MODEM: The Sacred Paths

Culture

The Sacred Paths

Photography Exhibition from The Middle East

26 September – 3 November 2013

The Sacred Paths showcases works of 13 photographers from the Middle East, divided into three sections; The Body, The Land and The Leader. Most of the artists are acclaimed photojournalists, whose pictures document their journeys through various countries in the region.

This exhibition engages the symbolic, political, social and personal meaning of the term “Path” rather than its physical-geographical aspects. It underscores the overarching collective social practices which developed from a continuous search for belonging. The ambiguity and complexity of representing human agency and its fragility within a context of authoritarian ideologies, be they political, religious or other, lies at the heart of The Sacred Paths project.

Whether we are confronted with the humanity and frailty of Raed Bawayah’s off-duty Palestinian soldiers; the on-going displacement of Palestinian refugees on the Jordanian-Iraqi border in Dalia Khamissy’s haunting black and white series On the Border (2004); Tanya Habjouqa’s depiction of the precarity of Bedouin lifestyle; or Newsha Tavakolian’s defiant silenced women singers in Iran: the paths human beings take (or are led to take) are never sacred, but directed through trial and error. Nevertheless, as the whole selection points out, even in the bleakest of situations, sparkles of hope, of dissent, of creativity and of courage – that exist outside of the photographer’s frame – can be found.

Newsha Tavakolian

Exhibiting artists:Tamara ABDUL HADI, Reem AL FAISAL, Boushra AL MOUTAWAKEL, Raed BAWAYAH, Laura BOUSHNAK, Laura EL-TANTAWY, Tanya HABJOUQA, Dalia KHAMISSY, Abbas KOWSARI, Samer MOHDAD, Farah NOSH, Newsha TAVAKOLIAN, Issa TOUMA

Curator: Abed AL KADIRI

 

Source: modemart.hu

1 thought on “MODEM: The Sacred Paths

  1. Hi,
    Could you please provide me with the name and contact address of the name of the above cited photograph.

    Thank you,
    Regards,
    Basma

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