Suad Al Attar, (Iraq, born 1942)
Unknown
Oil on canvas
Possibly from the collection of the Iraqi Museum of Modern Art
Possibly from the collection of the Iraqi Museum of Modern Art
This vibrant work, by Suad al Attar, is electrified through the hyper-realistic rendering of a tree’s root system fanning out from the central trunk like lightning through the sky. The color scheme of intense reds and yellows contrasted with black adds to the visual vibrancy of the piece. More on this painting
Suad al-Attar (born 1942) is a renowned
Iraqi painter whose work is in private and public collections worldwide,
including The British Museum and the Gulbenkian Collection. She has held over
twenty solo exhibitions, including one in Baghdad that became the first solo
exhibition in the country's history for a woman artist. Her many awards include
the first prize at the International Biennale in Cairo in 1984 and an award of
distinction at the Biennale held in Malta in 1995.
Suad left Baghdad with her husband and children in 1976, and settled
in London. For her, the perpetual sense of longing for "home" has
always been balanced by an awareness of the freedom that comes with distance.
This freedom—a condition that
gained added significance following the regime’s rise to power under Saddam
Hussein in the late 1970s—has enabled her to explore her relationship with her
homeland and to develop a personal visual language with which to express it.
Elements
of this language are to be found within the traditions of Middle Eastern art.
The winged creatures of Assyrian reliefs, Sumerian sculptures and the
illuminated manuscripts of the Baghdadi School were instrumental. However, this
awareness of her Arab heritage did not result in slavish imitation, but was
forged with her own romantic imagination and an appreciation of western
figurative traditions to create enigmatic images in which narrative and
symbolism are intertwined.
A substantial monograph documenting her career was
published in London in 2004. Much of Suad’s painting is characterised by an
intense dreamlike and poetic sensibility that draws on motifs and symbols from
within the traditions of Middle Eastern art. In recent years, these
richly-coloured representations of paradise and of sleeping cities bathed in
turquoise blue, have disappeared from her work as she has become increasingly
preoccupied with the plight of Iraq. More
on Suad al-Attar
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