new visitors alike.

“The idea for upper boundary walls and entrance”, Hiyari’s brainchild, “emerges from the very nature of the site itself, which, in essence, is a complex stratification of diverse historical layers that have their roots in ancient history and extend to the present.”

This other layer that “endorses the plurality and contrasts present within the site, thus remaining consistent with the site’s history, process of development and its function as a home for the arts”, is made of stone and concrete.

“The two diverse languages coexist and form the cadence of that specific district in particular, and of Amman in general… create a link between the two identities, through an unfamiliar body that oscillates between both yet never belonging to either,” says Hiyari about the wall whose “articulation as a fabric of three-dimensional blocks, marking the entries, corners and connection to existing structures provides the visual structure for a new front of Darat Al Funun.”

This and an original display of architectural works by the same architect/painter are definitely a point of attraction.

His installation of drawings is placed within a black cube that seems to cancel everything else within. The projects, white luminous trajectories on the right hand and white scale models placed on black cubes that make them look as floating in the space on the opposite side, are attracting visual images, more like artistic creations than engineering works of precision. The black around is meant to place emphasis on the projects and obliterate the space around, forcing the eye to focus on them.

For those with poor space orientation, in an adjacent room in the upper Blue House there is video projection where projects are shown tri-dimensionally, making it easier to understand how the final product looks. The viewer is constantly engaged, drawn, involved, guided.
Down in the main room, the selection of artworks from the Shoman private collection “revolves around one theme inspired by the video art film “So much I want to say” by British Palestinian artist Hatoum.

The haunting image of a face whose mouth is constantly blocked by hands comes syncopated with the words that give the film its title. It is a clear allusion at censorship and the artist’s claim to the right of free speech. It “shows the insistent desire to speak and be in contact with the world beyond borders”, another attempt of this artist at incorporating “the social and political aspects of exile, without transforming them into activist banners”.
Nearby works by Adnan Yahya (Jordan), Vera Tamari and Nasser Soumi (Palestine), and Sweden-based Iraqi Ibrahim Rachid “interpret exile and loss of nation in a personal and intimate manner”.

Also on display here are works by Adam Henein (Egypt), Ismail Fattah, (Iraq), Munif Ajaaj, Germany-based Marwan and Basel Al Saadi (Syria), Samer Tabbaa and Sahel Hiyari (Jordan).

Aesthetically rewarding and offering food for thought, the exhibition will run until Nov. 27.

to the exhibition

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