Atlas Group/Walid Raad: galerie sfeir-semler.Writing history is never easy. Especially if you come from Lebanon, whose history has been recorded mostly from a Western perspective. Atlas Group/Walid Raad has already essayed a new take on it: the attempt to investigate present-day Lebanon from the perspective of an artistic-historical convergence, through invented documents combined with real ones and the persona of the fictive fic·tive adj. 1. Of, relating to, or able to engage in imaginative invention. 2. Of, relating to, or being fiction; fictional. 3. Not genuine; sham. historian Dr. Fadl Fakhouri. Thus, differentiating between the real and the invented, the authentic and the imaginary, in Raad's work only marginally addresses its point, for in this difference appears but the "false binary of fiction and nonfiction," according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Raad. Of course, he does work with that antithesis antithesis (ăntĭth`ĭsĭs), a figure of speech involving a seeming contradiction of ideas, words, clauses, or sentences within a balanced grammatical structure. Parallelism of expression serves to emphasize opposition of ideas. , but in the knowledge that no historical essence may be won from it. The real could always be the fictive, or vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. . [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] My Neck Is Thinner Than a Hair is a piece begun by Raad in 2001 and not expected to be completed until the end of this year. Four parts were originally announced, of which the first, a multimedia installation, is now being presented for the first time. The project is to document, retroactively ret·ro·ac·tive adj. Influencing or applying to a period prior to enactment: a retroactive pay increase. [French rétroactif, from Latin , all the car bombs set off during the Lebanese civil war Lebanese Civil War (1975–91) Civil conflict resulting from tensions among Lebanon's Christian and Muslim populations and exacerbated by the presence in Lebanon in the 1970s of fighters from the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). of 1975-91. Of a total of 245 such explosions, Raad has been able to document one hundred in images. This, we are assured, is authentic material, consisting of photographs from archives, each of which Raad has nevertheless reduced to a standard black-and-white format. The "fiction" of the current installation, so to speak, consists in that in creates the impression of an official stocktaking stock·tak·ing n. 1. A reappraisal of a situation, a person, or one's own position or prospects. 2. The act or process of inventorying merchandise or the supplies on hand. of terrorist acts. Car bombs are peculiar in that they leave the engine of the exploded car more or less unscathed. Accordingly, the photographs show the engine block itself, plus individuals or groups of people who have gathered around the symbolically charged relic. What the photos do not show is the cause of this unexpected unveiling of the automobile's power train. Theoretically they could just as easily be about accidents caused by ordinary mechanical failure. Only when one knows the context does the whole work's connection to sectarian violence Sectarian violence or sectarian strife is violence inspired by sectarianism, that is, between different sects of one particular mode of thought, not necessarily religious (e.g. become clear. "Hence," says Raad, "this project, which also includes interviews with individuals who experienced directly or indirectly the car bomb explosions, whether civilians who were victims, militiamen who packed and planted the car bomb, or doctors and psychiatrists who treated the civilians and militiamen, will also be an exploration of what it means to speak, write, and know anything about the war and postwar experience in Lebanon." Seen in this perspective, the skeletal skeletal /skel·e·tal/ (skel´e-t'l) pertaining to the skeleton. skeletal pertaining to the skeleton. See also skeletal muscle. remains of a weapon can thus become an icon of a history of suffering, after all. That which has made it through more or less "whole" is what symbolizes the damaged character of that history. The traces of war are always different, depending on time and circumstance. The suffering of war, on the other hand, is always similar. Perhaps that is why Raad arranged his installation in a different chronological order, one that knows no years, only the dates, the first through the thirtieth, of an unnamed (perhaps fictitious Based upon a fabrication or pretense. A fictitious name is an assumed name that differs from an individual's actual name. A fictitious action is a lawsuit brought not for the adjudication of an actual controversy between the parties but merely for the purpose of ?) month. In the installation, all images of the same number--that is, all those dated, say, the first, second, or third of the month--are hung next to each other. Time does not repeat itself but instead accumulates, calculating itself according to repetitions, repetitions of the war and the suffering it caused. --Wolf Jahn Translated from German by Sara Ogger. |
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