Overview
At Sharjah Biennial 9 Nida Sinnokrot presented West Bank Butterfly – Kite Project. The work comprises three small wall-hung pieces that form a poignant chain of references. Pinned into a frame is an Apharitis Cilissa butterfly, an endangered species indigenous to the west bank of Palestine that can be recognised for the distinctive patterns on its wings.
Sinnokrot identifies a formal resemblance between the shape and markings of the butterfly’s wings and a map of the Israeli settlements in the West Bank. This resemblance is visualised in the second component of the installation – a map of the West Bank and Gaza Strip presented in the form of a butterfly. The third component, commissioned for and produced in part by Sharjah Biennial, transforms the motif even further. Sinnokrot presents a silk and okume wood kite that takes its shape from the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Sinnokrot is an Artist whose films, installations and sculptures often explore the complex realities of conflict and diaspora. West Bank Butterfly – Kite Project brings together powerful symbols of the West Bank conflict to create an installation that resonates with the struggle between freedom and oppression. The plight of the endangered butterfly and its chance resemblance to a settlement map in its natural habit becomes succinctly illustrative of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
This project was part of Sharjah Biennial 9
Artwork Images
West Bank Butterfly – Kite Project
Nida Sinnokrot
2009
Apharitis Cilissa, B’Tselem West Bank Settlement map,
Silk and Okume wood kite, Fan
Installation view
Photo by Alfredo Rubio
Related
Sharjah Biennial 9: Provisions Book I
Published to accompany Sharjah Biennial 9, Provisions is an experimental catalogue approaching the space of the book as an art project.
Sharjah Biennial 9: Provisions Book II
The second book in the Provisions series looks at the experience of taking part in and attending a biennial.