Overview
Considered to be among the most accomplished Arab painters and printmakers, Dalloul’s works merge contemporary disciplines with traditional materials such as ink, sepia and handmade paper. The subjects of his work involve stagnant, commonplace domestic objects such as chairs and tables, which are placed on the foreground of landscapes depicting nature’s virility in some form. The landscapes depicted in the works, often recollections of those found in his birthplace Syria, are however accompanied by characteristic dark masses of color. Through exploring the dichotomy between that which is still and that which is ever-changing Dalloul challenges convenient definitions associated with both the Orient and the Occident while simultaneously referencing art history’s relationship to still-life. The show will feature several large-scale paintings including a triptych, which was featured in this year’s Sharjah Biennial, works on paper, and a series of etchings from the artist book entitled The Book of Cities made in collaboration with Syrian poet Adonis.
This project was part of Sharjah Biennial 10
Artwork Images
Still Life-Landscape
Ziad Dalloul
2004
Oil on pearly Japanese paper
76 x 56 cm each
Installation view
Collection of the Artist
Presented by Atassi Gallery, Damascus
Photo by Alfredo Rubio
Related
Dalloul, Ziad
Ziad Dalloul graduated from the Faculty of Fine Arts, Damascus in 1977. He then studied at the École nationale supérieure des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, where he has been living ever since.
9 Etchings and Mixed Media
Considered among the most accomplished Arab painters and printmakers, Ziad Dalloul has been captivated with natures mortes, or still life, noting that the English word describes his practice more faithfully than the French one.
March Meeting 2013: Towards a New Cultural Cartography
This publication takes as its starting point Yuko Hasegawa’s curatorial concept for Sharjah Biennial 11: Re:Emerge – Towards a New Cultural Cartography and March Meeting 2013.