“I don’t know what
they teach in the academy.
I’m like a black sheep.”
Nihad al Turk
I’m like a black sheep.”
Nihad al Turk
Syrian artist Nihad al Turk’s
home town of Aleppo has become a metaphor for the Syrian art scene. What was at
the turn of the century an integral part of the bourgeoning Middle Eastern art scene has
through the shelling, car
bombings and curfews become an artistic ghost town. With the help of galleries
like Damascus’ Ayyam Gallery, Syrian artists have fled the carnage of their
country’s civil war to Dubai, Beirut or Cairo in an attempt to preserve a
part of the artistic legacy of their homeland.
Now
living in the Lebanese capital, al Turk is amongst that number. A situation
reflected in his work as the press release
for his current exhibition states “subjects that appear to shift in
place as masses trapped in disfigured shells.” Although it’s not that far
removed from his earlier work about which he told Nadia
Muhanna’s blog “We live in a region full of war and economic hardship,
so people will inevitably be slightly deformed.”
One of five children, al Turk
grew up in severe economic hardship and left school at the end of his primary
education during which his drawing abilities were clearly evident. Al Turk
taught himself to paint during his teenage years and held his first exhibition
in 1992 at the age of 20 which had a profound effect upon his subsequent work.
For the exhibitions 27 days
al Turk, who was doing his military service at the time, went AWOL. This saw
him sentenced to four months jail in Syria’s notorious Tadmor Prison. Reflecting
upon his release al Turk has said “I felt like a sheet of shattered glass, my
only release was painting.”
And paint he did, producing a
body of work that saw culturetrip.com
place al Turk amongst Syria’s top 10 artists saying “His works are complex
multi-layered compositions that explore the psychology of man. Taking into
examination existentialist questions, myths, power struggles, his paintings are
rich in symbols woven into intricate narratives. His rich visual imagery ranges
from monstrous creatures and mythical demons to still lives and botanical
elements that stand for anti-heroes, outcasts and rebels.”
Whilst international recognition
has come his way the continuation of poverty, political and social injustice
will find a place in his work. As he says, “As long as there’s no justice in
life, tension will never leave my life and therefore my paintings.”
His exhibition Nihad
Al Turk: Drawings
on Paper is currently on show at Beirut’s Ayyam Gallery
until the 28th of May.
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