• Aysha E. Arar, By Mohamed Amer Meziane and Anissa Touati

    Aysha E. Arar

    By Mohamed Amer Meziane and Anissa Touati

    First and foremost, Aysha Arar's trajectory disrupts our conventional narratives of what an artist is. A thousand miles away from the romantic myth of a genius bestowed by God or nature upon a sanctified creator, Arar enters the art world as if breaking and entering. There's no conversion to a fantasized demiurgic function, no "revelation" when born Palestinian in Israel. Arar was propelled by the chance of a prosaic Google search towards an art school. Inspired by the power of singing, the voice is omnipresent through the smallest threads weaving the image. Whose voice? Hers, but also that of the Palestinian people, living "under incubation": silenced and forced to speak a language that is not their own. Arar undoubtedly practices an art of resistance to oppression. However, despite constant references to the figures of the hero and the Messiah, this art of survival does not manifest itself in the conventional forms of the "political." Far from any committed art, resistance is primarily the ability to breathe underwater by changing worlds and elements through the power of images and voice. Breathing underwater when one can no longer do so on land. Like Amphibia: a creature, part-human, part-animal, a being of submarines, it breathes and lives in worlds not accessible to the oppressive forces that claim the lands. Beyond the staging of a reclamation of land or dignity, it aims to transport us into another world on which no colonial or patriarchal force would have a grip.

  • Aysha Arar's drawings plunge us into another world, underwater and amphibious. They represent what she calls 'creatures without identity.' Bodies...
    Aysha Arar's drawings plunge us into another world, underwater and amphibious. They represent what she calls "creatures without identity." Bodies haunted by love that precede their being, these creatures merge into each other, shattering the boundaries of identity with lines traversing the entangled bodies. Our visual identification techniques are thus disturbed in what, for the hurried eye, appears to be simple childlike drawings. They are, in truth, lines beneath the drawing that bring us back to a sub-perceptual state, rediscovering sensation as it functions before our brains can objectify bodies by attributing human identities to them. Disturbing the boundary between humans and non-humans, Arar invents a code that corresponds colors, natural elements, and humans. This code intertwines the feminine and the masculine through the play of colors, bringing forth an aesthetic and cosmic force from their indistinctness.
     
    • Aysha E Arar, The kick, 2018
      Aysha E Arar, The kick, 2018
    • Aysha E Arar, He was everywhere even in my DNA, 2018
      Aysha E Arar, He was everywhere even in my DNA, 2018
  • Aysha E Arar, Amphibia, Ai Generated Animation

    Beit Hagefen Art Gallery, July, 2023
    • Aysha E Arar, Open your Mouth, 2023
      Aysha E Arar, Open your Mouth, 2023
    • Aysha E Arar, Alice in the Middle East, 2023
      Aysha E Arar, Alice in the Middle East, 2023
    • Aysha E Arar, Alice in the Middle East, 2023
      Aysha E Arar, Alice in the Middle East, 2023
    • Aysha E Arar, She was always your spoiled cat, 2023
      Aysha E Arar, She was always your spoiled cat, 2023
    • Aysha E Arar, Hug me, 2023
      Aysha E Arar, Hug me, 2023
    • Aysha E Arar, It was more than a love story, 2023
      Aysha E Arar, It was more than a love story, 2023
  • Art Ono 2024

    Booth 205

    Chaya Hazan

    +972 58-7419969

    international@dvirgallery.com