“Oil on Landscape: Art from Wartime Contemporaries of Baghdad” Exhibition

Pomegranate Gallery

poster for “Oil on Landscape: Art from Wartime Contemporaries of Baghdad” Exhibition

This event has ended.

From 2006 to 2007, a military liaison officer in the U.S. Embassy of Baghdad worked on the sidelines to develop relations with the artists of Baghdad. Under extremely unlikely circumstances, several of Baghdad’s artists trusted this military officer to share their art with the world. The scope of the exhibition includes works on Iraqi refugees, the children of war, genocide, and an Iraqi perspective on Shock and Awe.

Mohammed [Hussein] al Hamdany: Mohammed is the brother of a cabinet minister murdered by Saddam Hussein. While he had good reasons to celebrate the fall of Saddam, Mohammed’s life and art reveal far more complex issues than the mere jubilation of liberation. Mohammed’s unprecedented 25-painting series on the Night of Fire recounts the cathartic experience of Shock and Awe and the fall of Saddam from a truly unique Iraqi perspective. Babylon International Art Festival, 1998-2002, Amman International Art Exhibition, 2006

Khudayer al Shakarji: Born in Bakouba in 1937, Koudair al Shakrji earned degrees at both the Institute of Fine arts and the Academy of Fine Arts in Baghdad. After decades of exhibitions at home and abroad, Shakrji settled in Baghdad, teaching drawing at the Institute for Fine Arts. Shakarji died of natural causes in Baghdad, 2006.

Sadik Jaffar: The nom de guerre, Sadik, means, “one who sees the truth.” Sadik Jaffar not only sees the truth, but captures it on paper through his uncannily expressive hand. Even in close proximity to the original pieces, it is difficult to discern that these works are not photographs, but, in fact, drawings.

Ahmed Nousaife: Born in 1967 in Baghdad. Obtained a fine arts degree form the College of Fine Arts, Baghdad, 1992.

Sat’aar Darweesh: Born in 1967 in Baghdad. Fine Arts degree at College of FIne Arts, Baghdad. Member of Al Jama’a al Funun al Bassariyah Featured in Art Contemporain en Irak, France, 2004.

Oded Halahmy, an Iraqi American sculptor and thirty-seven year resident of SoHo founded the Pomegranate Gallery as a catalyst for international artistic dialogue. “As an artist born in Baghdad, it is very exciting for me to bring works by contemporary Iraqi artists to New York City,” explains Halahmy. As an artist whose modernist sculptures appear in the Guggenheim, the Hirschhorn, and the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, Halahmy offers compelling reasons and uncanny ability to introduce Americans to serious artistic initiatives from the Middle East. “Americans are becoming increasingly international in their art collecting.” But Halahmy also hopes that his gallery “will serve as a cultural ambassador to awaken American consciousness of Middle Eastern Art.” Baghdad, the cradle of civilization, has historically been viewed as the cultural capitol of the Middle East and primary innovator in the fine arts. The fact that the artists of Baghdad continued to create at the height of the insurgency is nothing short of astounding.

Also on view: contemporary Iraqi art from the gallery collection.

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Schedule

from May 24, 2008 to June 21, 2008

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