Sunday, September 12, 2010
details
the East Mediterranean + INCIDENCE Ziad Antar + Inci Eviner + Gülsün Karamustafa + Hassan Khan + Maha Maamoun + Christodoulos Panayiotou
exhibition opening at Philadelphia Museum of Art + a live music and video performance by artist Hassan Khan at the Slought Foundation
Saturday September 18 / 1-5
Live Cinema Live
an afternoon of conversations between artists, curators + writers including Nora Alter + Hassan Khan + René Marquez + November Paynter + Adelina Vlas + Brian Kuan Wood Trabant Theater / University of Delaware
+ Thursday September 16 / 3:30 Christodoulos Panayiotou Artist Talk Sharp Lab Room 130 / University of Delaware
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Panayiotou Group Exhibition.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Googoosh
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Kuwait Museum of Modern Art
Sunday, August 1, 2010
An Isfahani in New York (1972)
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Evening with Salman Rushdie and Christopher Hitchens
Beirut Terraces by Herzog and de Meuron
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Bidoun
— Gary Dauphin, "Have Pamphlet, Will Travel"
BAZAAR: a theme so nice, we used it twice.
Last issue, Bidoun delved into the business of the art world, a somewhat rarified realm, with its auctions and parties and oh-so-critical discourse. This time we wanted to get our hands dirtier. Mucky, even. So one thing we did was seek out the details — good, bad, and gory — of how work works. What the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is doing for beauty salons in America. How the protests in Thailand have affected red-dye manufacturers in Karachi. Why the Iraq War has been a bonanza for health clubs in occupied Baghdad.
The whole BAZAAR business originated on a trip to Dubai, the Las Vegas of the Middle East. Or rather, a trip to the Las Vegas of the Las Vegas of the Middle East. At the Indian mall in the down-market Karama district, the prime real estate belongs to Las Vegas Fashion LLC, a clothing store whose windows are lined with bedoo-rag'd mannequins in b-boy poses. Fittingly, Adham Alshorafa, the man behind Las Vegas, is the subject of one of the fifteen profiles, interviews, and as-told-to accounts that comprise our portfolio, How's Business — along with a hash-dealing ex-cop in Cairo, a scrap metal recycler in Bangalore, a defense contractor in Kandahar, and many more stories from the annals of globalization.
The globe itself is the canvas for Simon Anholt, the reluctant magician of nation branding. In "Your Brand Is My Brand," Babak Radboy considers the feedback loop that powers the multimillion dollar business of national identity. Bonus: a ragtag team of amateur nation branders examine brands from across the Bidounosphere, asking the age-old question, "Is that an atom hovering over the I in Israel?"
There are more and more reporters who have no experience covering war, much less participating in it… I can't blame the reporters for being naive. I blame the editors for sending them over in the first place… Are you going to send someone with a BA in literature to interview the mechanic at a nuclear power plant, when they don't know a piece of wood from a piece of coal? It's the same thing with conflict reporting.
— Lt. Col. Robert K. Brown, publisher of Soldier of Fortune
In the Magazine Bazaar, we discuss the business and pleasure of being a niche magazine, with a quartet of trade publications servicing mercenaries, utility contractors, haunted house owners, and disgruntled artists.
Now people write to ask me for permission to write about Africa. Be frank, they say, be candid… It's almost a sexual thing. They come crawling out of the unlikeliest places, looking to be whipped. I am bad, Master Binya, beat me. Oh!... They seem quite disappointed when I don't. Once in a while I do, and it feels both good and bad, like too much wasabi.
—Binyavanga Wainaina, "How to Write About Africa II: The Revenge"
Plus: Binyavanga Wainaina on becoming spam. Fatima Al Qadiri on ill-gotten goods. Indie-rock, Iranian style with Hypernova. Gary Dauphin on the prehistory of infotainment. Kaelen Wilson-Goldie on the enigmatic art of Mohamed Soueid. The wit and wisdom of the 1982 Kuwait stock market crash. And so on.
Friday, July 23, 2010
Miral
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Hassan Shamaizadeh - Bishtar Bishtar
The Glorious Gongs of Haimuwele
The sounds range from an interesting cross of gamelan and pre-Velvets John Cale ("Lila Dederba") to straight-up art-space-squat improv noise (opener "Mal de Ojo" and closer "Redeyes, Noose and Goad"). If there is a tribal ritual that goes with this music, it probably involves chanting Arthur-magazine record reviews out loud and passing around Alice B. Toklas brownies while watching Ira Cohen's Invasion of Thunderbolt Pagoda.
Sunday, June 27, 2010
2 Minutes of Cultural Displacement
Letters to Palestine Facebook Group
It will capture the stories which never had the opportunity to reach the homes and the families of the Palestinians living under occupation.
From young to old, the Arabs captured in this film will have the chance to send their love, their stories, their aching for Palestine to the homes, families and children of Palestine
Art History Graduate Lecture Series
Ali Akbar Sadeghi
Sadeghi has been artistically active since the 1950s. His style is a kind of Iranian surrealism, based on Iranian forms and compositions of traditional paintings, the use of Iranian iconography, and the use of Persian cultural motifs, signs and myths, full of movement and action, in prominent and genuine oil colors, in large frames, very personal, reminiscent of epic traditional Persian paintings and illustrations, with a conspicuous decorative style.
He is among the first individuals involved in the Center for the Intellectual Development of Children and the Youth, and was among the founders of the Film Animation department of this institute. Films produced by Sadeghi have won more than 15 awards at International Film Festivals. Also, for his book illustrations he has won four international awards.
Words from Inci Eviner
She cut her feet so that
She can hold them in her hands.
She cut her feet. It didn?t hurt.
There was a pair of white feet in her hands.
Her toes were folded in cotton pads.
"Unfold them" said somebody.
"Unfold them". It hurt.
1997