فير زملر غاليري Sfeir-Semler Gallery

Lawrence Abu Hamdan
Zifzafa


Munch Museet, Oslo

Zifzafa is an Arabic word describing a wind that shakes and rattles everything in its path. Lawrence Abu Hamdan has created a work which demonstrates the effect that more than 30 planned wind turbines will have upon the inhabitants of the occupied Golan Heights.

Lawrence Abu Hamdan takes you through the landscape in a guided play-through, showing the impact of the planned 250-metre wind turbines. Their mechanical roar merges with recordings of children at play, bees buzzing, birds singing. Abu Hamdan also includes a video of saxophonist Amr Mdah, playing from the balcony of one of the area’s small houses. Together, these elements form an acoustic portrait of the Golan Heights: both a warning of what stands to be lost and a record of the community’s resilience.

As well as being a powerful installation in itself, the work also addresses important critical questions to do with the green movement and those who suffer in the transition to so-called clean energy. This is especially relevant in connection with the current anti-wind turbine protests here in Norway/Sápmi.

The exhibition is curated by Tominga O’Donnell.

Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Zifzafa: a livestream audio essay, 2024
video game, three-channel projection, color, sound, 40 min 50 sec
Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Tilting at Windmills, 2024
CGI animation, color, 6 sec loop, each
Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Wind Ensemble, 2024
single-channel video projection, sound, color, amplifier, 12 min

Photo: Ove Kvavik, Munchmuseet