Changing Narratives - Creative Voices from the Global South
In today’s new episode of Changing Narratives, we speak with Palestinian visual artist Noor Abuarafeh, whose work addresses memory, history and the archive. Noor talks to us about how she traces absences and questions the complexity of history including how it is shaped, constructed, made, and understood. We delve into several of her works, focusing in particular on ‘Observational Desire on a Memory that Remains.’ A short film that begins with a group photograph at an exhibition opening in Jerusalem in 1985. Fourteen artists stand together. One of the artists, Saqr Al Qatil, becomes the narrator of this piece, which reveals itself as a powerful and elegiac act of resistance against forgetting. Searching for context, Noor found that no comprehensive Palestinian art archive exists from before 1993, the year the Oslo Accords were signed. Most cultural institutions were established afterwards. It is not until she managed to find contact of his family members and a friend that she was able to build a visual narrative and archive of his life and work. Tracing his story became a way of revisiting an undocumented wider artistic moment in Jerusalem. In reconstructing one life, the work also exposes the fragility of how cultural memory is recorded, labelled and preserved. At a moment when institutions such as the British Museum have removed the word Palestine from parts of their displays, Noor Abuarafeh’s work feels especially timely. Watch 'Oberservational Desire on a Memory that Remains' here https://vimeo.com/116973160?fl=pl&fe=sh
6 episodios
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