Showing posts with label Video Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Video Art. Show all posts

Sunday, November 15, 2020

Kfar Sama - On faith (new video art by Tarek Chemaly)

Artwork by Tarek Chemaly
Are these rituals? or faith? Or does it really matter? Mixing Derek Jarman's quotes from his masterpiece Blue, to a hymn from the ubiquitous Monseigneur Mansour Labaky which bathed my childhood, this video tries - but perhaps fails - to answer the said questions. Watch it here.

Saturday, July 25, 2020

The history of Lebanon: Simulacra and simulation. (Official release)


Based on the philosophical treatise by Jean Baudrillard. This art project is an attempt to retrace the history of Lebanon through signs and signifiers.
Simulacra are defined as copies that depict things that either had no original, or that no longer have an original, whereas simulation is the imitation of the operation of a real-world process or system over time.
Lebanon has not had a common official history book since before the war, students still study in archaic books that end somewhere around 1972. The reason for that is simple, since history is not the real version of the events but simply the narrative dictated by the winner, and since there was no clear winner of the Lebanese war at the abrupt end of it, then the saying by Bill Farrell - the late New York Times reporter in Lebanon - "there's no truth in Beirut, only versions" still holds.
To make things worse, the same political families which ruled Lebanon during the war, are still there and refusing to look at their past and be able to understand what they did wrong or assess their legacies in the bloody events. Still, all is not lost, for - no matter in which shelter one was in the Lebanese war - we were all listening to the same ads, jingles, watching the same soap operas, using the same products, going to (different) cinemas which were showing the same movies, enjoying the same heartthrobs - be they in roman photo (translated Italian photoromanze) or singing sensations, and the list goes on.
Only the signs and signals of pop culture of Lebanon will be able to join us when "politics" divides us. Politics stems from the two Greek words, "polis" and "ethos" - polis or the "heart of the fortress" and ethos which means ethics. So the original meaning of the word meant "the ethics of living in a community" and if that had to go through advertising jingles, then so be it. 
The project aims to use pop culture, in terms of symbols, names, catchphrases as a way to unify the Lebanese around the same concepts and ideas, and using the said elements as emotional triggers to help preserve memories both personal and collective.
Baudrillard has said about the iconoclasts: "One can live with the idea of distorted truth. But their metaphysical despair came from the idea that the image didn't conceal anything at all". Should this be true then the images of this project do not conceal anything either.
The project is composed of "episodes" each being a video art 13,5 seconds long, with each video containing 9 high resolution related images (thematically, geographically or time wise) with a total time of 120 minutes. Along with a two-hour long soundtrack which explores the Lebanese collective memory in terms of audio rarities and songs (specifically related to the war era).

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Lebanon: Identity with an Arab(esque) face (video art by Tarek Chemaly)

Still from "Lebanon: Identity with an Arab(esque) face"
A new video art has been launched by Tarek Chemaly. Please watch it here.
Lebanon always had an issue with its Arab identity, so much that in the original 1943 constitution, Lebanon was called a country with an "Arab face" (only for this to be changed in the Taef agreement which ended the 1975-1990 war and which became the new constitution in which Lebanon became an "Arab country").
By applying arabesque (with its link to Islamic culture)  to Lebanese "iconic" buildings/old stamps/vintage postcards/historic tiles... - according to a complex mathematical algorithm I constructed - and by using the act of repetition (yet with variants despite the uniformity), made me look back at our history as a chequered past - as a both personal and collective narrative - in a new fragmented (as opposed to linear) way, especially since writing history (specifically that of the war years) is almost impossible in Lebanon).
Interestingly, the whole exercise was done by hand through painstaking use of the rudimentary Microsoft Paintbrush rather than Photoshop (joining technology with the folk movement championed by the likes of Soetsu Yanagi).