Personal Revolutions

Over successive generations, women have played an integral role in the development of the Syrian arts scene.

Handmade Bridal Broderie and Jewelry (20th Century) by UnknownAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

Many of fearless, pioneering Syrian women in art have gone unnoticed in the mainstream and undocumented by the history. In this exhibition we seek to bring to light some of Syria’s seminal female artists and to highlight their innovative, experimental and impactful oeuvres. In particular, to explore the development that has taken place amongst female artists over the past two decades. As such, Personal Revolutions is as much about the history of Syrian art as it is about the challenges, triumphs and achievements of these women – without whom the Syrian contemporary arts scene would not be what it is today. Practicing during socio-politically tumultuous years, their works are as a much a documentation of the changing face of a nation as they are of their own inner worlds.

Auto Portrait (1983) by Shalabiya IbrahimAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

When I start working and entering into the realm of the imagination, the world becomes affectionate and filled with angels. It becomes a world without sins and evils.

When I start painting, I become affectionate and transparent. I take from legend, but my imagination liberates me from it and the two of them march together. Imagination does not impose logical or scientific conditions on the shape or movement of the body; imagination is freer, it lies outside the frame of conditions.

The artist Shalabiya Ibrahim uses this ‘dreamy woman’ as a basic element in most of her paintings. Her body appears free, full of life, soaring smoothly in space, surrounded by placid creatures like birds, swans, fish and horses, amongst plants and flowers. It is as if the artist dwells inside a private paradise, the paradise of the East, swaying and dancing to some enchanted melody.

Ibrahim’s work seeks to synthesize the integration between humankind and nature and the characters in her portraits live in a magnificent cosmic dream.

One of the issues that constituted an obstacle to women in continuing their careers in fine arts, particularly in the1970s, 80s and up to the beginning of the 21st century, is directly linked to work conditions, both financial and spatial. This applied also to male artists. It rarely happened that a Syrian female artist was able to make her career in art the main axis of her life, to research, develop and gain her living. In addition, with the nonexistence of an atelier, she would at best dedicate a room in her own house.

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Leila Nseir recounts how hard it was for her as a woman to lead a free life in Damascus and the difficulties she encountered in order to rent her own place for painting. It was for this reason that she eventually left Damascus and went back to her birthplace, Latakia, where this was possible.

Nseir’s experience is one of the rare Syrian artistic experiences; art has been her obsession since she graduated from the faculty of Fine Arts in Cairo in 1964 and until this day, she continues with her art production unabated. Her works are centred on the daily life of ordinary people and male and female features converge in her portraits.

She draws shapes with a single clear and confident line through which she defines the picture, with little colour, implying sometimes a fading away of shapes. Her works fluctuate between the entire presence of the body and the details of the face which appears to be alone and very near so that it occupies the whole space of the painting.

Auto Portrait, Dorrieh Fakhoury, 1950, From the collection of: Atassi Foundation for Art and Culture
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Untitled (2000) by Hala MahayniAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

Hala Mahayni draws on her abundant stock of pictures of houses and views of the Damascus countryside, which she had always painted in watercolours alongside her mentor Naseer Shoura, the pioneer of Syrian Impressionism (they also exhibited together in 1978). Mahayni draws, shapes and drafts places based freely on her memory. She loads her paintings with worries and huge sentiments; as if embodying a saying by Al Mutanabbi “Worried as if the wind was below me”. It is as if the wind was blowing the colours on the surface of her portrait at noon, as light has a major presence in her portraits, making reds glow, yellows bright and blues clear as the sky. She rebuilds and reconstitutes her visual stock of forms so that masses and colour spaces appear in equilibrium, flowing over the surface of the canvas in harmony, like an epic musical recital, so much so that we can almost ‘hear’ the sound of their delightful colours.

We seldom find visible lines or details in Mahayni’s
portraits. Her works are based on hidden geometry,
with a balance between shape, space and void. To draw a two-dimensional portrait she draws things not as she sees them, but as she feels them. It looks as if everything in her world is mobile, diverse, and full of contradiction.

The light is inspired by the glowing light coming from
the stained glass windows that she had always contemplated in Damascene houses. She evokes the colours of the flowers of those houses and their gardens, full of plants and citrus trees, allowing us to inhale their smell without seeing them.

By working in oil, she can evoke the harmony between bright translucency and viscosity. She reconstructs buildings, plants and rocks with configurations adjacent to each other, in order to resemble the alignment of the houses at the foot of Mount Qasion.

Couture (2019) by Nour AsaliaAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

Nour Asalia

It is attractive to sing the praises of the visual – that is, of the eye – in art. I could evoke the Neolithic statues of ‘Tall Barak’ (Barak Hill, known as ‘Statues of the eyes’) and dating back to the fourth millennium B.C. Or we can also stand before the fantastic composition of the eyes of the monks of the Syrian Kingdom of Mary, as well as those famous stylized eyes associated with the statues of the Pharaohs.

Then there is the ‘Lover’s Eye’ which appeared in the Victorian age in Britain; the glorious eye designed as a pendant worn mostly by women, inlaid in a frame of precious stones.

My sensitivity to the eye was gradually aggravated after my mother’s eyesight started to deteriorate, and she had to endure the pain of injections in the center of the eye.

I used to accompany her during those procedures, which were then followed by a lengthy surgery for my own daughter’s eye. It was suffocating to think that I had personally delivered her to the surgeon to operate on her eye.

During those long hours of surgery, I used to think of a way to endure the piercing instead of her. No doubt, I must have remembered at the time the story of the nun ‘Rafqa’ who decided to undergo a long eye surgery without any anesthetic, based on her belief in the sufferings of Jesus Christ.

One year later, I was able to extract that motherly self-flogging. I printed pictures of my eye on fragile rice paper and sewed stitches on them. This process allowed the experience to metamorphose into an artistic formulation, and gradually the degree of violence applied to the pictures decreased.

I began weaving lines and circles on the eye and around it. For me, today, this repetitive manual work is kind of psychedelic. Thus, I simply named the collection Couture, (sewing).

Mohammad, Iqbal Qaresly, 1974, From the collection of: Atassi Foundation for Art and Culture
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Untitled (2012) by Nagham HodaifaAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

Nagham Hudaifa’s painting Chemise de Nuit (‘The Nightgown’) has its roots in the memory of a nightgown gifted to her by her grandmother a few months before she travelled to France. 'The Nightgown' becomes a time traveller: through the memory of her grandmother, and the item itself, it becomes a kind of feminine time that travels through past to present. The first of Hudaifa’s paintings to explore this subject goes back to 2012. The dimensions of that painting emulate her own size, the size of the artist’s body, but without a head or face. The Nightgown came to symbolize dual realities: the evocations of daily, intimate family life, as well as a sort of cosmic material reflecting the human condition and all the big questions that go with it. 

This nightgown cannot be seen or observed by or shown except to a very close person. It is an intimate moment that could sometimes be glimpsed, as if through a mirror.

A question arises: What do we hide when we are in the dark? The curves of a body and the folds of desire! What can this picture create in the layers of the painting?


Something as simple as a nightgown can encompass
tangible memories but also symbolize so much more: it can render the invisible, visible.

My Little Voice Can’t Lie (2019) by Khadija BakerAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

'My Little Voice Can’t Lie' is a live spoken word performance during which Khadija Baker stands silently and allows people to listen to spoken text through head phones woven into her braided hair. After collecting the stories of displaced women who have experienced loss, the artist wrote a text based on their stories (including her own). As in much of her work, she uses her body – in this case, as the main source of the sound installation.The main objective is to encourage closeness: in order to hear the soundtrack, viewers must come close to Baker and touch her hair. This evokes an intimacy between people, particularly as, in the artist’s cultural background, strangers are normally forbidden from touching a woman’s hair.

My Little Voice Can’t Lie (2019) by Khadija BakerAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

When participants are able to physically touch
her hair and listen to the story, Baker allows these stories to become part of their own memory. The viewer now too owns the story; they become witnesses. Her goal is to create a complex connection, where she and the viewers interact through the work on various levels.

Hindmosts, Azza Abo Rebieh, 2014, From the collection of: Atassi Foundation for Art and Culture
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Untitled (2018) by Alina AmerAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

Alina Amer’s performance piece, 'Blessing with Infection', is a meditation on the Russian Orthodox Church’s public ritual of blessing weapons of mass destruction. In doing so, it investigates the political situation in Russia and its military involvement in Syria. In the work, this ritual is accompanied with a sound collage of politicians using hygienic and medical jargon in their speeches about war on the Middle East.

The body in this ritual is used as a neutral vessel that absorbs and gets rid of Holy Water to bless a weapon of mass destruction, a ritual in a defence of the claim that artists like Pussy Riot are infecting the soul of the nation with their foreign liberalism.

A Poem That Doesn't Heal 1 (2018) by Laila MuraywidAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

Laila Muraywid

The female body represents the cornerstone of my work. It is where contradictions, paradoxes, double standards and social and cultural conflicts all come together. It is also the external embodiment of feelings and emotions. It is a symbol, a façade, for the female body is also reflective of society’s image of what a woman should be and how she should look like – at once desirable, and at once a taboo. If woman is a battlefield exposed to all sorts of violence, then the female body is also a priceless vital force.

A Poem That Doesn't Heal 3 (2018) by Laila MuraywidAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

My works have their origin in this most raw of materials – the body – as though I could launch her – woman from an organic chaos and thereby create a work that contradicts all these prevailing ideas. It effaces the borders between life and death, memory and absence, the sacred and profane, ugliness and beauty.

A Poem That Doesn't Heal 2 (2018) by Laila MuraywidAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

How do we highlight the poetry and beauty of ruins?

Auto Portrait, Asma Fayoumi, From the collection of: Atassi Foundation for Art and Culture
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Untitled (2019) by Sulafa HijaziAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

In this interactive work by Sulafa Hijazi, we are presented with 372 versions of Quick Response (QR) codes. Together, they form a decorative mosaic not dissimilar to those seen in traditional embroidery styles of the Levant – in particular, Palestine.

On one hand, this style of traditional embroidery is loaded with political and historical significance: through its ability to preserve cultural memory and heritage, it has become an act of resistance against occupation. On the other, this particular style of embroidery has become one of the most popular local industries and commercial products; both made and designed by hand or manufactured by digitally-programmed machines.

A digital dress, like a traditional dress, is a variable product. Where physical material can wear out over time, so too digital links might be discontinued due to the disappearance of their pages on the Internet, or a change in their content. Women used to spend months weaving one single dress and embroidering it. During that period of time, they chatted and exchanged stories. With the passing of time, these kinds of gatherings started to vanish because of the accelerating rhythm of life, shortage of time and replacing many handicrafts with technical alternatives.

Within Dress, viewers can scan each of the codes with their smart phone. Each code leads to a different link, such as an article, picture, video or artistic experiments and sketches. These feature digital or key words and symbols, or even personal features. Together, these various links create a mental picture that brings together the many different signifiers represented by traditional Levantine embroidery: women’s collective narratives and their social and regional connotations, as well as QR codes as a global visual language with different modern interpretations. It is within this space that Hijazi seeks to examine the intersection of individual and collective, local and international identities.

Separation (2019) by Iman HasbaniAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

The scene: It is the winter of 1989, at Iman Hasbani’s family home in the far south of Syria; a big house with a large garden, there were many olive trees and one big lonely eucalyptus as ancient as Hasbani’s family tree.

That winter, she was 10 years old. The snow fell heavily over her village of Amtan, until everything was covered in white and in total unity with the sky. The silence and whiteness “made me feel like standing in the heavily falling snow to look up at the sky and let the snow fall quietly over me like it was falling over everything else,” says the artist. However, when she told her mother what she wanted to do, the answer was great caution: You cannot do that. If you stand in the snow, something bad will happen to you.

For Hasbani, the horror of that moment, when she was pulled firmly inside after standing barefoot outside the house became a galvanizing moment, terrified by the idea that her body had decided to do what it wanted despite her mother’s warnings.

In the years that preceded her subsequent travel to Europe between 2014 and 2015, now living in a modern flat in a relatively modern building overlooking the road that leads to Damascus airport, she woke up several times to find her body stretched on the floor, in the corridor between bedrooms, without cover. It was as if Hasbani’s body had decided that the house had become a passageway or had shrunk to one space: rectangular, white and cemented but still fragile.

During her time in Berlin, in her dreams she would fly and visit unknown places. Hasbani would return to that garden of her childhood. She still dreams of that first house.

In the artist’s dreams, she is again 10 years of age, amongst those trees, with her grandfather. she remains trapped there amidst many specifics that happened at that time. This is the story of Separation.

In the spring of 2014, Hiba Al Ansari returned to Syria after time spent in Germany, travelling to the village of Kfarnabel in the Syrian north, which was not dominated by Assad regime. While roaming the ruined neighborhoods, she came across a newly-built but demolished and bombed house. The cement was still dark grey and she glimpsed the corpse of a mathematics book under the roof. Al Ansari grabbed the book, “like someone stealing the memory of the place” and took it back with her to Munich. 

I felt an immense hatred of mathematics and fear from the book, which was stretched like a dead body in my house. When I turned the pages, I saw the name of the owner of the book (Noura Bazkadi) who was killed when her house was bombed.

Working with the concept of ‘systematic destruction’ is intentional. Syrians saw their buildings and houses turn into geometric shapes; disembodied rectangles, parallel rectangles, squares, circles and half circles, or sometimes simply ashes in the air and on the ground,
following the daily shelling. Similarly, in Mathematics
Book: To Noura Bazkadi, the artist worked on rearranging geometrical shapes and repeating shapes to mimic the impact of these absurd and irrational explosions.

Untitled (20th Century) by Safaa ElsetAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

Untitled (20th Century) by Shalabya IbraheemAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

Shalabiya Ibrahim (1944) is unique with her innate finesse in drawing. Ever since her solo exhibition in the gallery of the Arabic Cultural Center in Damascus in 1971 she has maintained characteristics and elements that lend her work a clear identity. Myths and popular tales inspire her subjects and she focuses on handling the feminine body as a material for artistic composition, often through a tendency towards simplification by using lines and colour spaces.

Untitled, Shalabya Ibraheem, 2007, From the collection of: Atassi Foundation for Art and Culture
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The source of her inspiration is the worlds and memories of her childhood, particularly the Delta on the shore of the Nile River and the tales and myths told by grandmothers.

Untitled (20th Century) by Lujaina Al AseelAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

Lujaina Al Aseel has coloured the lives of several generations of children and contributed in broadening their imaginations through painting and designing many characters and illustrations in children’s books. Her work in ‘Oussama Magazine’ had a great impact on her from the start. She drew and participated in designing the identity of the magazine in 1970. She had approached the magazine by chance, without realizing that her passion lay therein, and that this particular work would transform the course of her life entirely. When one of its writers, Adel Abu Shanab, asked her to create a two page illustration for the magazine, she fell in love with the work and went on to become the art supervisor of many Arabic books for children.

Untitled (20th Century) by Lujaina Al AseelAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

My passion is illustrating children’s books... For many years, I have felt that I wanted people to love and appreciate the portraits in children’s books just like they do ‘artistic’ ones. I cannot describe the joy and childish passion that overcomes me when I start drawing pictures for a new book. It is exactly like a child eager to browse their new book. I am proud to say out loud: I am an illustrator of children’s books.

Untitled (20th Century) by Itab HreibAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

The richness of Itab Hreib’s spatial memory is reflected in the surface of her portraits. Her eyes soaked up the beauty of nature in many Syrian towns and villages because of her father’s work, which saw the family move around Syria fairly frequently.

As a result, she discovered the sea, the rivers, the mountains, the planes and the desert. This diversity is also apparent in her colour memory; at times, her portraits are saturated with light and heat, at others, with melancholy and fog. In her paintings, colour flows like water on the surface with an audacity and honesty that is due to the singular rhythm of her quick, light brushstrokes, through which she conveys her true feelings and emotions.

In her portraits, she draws flowers and oases of anemones that look like fancy Euphrates gowns. She is the ‘daughter’ of the Euphrates and had often drawn the houses slumbering on its banks and the boats floating on it between the blue of sky and sea.

Tapestry Al Sanaye’ Women School in Aleppo (1931) by Al Sanaye’ Women School in AleppoAtassi Foundation for Art and Culture

The exhibit celebrates strong, talented women who are deserving their mantle as groundbreaking artists in their own right. To categorize all these Artists' achievements based solely on their gender would do them a disservice.

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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