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Monuments & Flowers

Curated by Regine Basha


Monuments & Flowers brings together a selection of seminal video work by women artists culled from the archives of ArteEast with the work of contemporary voices including Yto Barrada, Lara Baladi, Marianne Fahmy, Malak Helmy Maha Maamoun and Setareh Shahbazi with Mirene Arsanios.


How do we reflect upon the ebb and flow of destruction and construction, death and regeneration – of cities, of ideologies, of nations and particularly of quotidian life and ecosystems? As these overwhelming tragedies accelerate in real time in different parts of the world, the act of memorializing is overpowered by a continual state of grieving. How do artists and filmmakers create works of memorialization through this lens of grieving? Oftentimes it is through invoking both past and future perspectives into alternate visions of reality that speak to hidden truths. Monument & Flowers reflected on these strategies in its original iteration in 2019, and will now be re-mounted in Europe at this time with an all women line-up and the addition of Spanish subtitles, courtesy of ArteEast and Casa Arabe. 

 

Monuments & Flowers features films by six visionary women artists from the region termed ´the Middle East´ where a colonialists´ footprint of destruction, displacement and reconstruction have long become part of artists´ psychic imagination and generative narratives. The film and video works selected here internalize this state of constant flux, employing both fictional and diaristic narratives while collapsing the hyper-real with the surreal. Scenes from daily life may become infused with a subconscious overlay of desire, fear, alienation or utopian longings that resemble a hallucination of the past and future colliding. Through highly evocative mixed use of time-based media; ranging from found super 8mm, to stained celluloid, to CGI, many of the works lean towards a retro-futurist lens that is highly attentive to the minutiae and habits of locale, yet slippery in its chronology.

 

Regine Basha is a curator, educator and cultural producer working between Madrid and New York. Her curatorial work and story-telling archive, Tuning Baghdad, can be found on bashaprojects.com. She is based between Brooklyn and Madrid.


Monuments and Flowers is co-presented by ArteEast and Casa Árabe. This series is part of the legacy program Unpacking the ArteArchive, which preserves and presents over 17 years of film and video programming by ArteEast. In addition to in-person, theatrical screenings at Casa Árabe Cordoba (April 27th, 7pm) and at Casa Árabe Madrid (April 28, 7:30pm), the series will be presented on artearchive.org from April 29 - May 7, 2022. For more info on the in person program go to casaarabe.es



Check out the Artist Spotlights with Lara Baladi, Setareh Shahbazi , Marianne Fahmy, and Malak Helmy

 

Don’t Touch Me Tomatoes & Chachacha


Between 2012 and 2013, artist Lara Baladi created the immersive, surround-sound video installation, Don’t Touch Me Tomatoes & Chachacha as a direct response to the ill-concealed misogyny which had been surfacing around the world (and continues to), and which at the time, in Egypt in particular, was amplified by the use of sexual abuse as a counter-revolutionary tool.


Made with YouTube videos collected over a period of two years during the 2011 Egyptian revolution and its aftermath, Don’t Touch Me Tomatoes & Chachacha, is a tribute to the creative and transformative part women play in history, a role they are too often denied, in the Middle East and in the world at large.


As a response to a commission by Christian Dior to make a work for the exhibition Miss Dior––which highlighted the designer’s admiration for his sister’s role as a resistant in the second world war––this enchanting audio-visual experience, titled after one of Josephine Baker’s songs, Don’t Touch Me Tomatoes, is a "carousel" of fireflies in which iconic women artists, activists, and anarchists, such as Louise Michelle, Isadora Duncan, Alice Guy, and many more––are fireflies, who, if only for a moment, illuminate the world.


This work was originally conceived as a 7.1 surround sound video installation (projection at 180 degrees 380 X 118 inches).


Artwork commissioned by Dior.



About the Filmmaker 


Lara Baladi is an internationally recognized Egyptian-Lebanese, multi-disciplinary

artist, archivist, and educator. Her artistic practice spans from photography, video, sculpture to architecture, social engagement and multimedia installations. Informed by critical investigations into historical archives and the study of popular visual culture,

Baladi’s work questions the theoretical divide between myth, memory, socio-political narratives and the cycles inherent to History. Baladi’s work has been published, exhibited and featured internationally—from the Centre George Pompidou, Paris, Transmediale,

Berlin, the Gwangju Biennial, South Korea, to the Hasselblad Foundation, Sweden. .Baladi has received fellowships from the Japan Foundation and MIT’s Open Documentary Lab – and residencies with Art Omi (Ghent, New York), MacDowell (New Hampshire) and MIT (Ida Ely Rubin Artist in Residence) amongst others. She has been on the board of directors of the Arab Image Foundation (Lebanon) and Townhouse Gallery of Contemporary Art (Egypt). Since 2011, her media initiative Vox Populi: Tahrir Archives, includes a series of artworks, publications and an open source timeline and portal into web-based archives of the 2011 Egyptian revolution and other global social movements. Since 2016, Lara Baladi has been a Lecturer in MIT’s Program in Art, Culture and Technology (ACT).



  • Year
    2013
  • Runtime
    9 minutes
  • Language
    Multilingual
  • Country
    Egypt, Lebanon
  • Note
    It is highly recommended to watch this film with headphones.
  • Director
    Lara Baladi
  • Producer
    Urubu
  • Animator
    Bastien Brenot
  • Sound Design
    Nathaniel Robin Mann