TAWSEET AL SHARQ #3: مُلهَم

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In this project of Tawseet Al Sharq, I will bring to light Middle Eastern cultures, traditions, beauty and issues by examining and discussing Middle Eastern art and artists. Since this project started on Tumblr before coming to Jaffat El Aqlam, this piece is therefore dedicated to Wed, the mind behind it all, who I have had the pleasure of following and seeing her art flourish through social media platforms.

    When I first came across her work, I was fascinated by how little she uses to effectively show the meaning behind her work. By focusing on replicating a simplistic figure, Wed transforms her minimalistic character from a mere shape into an extension of expressions of thought. Her work places heavy-weighted issues and expressions of Arab youth so tenderly on paper and poignantly celebrates women within that society. After reaching out to her, we sat down and discussed some of her pieces and the following is what happened.

I admire your simplistic character and your approach in producing such works. The use of a pen and paper makes it more accessible to other Arab youth and breaks down the barrier between the audience and your work. So the message flows freely in between the two and is not restrained within the work itself. Can you tell me why you used a simplistic approach to portray such figures and powerful messages?

From the start, I try to keep the character as pure and simple as possible to convey a certain emotion or thought because the goal of my work is to inspire people which is why the character is, in fact, called Mulham, which is Arabic for the word ‘inspirational’. I started off with deciding on the shape, rather than on the approach, and began with a shape of demaghi, which means being or related to the brain. The whole figure symbolizes the brain with the oblong head and minimalistic body. Such a figure disassembles itself from the physical body and does not need one to be enabled or to express itself. To that end, Mulham became an expression of itself and a continuation of my thoughts.

What audience was responding to your work and how have the responses changed overtime?

The majority of the audience that respond to my art are usually Middle Easterners, and women whose opinions resonate with the thought expressed in my work, whether they agree with them or not. When I first started uploading works of Mulham, there wasn’t a lot of response as the subject of my work and ideas accompanying Mulham were still not established with the audience. But with time, they started understanding that Mulham is not just a quick sketch of lines on paper accompanied by thoughts but is much more alive with emotions and thoughts, which gave the character more depth after it was established. Also with such a figure, repetition becomes accessible to both the audience and I to get my message across effectively.

Now, I find it really interesting when two Mulhams are present in the same work where they create this interesting dynamic of how we share and use our ideas on both a societal and an individual level.  How do you interpret that in your work, such as Secret Harmony?

Secret Harmony shows an uninhibited attraction, where there is no logical reason to be attracted. The attraction is just a raw emotion of the basic level of connection and more importantly examines a connection that doesn’t have to be explained. The nodes orbiting Mulhams’ heads signify knowledge and by count are unequal showing a difference in the way of thinking yet there is still chemistry. The everlasting connection through the figure combining them into one shows the love, vision and continuity of such a connection. Mulham serves the purpose of capturing such an emotion and cherishing it without the inflection of gender, age or a certain individual due to his simplistic figure. And it is important to me to encapsulate an emotion solely as an expression of itself, to offer the audience a work that expresses a pure connection they have with another person whatever that connection may be.

 
 

Next lets go back and talk about the making of the figure itself, how do you change the character to address a certain topic?

I include a specific body part in some of my works, only to highlight an issue specific to that body part.  When I do want to specifically show a woman I add a tooq (crown) of flowers or beads to surround Mulham. The only time I distinguish a woman in my work is when the work itself is directed to women and pertaining to an issue concerning women and their rights. Other than that Mulham is genderless.

In Freedom of Opinion, the connection is different than other connections we have seen throughout your work. Instead of being connected organically as they have usually been through their bodies or their minds, they are connected in an out-of-body box signifying their opinions. How is the connection through the box important to this portrait?

This piece is dedicated to all those who have been detained, or faced hardships due to voicing their opinions because they were at the forefront of the revolution. These men and women endure the hardship of raising such opinions, yet it is in their imprisonment that the concepts they’re fighting for, further rose and came forth. So the same box that they are imprisoned in has become a vessel that contains their battle, and their ideas are paving the way for future generations. Their fight has not gone unnoticed and their ideas and achievements can never be imprisoned so this piece is in honor of them.

FILM JOURNAL #2

A LIBERAL ARTS GUIDE TO LOVE

One: The fact that you see her existing. With nonchalance that is almost insolent. She has a biochemistry that you seem to be more aware of than your own. She'd made you analytical but your notes still read like poems. 

Two: Where you're going and where she's going are parallel lines. You will not share a point in time or space where there will be coffee and a chance to worry about oral hygiene. 

Three: Neuronal bridges of you do not exist. She is her own logic, well studied. You can neither add to nor change her axonims. You are not, as you have so fervently prayed, dormant in her mind, waiting for a moment of unexpected plasticity. You long to be déjà vu; to inhabit her as she inhabits you.

Four: You're lost without coordinates. The possibilities suffocate you. You don't realize that those possibilities are merely hallucinations. Outside of you there is no evidence of possibility and she remains unsolved. The hunger persists. Your infatuation has taken up purring and greeting you in doorways. 

Five: You have erred on the side of caution. And caution caught you in her arms and now you carry her baby; existential crisis. Who would have predicted that words could go that far? That they could be digested so thoroughly, absorbed and believed. 

Six: There's no one to talk to and I'm forced to bury my confusion in metaphors and tell you this story preceded the birth of the universe. 

Seven: You continue, audaciously, to hope. 

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TEXT: DANA S

 

 

 

 

TWO BY TWO BY MISERY

 

PART 1 / WHAT IS A BEDROOM

A bedroom is a room with enough space for a bed, a closet, a table, and a chair; or any equivalent pieces of furniture respective of the occupant’s culture and lifestyle. These pieces must be comfortably distanced so as to not impede the occupant’s in-room circulation. A bedroom has an operable window with natural lighting and ventilation. Any room not satisfying these basic requirements is not a bedroom, regardless of whether it’s being used as a bedroom or not.

PART 2 / WHAT IS A BATHROOM

A bathroom is a room with enough space for a toilet, a sink, and bathing space; or any equivalent bathroom fixtures respective of the user’s culture and lifestyle. These fixtures must be comfortably distanced so as to not impede the occupant’s in-room circulation. Any room not satisfying these basic requirements  is not a bathroom, regardless of whether it’s being used as a bathroom or not.

PART 3 / AN ARCHITECTURAL RIGHT

Every human being has the right to a bedroom and a bathroom. They can be shared or personal, owned or rented, and they can be creatively adjusted to fit an infinite of possible contexts, but they must be provided without compromising any of their basic components.

PART 4 / AN ARCHITECTURAL CRIME

To purposefully deprive a human being of their right to a bedroom and a bathroom, when there is ample opportunity to provide this right is a crime. Apathy, laziness, cost cutting, profit maximization, or ignorance of the importance of providing the aforementioned architectural right is not an excuse for committing this architectural crime. Any architect who helps his client commit this crime has equally committed the crime, and is a traitor to the profession.

PART 5 / A LETTER TO A CRIMINAL ARCHITECT

Dear Architect,

  • Even though we have never met, and I don’t know your name or how you look like… I still hate you.

  • This is because I don’t need to meet you to know who you are. This room that I live in, a room in a building that you designed, tells me all I need to know about who you are.

  • Let me tell you what I think about this room that you have designed for me… I hate it.

  • It’s too small, and too dark. The air is still and stale. There’s no window. I can’t tell day from night.

  • There’s not even space to permanently fit my tiny bed. I have to fold it in the morning to make space for the ironing board. My closet is too shallow to fit anything other than tightly folded clothes.

  • And that’s it. There is no space for anything else.

  • Is this all you think I need? What if I wanted to read a book? Or write in my notebook? What if I bought something slightly bigger than what your tiny closet can hold, where do you propose I put it? What if I wanted to stretch both my arms at the same time without hitting the walls? Is that too much?

  • A bed is for lying down, but what if I didn’t want to lie down? What if I wanted to sit in my room? There’s no chair, nor any space to place a chair. The room is even too small for an imaginary chair. I can stand in my room. I can lie down in my room. But I can’t sit. Do you have something against me sitting? Why can’t I sit?

  • Actually there is one place I can sit, the toilet seat in my bathroom. But I try to avoid that as much as possible. My bathroom is smaller, darker and damper than my room.

  • I hate my bathroom too.

  • But I don’t only hate you because you have decided to give me a bedroom and a bathroom that I hate. I hate you more because the rest of the apartment is actually quite beautiful.

  • This tells me that you are not an incompetent architect, but a lazy and cruel architect. You gave me this room even though you could have done better. You just decided not to.

  • The bedroom next to mine is currently empty. It has a big window overlooking the sea. It has its own bathroom too. The flooring is lovely dark wood, and the walls are covered with soft vegetal patterns. It’s being kept empty because they’re expecting the baby to arrive anytime now. I love that room.

  • As I said, even though we have never met, I know you.

  • I know that you don’t care about me.

  • I know that you think I’m not important enough for you to put some effort into designing something nice for me.

  • You have built my current misery from blocks and concrete.

  • And because of that dear architect, and even though I have never met you… I hate you,

PART 6 / A CONVERSATION BETWEEN A CLIENT AND A CRIMINAL ARCHITECT

Client: “The kitchen seems a bit small, can you make it a little bit bigger.”

Architect: “I made the kitchen as large as possible given the available space; the only way to make it bigger is to take some space from one of the rooms around it. And that is not advisable.”

Client: “What if you took a meter from the maid’s room?”

Architect: “That might work; I’ll give it a try.”

PART 7 / A CONVERSATION BETWEEN A CLIENT AND A GOOD ARCHITECT

Client: “The kitchen seems a bit small, can you make it a little bit bigger.”

Architect: “I made the kitchen as large as possible given the available space; the only way to make it bigger is to take some space from one of the rooms around it. And that is not advisable.”

Client: “What if you took a meter from the maid’s room?”

Architect: “That won’t work, the maid’s bedroom would become too small.”

Client: “I don’t mind her bedroom becoming a bit smaller, I think it’s currently too big anyway.”

Architect: “The extra meter that will be added to the kitchen won’t have a large effect on the room, since it’s already a spacious room; while removing this meter from the maid’s bedroom will substantially decrease its livability. I say we keep things as they are, or maybe I can take the extra meter from the living room.”

Client: “Are you serious?! You want to make the living room smaller? Tenants choose which apartment to rent sometimes solely based on the size of the living room, and definitely not on the size of the maid’s room.”

Architect: “Regardless of whether that’s true or not, making the maid’s bedroom smaller than what it currently is would make it uncomfortable for human occupation, therefore architecturally unacceptable.”

Client: “I don’t care, make it smaller.”

Architect: “I can’t do that.”

Client: “This is not a request, it’s an order. Do it or I’ll find someone who will!”

Architect: “I still can’t do it.”

Client: “You’re fired!”

PART 8 / END

The ending of any text is the final surrender of the writer, an acceptance that his words will now be in the hands of others, and that he has no more control over their future. This is the ending of this text, and my final surrender. I am full of hope and full of doubt.

 

 

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TEXT: ALI AL YOUSIFI

KHAMBALA'S RETURN

KHAMBALA'S RETURN

Khambala, the Saudi based short films channel is back stronger than ever. They're addressing social, political and cultural issues within our community in the most horrifyingly hilarious ways, with awe-inspiring aesthetics, brilliant scripts & excellent production/cinematography.

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