Arab protesters put their art on the streets
The Cairo-based artist Ganzeer’s stencil of Egyptian riot police, bravely painted on the side of the Mogamma government building on Tahrir Square last month, is the latest in a long line of works of art that have flourished in Egypt’s streets since Hosni Mubarak was ousted in February 2011.
In Libya and Syria too, radical publishing and pamphleteering, street art and graffiti have thrived, even appearing in deeply conservative Saudi Arabia.
Murals for the dead
Egypt’s growing group of young artists working in the street, including Ganzeer, Keizer, El Teneen, Hosni and Hany Khaled, are engaging actively in the revolution. Ganzeer, 29, who exhibits his work both in and out of galleries (in a recent interview in Bidoun magazine, he said his gallery work is “the least satisfying” as it “is not relevant to life”), is painting a mural for each of the people killed during the 18 days of revolt that began in January 2011. Since this is believed to number as many as 850, this is a major undertaking.
“What is interesting to see in Egypt, and in all these countries, is that artists are not only going out into the city, they also become agents of change in society,” says Hans Ulrich Obrist of London’s Serpentine Gallery, who is chairing a discussion on art patronage in the Middle East as part of a summit at the British Museum and the Royal College of Art (12-13 January). “If you think about it in terms of the Russian Revolution and Mayakovsky saying ‘the streets are our brushes, the squares our palettes’, it’s about art going beyond the museum and blurring the boundaries between art and life.”
Obrist also notes that there is a long-standing tradition, particularly in Egypt, of contemporary artists using the street to mount performances or install works. Indeed, several contemporary Egyptian artists, including Susan Hefuna and Hassan Khan, have used the city as a site for their work, both before and in response to the uprising.
Egypt has also attracted its share of international street artists. In October, German street art collective Ma’Claim was invited by the Goethe Institute in Alexandria to paint murals depicting the revolution in the city. Following the project, Ma’Claim member Andreas von Chrzanowski, who works under the name Case, went on to Cairo. There he stencilled portraits of Mina Daniel, an activist who was killed during protests in Cairo, and Khaled Said, whose murder by two policemen in Alexandria in June 2010 caused public outrage, on walls near the ministry of the interior. “I had to be careful, there was military everywhere,” says Von Chrzanowski.
The recent surge in street art has not been driven by artists alone. “There was a big rise in March,” says Daniel Stoevesandt, the director of the Goethe Institute in Alexandria. “Almost everybody was painting in the street.” Fatenn Mostafa, the founder of Art Talks: Egypt’s Visual Arts Foundation, says many young people took to the streets to express their frustration. “However, the most striking and expressive [murals] are by artists,” she says.
With the level of sophistication of many of the outdoor works in Egypt, the question now is how—or whether—to preserve them. The owners of the buildings in Alexandria bearing the Ma’Claim murals have agreed to keep the works, according to Stoevesandt. “But as they are graffiti we never know whether someone else might tag or paint over them.”
Whitewash
Mostafa says that Egypt’s ruling military council is beginning to whitewash some of the overtly political graffiti: “Many walls are being removed by Scaf (the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces) or pro-Scaf citizens.”
While the recent elections in Egypt have brought about a fresh wave of politicised street art, the commercial sector has also seized the opportunity to promote itself. “Some people have been hijacking the space and using it for private advertising,” Stoevesandt says. Internet providers, mobile telephone companies and soft drinks corporations are rebranding themselves as revolutionary, with signs such as “Make Tomorrow Better: Coca-Cola” appearing in the streets of Cairo. This commodification of the uprising is galvanising artists and young people to reclaim the streets once again.
In Libya, as in Egypt, pictorially complex murals decorate the streets. Muammar Gaddafi is the subject of much of the art, with the late leader often humorously depicted as a rat, an ape or a vampire. Mainly found in bigger cities such as Tripoli and Benghazi, Rana Jawad, the BBC’s North Africa correspondent, who has spent the past year in Tripoli, says murals started appearing almost immediately after Tripoli fell in August. “It happened so quickly,” she says. “Within five or six days it seemed every wall had a portrait that mocked Gaddafi.” As fighting between rival militias continues in Libya, graffiti are increasingly being used to show support for different political factions. “We are also seeing more elaborate works depicting general themes such as war, feelings of nationalism and the future of Libya,” Jawad says.
Many of the wall paintings are sophisticated, but, according to Jawad, there are no official plans to keep the work. “Some people say [the murals] are part of a new heritage and want to keep the more elaborate paintings, but others say that in a few years time some of the images might not carry the same meaning as they do now.” In the long term, hastily scrawled graffiti are likely to be incongruous with the image Tripoli will want to project when it reopens for business.
More news
![]() |
Helen Frankenthaler, the lyrically abstract painter whose technique of staining pigment into raw canvas helped shape an influential art movement in the mid-20th century and who became one of the most admired artists of her generation, died on Tuesday at her home in Darien, Conn. She was 83.
28 December '11
www.nytimes.com
|
![]() |
US pop artist James Rizzi, best known for his bright, cartoon-like drawings and 3D constructions, has died aged 61.
28 December '11
www.bbc.co.uk
|
![]() |
Art historians at the Louvre have been accused of "overcleaning" a masterpiece by Leonardo da Vinci, leaving the painting with a brightness that was never intended.
31 December '11
www.telegraph.co.uk
|
![]() |
Exclusively for guests of Art Rotterdam, we now present Hotel Rotterdam. During Art Rotterdam, Hotel Rotterdam offers overnight stays in the studios and homes of artists in Rotterdam.
27 December '11
www.wakeupinart.nl
|
![]() |
The Association of International Photography Art Dealers will hold the 32nd edition of The AIPAD Photography Show New York, one of the world’s most important annual photography events, March 29 – April 1, 2012, at the Park Avenue Armory in New York City.
27 December '11
www.artdaily.org
|
![]() |
Masterworks of the traditional fine arts of Japan will be on view during New York’s Asia Week in JADA 2012: An Exhibition by the Japanese Art Dealers Association.
26 December '11
www.artdaily.org
|
![]() |
From New Year, dealers and auctioneers must pay artists' heirs up to 4% of the sale price of works sold for more than €1,000.
26 December '11
www.guardian.co.uk
|
![]() |
Art by Damien Hirst and Andy Warhol outperformed the Standard & Poor’s 500 index over the past 10 years, according to a new measure by Artnet AG designed to rank the performance of art as an asset.
25 December '11
www.bloomberg.com
|
![]() |
The Metropolitan Museum of Art announced that it is collaborating with Google to allow users to search the Web via pictures they take on their mobile phones, to increase access to information online about its encyclopedic collections.
22 December '11
www.artdaily.org
|
![]() |
The VIP Art Fair has announced the list of exhibitors for its second edition, which opens in February.
20 December '11
www.artreview.com
|
![]() |
A four-day New York auction of the belongings of Hollywood star Elizabeth Taylor has fetched more than $150m, with one leather-bound film script selling for 50 times its estimate.
18 December '11
www.bbc.co.uk
|
![]() |
Street artist Banksy has installed a vandalised sculpture of a priest in a gallery in Liverpool.
16 December '11
www.bbc.co.uk
|
![]() |
In mid-December Foam presents the first major retrospective exhibition in the Netherlands of the work of Joel Sternfeld (1944, New York), one of the pioneers of color photography.
16 December '11
www.artdaily.org
|
![]() |
The Museo del Prado is presenting to the public for the first time The Wine of Saint Martin’s Day by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, the leading figure within 16th-century Flemish painting.
14 December '11
www.artdaily.org
|
![]() |
A painting believed to be by the street artist Banksy has appeared in Liverpool city centre.
14 December '11
www.bbc.co.uk
|
![]() |
The extraordinary beauty, rarity and provenance of the pearl known as “La Peregrina” inspired a fierce bidding battle at Christie’s New York at the opening auction of The Collection of Elizabeth Taylor.
14 December '11
www.artdaily.org
|
![]() |
The most expensive Chinese work of art at auction is still not paid for, more than a year after it was bid to 51.6 million pounds ($83 million).
13 December '11
www.bloomberg.com
|
![]() |
Monet's Waterloo Bridge, created during one of his stays at The Savoy, is returning to the London hotel over 100 years after it was drawn.
13 December '11
www.bbc.co.uk
|
























