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Jefferson23

(30,099 posts)
Wed Jun 17, 2015, 11:38 AM Jun 2015

Artists help Syrian refugee women tell their stories

June 14, 2015



Syrian refugee women from the association Basmeh wa Zeitooneh in Shatila work on an embroidery piece for the "Embroiderers of Actuality" project, realized March through April 2015 in Beirut, in collaboration with Art Residence Aley and the Swiss Embassy in Lebanon. (photo by embroiderers-of-actuality.com/)


Since the beginning of the Syrian civil war in 2011, the stories of female Syrian refugees in Lebanon have been told through various media and reports by nongovernmental organizations, expressing great concern for their safety. Often separated from their husbands and family, as these women struggle to survive, many have experienced trauma and sexual targeting by Syrian and Lebanese men inside and outside the camps where they live. Some art initiatives are trying to create an image of these women beyond that of a victim, giving them voice through works that sensitively look at their lives and situations.

How does one discuss Syrian women who have sought shelter in Lebanon without falling into the trap of sensationalism? Some artists have addressed this by allowing the women to express themselves. Such is the case of Aglaia Haritz, from Switzerland, and Abdelaziz Zerrou, from Morocco, both visual artists.

Haritz ad Zerrou met in Paris in 2011 and decided to work together on a project, Embroiderers of Actuality. For this undertaking, they ask women in different locations — Cairo, Casablanca and Marrakech and this year Beirut — to create embroidery. Afterward, the two artists draw images, including on the embroidery, and create sculptures influenced by the discussions they have with the women. The works are then displayed in yet a different country.

“Embroidery is an excuse to get in touch with women from conservative societies and to get to know their world and stories,” Haritz told Al-Monitor. “We want to show these aspects in art spaces to bring light to their situation. While the women embroider, we talk to them, and we make sound recordings and videos, a kind of sound sculpture that reflects the work atmosphere.”

Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2015/06/syria-syria-refugees-photography-art-exhibition-omar-imam.html#ixzz3dKmQ9t33


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