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Exploring the ideological associations of Iraq’s buildings and monuments, Ala Younis’s Plan for Greater Baghdad is composed of models, documents, and found materials. The installation was inspired by a set of 35 mm slides taken in 1982 by architect Rifat Chadirji, which depicts a Baghdad gym designed by Le Corbusier and named after Saddam Hussein. Younis presents the gym’s development in the form of two twenty-five-year timelines leading up to its construction in 1980. These parallel architectural narratives reveal much about the history of Baghdad during a turbulent period that witnessed five military coups and the rise to power of six different heads of state. The work’s title refers to Frank Lloyd Wright’s unrealized late-1950s proposal for a cultural complex and university on the outskirts of the city.

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