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Suad al-Attar

 

1942 -

An Iraqi painter and printmaker.

Suad (also Suʿad) al-Attar was the first Iraqi woman to hold a solo exhibition in Baghdad (1965). She was trained at California State University, at the University of Baghdad, and also at the Wimbledon School of Art and the Central School of Art in London. Al-Attar's work is rooted in the visual traditions of her native Iraq and makes use of elements of Islamic design, Assyrian art, and folk art in particular. Many of her works represent scenes from Arab legends and folklore, or detailed gardens filled with flora and fauna, both done in styles influenced by medieval Baghdadi painting and the broader tradition of miniature painting. Much of her work since the 1990s has been inspired by the tragic situation of Iraq and by the untimely death of her sister (also an artist as well as an influential curator) during the bombing of Baghdad during the 1991 Gulf War. Al-Attar has described her work as emotional archives that deal centrally with myths, sensuality, dreams, and taboos. She has exhibited in the Middle East, Europe, and the United States. She is the winner of the Miró Award and of several prizes at international biennials.

Bibliography

Ali, Wijdan. Modern Islamic Art: Development and Continuity. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1997.

— JESSICA WINEGAR

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Suad al-Attar (Arabic,سعاد العطار)(born 1942) is a renowned Iraqi painter[1] whose work is in private and public collections worldwide, including The British Museum and the Gulbenkian Collection. She has held over twenty solo exhibitions, including one in Baghdad that became the first solo exhibition in the country's history for a woman artist. Her many awards include the first prize at the International Biennale in Cairo in 1984 and an award of distinction at the Biennale held in Malta in 1995.

Suad left Baghdad with her husband and children in 1976, and settled in London. For her, the perpetual sense of longing for "home" has always been balanced by an awareness of the freedom that comes with distance. This freedom—a condition that gained added significance following the regime’s rise to power under Saddam Hussein in the late 1970s—has enabled her to explore her relationship with her homeland and to develop a personal visual language with which to express it.

Elements of this language are to be found within the traditions of Middle Eastern art. The winged creatures of Assyrian reliefs, Sumerian sculptures and the illuminated manuscripts of the Baghdadi School were instrumental. However, this awareness of her Arab heritage did not result in slavish imitation, but was forged with her own romantic imagination and an appreciation of western figurative traditions to create enigmatic images in which narrative and symbolism are intertwined.

A substantial monograph documenting her career was published in London in 2004. Much of Suad’s painting is characterised by an intense dreamlike and poetic sensibility that draws on motifs and symbols from within the traditions of Middle Eastern art. In recent years, these richly-coloured representations of paradise and of sleeping cities bathed in turquoise blue, have disappeared from her work as she has become increasingly preoccupied with the plight of Iraq.

References

  1. ^ Iraqi Artists at the Art History Archive, retrieved June 14th 2007.



 
 

 

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Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Copyright © 2004 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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