فير زملر غاليري Sfeir-Semler Gallery

Akram Zaatari
three snapshots and a long exposure


Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Hamburg

Sfeir-Semler Gallery is happy to inaugurate its extended ground floor space with a solo show by Akram Zaatari, whose exhibitions we have been presenting since 2005 in both our Beirut and Hamburg galleries.
three snapshots and a long exposure takes the plasticity attributed to photography in the digital era as a common feature among works that engage with the reconfiguration of photographic documents.

Akram Zaatari, three snapshots and a long exposure, Exhibition view Sfeir-Semler Gallery Hamburg 2022
Exhibition view, three snapshots and a long exposure, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2022

The migration of elements from one photograph to another, their occasional withdrawal, their contamination of one another or their physical recreation, after their vanishing, as objects based on their photographic or textual descriptions, constitute the palette that was used while making the different works in this exhibition.

Akram Zaatari, three snapshots and a long exposure, Exhibition view Sfeir-Semler Gallery Hamburg 2022
Exhibition view, three snapshots and a long exposure, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2022
Akram Zaatari, three snapshots and a long exposure, Exhibition view Sfeir-Semler Gallery Hamburg 2022
Exhibition view, three snapshots and a long exposure, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2022

Photographic Currency, 2019, presented in the window of the new ground floor space of the gallery, is based on dozens of images of traditional quilts made in Saida, South Lebanon, gathered over the years by Zaatari whenever he encountered them in the archive of photographer Hashem el Madani. These had been taken in the 1950s and functioned as a loose catalog for quiltmakers, allowing them to keep records of designs and stitch patterns, to show to potential clients. Zaatari considers those photos as the external memory of quiltmakers, thus not really end products in themselves. They are used here as currency towards objects (quilts) remakes.

Akram Zaatari, Traditional quilt, satin/linen fabric, cotton-filled, hand-made by Mustapha Al-Qady, Saida, Lebanon, 2019, 200 x 180 cm
Akram Zaatari, Traditional quilt, 2019
satin/linen fabric, cotton-filled, hand-made by Mustapha Al-Qady, Saida, Lebanon, 200 ⁠× ⁠180 ⁠⁠cm
Akram Zaatari, Photographic Currency, Archival silver gelatin fiberprint, 18 x 27 cm. Photograph by Hashem el Madani, featuring Abdel-Rahman Al-Qady. Saida, early 1950s
Akram Zaatari, Photographic Currency, early 1950s
Archival silver gelantin fiberprint, 18 ⁠× ⁠27 ⁠⁠cm, Photograph by Hashem el Madani, featuring Abdel-Rahman Al-Qady, Saida
Akram Zaatari, Photographic Currency, Archival silver gelatin fiberprint, 18 x 27 cm. Photograph by Hashem el Madani, featuring Abdel-Rahman Al-Qady. Saida, early 1950s
Akram Zaatari, Photographic Currency, early 1950s
archival silver gelantin fiberprint, 18 ⁠× ⁠27 ⁠⁠cm, Photograph by Hashem el Madani, featuring Abdel-Rahman Al-Qady, Saida

Facing it, Against Photography, 2017, combines one of the most advanced 3D recording techniques to trace the reliefs of aging negatives, with one of the most traditional press methods to reproduce the surface of decayed negatives without the images they show.

Akram Zaatari, Against Photography, 2017, 12 routed aluminum plates, 24 x 28 cm each, 4 sets of intaglio and chine-collé prints, 27 x 31 cm each
Akram Zaatari, Against Photography, 2017, installation view, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2022
Akram Zaatari, Against Photography, 2017, 12 routed aluminum plates, 24 x 28 cm each, 4 sets of intaglio and chine-collé prints, 27 x 31 cm each
Akram Zaatari, Against Photography (detail), 2017
12 routed aluminium plates, 24 ⁠× ⁠28 ⁠cm each, 4 sets of intaglio and chine-collé prints, 27 ⁠× ⁠31 ⁠cm each

On the main space of the ground-floor, are works that engage directly with the archeological gesture of digging earth looking for finds, and the excitement that accompanies their first contemplation. Archeology, 2017, consists of a large glass piece that is meant to represent a replica of a small photographic glass plate that Zaatari had collected for the AIF in the late 1990s. The negative plate, which was originally exposed by Antranick Anouchian, shows an athlete posing nude, but found missing major parts. Its replica was enlarged way beyond its original size to match Zaatari’s thrill at the plate’s first encounter.

Akram Zaatari, Archeology, 2017, Pigment inkjet print on gelatin treated glass and mixed media, Pigment inkjet print on gelatin treated aluminum sheet, Floor standing preservation flood light, 210 x 160 cm
Akram Zaatari, Archeology, 2017
pigment inkjet print on gelantin tread glass and mixed media, pigment inkjet print on gelantin treated aluminium sheet, floor standing preservation flood light, 210 ⁠× ⁠160 ⁠⁠cm

The Tabnit Monolith, 2022, installed hanging from a simple and primitive crane, is a replica of a giant monolithic boulder that sealed king Tabnit’s tomb almost 1900 years before it was completely destroyed during its excavation in 1887. King Tabnit was a Phoenician king, who ruled Saida in the 6th century BC. The discovery of his mummy alongside 19 sarcophagi in what became known as Sidon’s Necropolis was one of the earliest achievements of Ottoman archaeology under the leadership of Osman Hamdi Bey.

Akram Zaatari, Tabnit-Monolith, 2022, Spuma Limestone, Bchaaleh, North Lebanon, Crane, stone: 34 x 69 x 32 cm
Akram Zaatari, Tabnit-Monolith, 2022
Spuma Limestone, Bchaaleh, North Lebanon, North Lebanon, crane, stone, 34 ⁠× ⁠69 ⁠× ⁠32 ⁠⁠cm
Akram Zaatari, Tabnit-Monolith, 2022, Spuma Limestone, Bchaaleh, North Lebanon, Crane, stone: 34 x 69 x 32 cm
Akram Zaatari, Tabnit-Monolith (detail), 2022
Spuma Limestone, Bchaaleh, North Lebanon, crane, stone, 34 ⁠× ⁠69 ⁠× ⁠32 ⁠⁠cm

An Extraordinary Event, 2018, was based on Hamdi Bey’s photographs of those finds displayed in the citrus grove immediately upon their excavation, with workers and diggers standing often in the background. Zaatari erases their central object to highlight the location and people who appear in the background.

Akram Zaatari, An Extraordinary Event, 2018, 8 inkjet prints, 35 x 56 cm each
Akram Zaatari, An Extraordinary Event, 2018, installation view, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2022
Akram Zaatari, An Extraordinary Event, 2018, Inkjet print, 35 x 56 cm
Akram Zaatari, An Extraordinary Event, 2018
inkjet print, 35 ⁠× ⁠56 ⁠⁠cm
Akram Zaatari, An Extraordinary Event, 2018, Inkjet print, 35 x 56 cm
Akram Zaatari, An Extraordinary Event, 2018
injket print, 35 ⁠× ⁠56 ⁠⁠cm

On the opposite wall, are presented elements from a site-specific display, Footnotes to Hashem el Madani’s Studio Practices, 2018, which were initially installed directly onto the exhibition walls at New Art Exchange, Nottingham. They are presented here as detached archeological objects.

Akram Zaatari, Footnotes to Hashem el Madani’s Studio Practices, 2018
Akram Zaatari, Footnotes to Hashem el Madani's Studio Practices, 2018, installation view, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2022
Akram Zaatari, Footnotes to Hashem el Madani’s Studio Practices #6, 2018, Print transfer on gypsum board, 15,5 x 18 cm
Akram Zaatari, Footnotds to Hashem el Madani's Studio Practices #6, 2018
print transfer on gypsum board, 15.5 ⁠× ⁠18 ⁠⁠cm
Akram Zaatari, Footnotes to Hashem el Madani’s Studio Practices #9, 2018, Print transfer on gypsum board, 15 x 19 cm
Akram Zaatari, Footnotes to Hashem el Madani's Studio Practices #9, 2018
print transfer on gypsum board, 15 ⁠× ⁠19 ⁠⁠cm

Exhibited on the first floor of the gallery, the series that gave its title to the show, focuses on post-civil-war iconography from Beirut. In the mid-1990s, while the reconstruction project of the city’s downtown was provoking heated debates, Zaatari started documenting the first belt around the city center, with the aim of indexing houses typology for a book project initiated by then professor of Urban Planning and Design at the American University of Beirut, Robert Saliba.

Akram Zaatari, three snapshots and a long exposure, Exhibition view Sfeir-Semler Gallery Hamburg 2022
Exhibition view, three snapshots and a long exposure, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2022
Akram Zaatari, Three snapshots and a long exposure, 2022
Exhibition view, three snapshots and a long exposure, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2022

The images, taken with a 4x5” view camera, were never used until Zaatari returned to them nearly twenty-five years later. Printed in large formats, the landscapes, which Zaatari qualifies as missing any specific focal points, might have captured an atmosphere of speculation, a gentrification on its way, and an urban transformation, back then still latent in the neighborhoods located on both sides of the green line that had divided Beirut between East and West from 1975 to 1990.

Akram Zaatari, Turning Two Plots into One, 2022, Pigmented inkjet print on backlit cloth, 100 x 180 cm
Akram Zaatari, Turning Two Plots into One, 2022
pigmented inkjet print on backlit cloth, 100 ⁠× ⁠180 ⁠⁠cm
Akram Zaatari, Black and White is Color, 2022, Pigmented inkjet print on backlit cloth, 100 x 180 cm
Akram Zaatari, Black anf White is Color, 2022
pigmented inkjet print on backlit cloth, 100 ⁠× ⁠180 ⁠⁠cm
Akram Zaatari, Temple of Unresolved Conflict, 2022, C-print, 120 x 192 cm
Akram Zaatari, Temple of the Unresolved Conflict, 2022
C-print, 120 ⁠× ⁠192 ⁠⁠cm

Within the same space, The Fold, 2018, explores specific phenomena that captured Zaatari’s interest in photographs from the collection of the Arab Image Foundation (AIF). The Fold presents a model for interpreting photographs, thus providing keys to their reconfiguration.  Most surprising is the photograph form Beirut in the 1920s - 1930s showing a reclining nude woman, originally attributed to the late Kamal Haddad, and taken to be turned into a painting. It’s transformed by Zaatari into a bas-relief in marble. Probably never meant to be displayed as a photograph, given social constraints in Lebanon at that time, the fact that it was printed as a transparency makes it, for the artist, a middle step in an artistic practice and not an end itself.

Akram Zaatari, The Fold, 2022, Installation with 9 photographs and relief, Various dimensions
Akram Zaatari, The Fold, 2022
installation with 9 photographs and relief, various dimensions

0136ha00010

Beirut, Lebanon, 1920s - 1930s
Laser print of monochrome transparency on film, 29.6 x 23.7 cm Photographer: Farid Haddad
Collection: George Haddad
Courtesy of the AIF

This transparency came as a set with other transparencies that re- present nude women posing on a bed and are attributed to Dr. Farid Haddad from the 1920s or 1930s. Haddad was a Lebanese medical doctor who practiced painting in addition to medicine, and who might have produced some paintings based on these photographs, which explains why they were printed on transparencies, thus anticipating their use on overhead projector.

Akram Zaatari, Venus of Beirut from: The Fold, 2022, 3D routed, hand-polished Grey Bardiglio imperiale, 50,5 x 50,5 x 4 cm
Akram Zaatari, Venus of Beirut, from: The Fold, 2022
3D routed, hand-polished Grey Bardiglio imperiale, 50.5 ⁠× ⁠50.5 ⁠× ⁠4 ⁠⁠cm

Un-dividing History, 2017 enfolds the photographs of Khalil Raad and Yaakov Ben Dov, fusing them into single objects made by two photographers who shared the same city, Jerusalem, but who navigated completely different universes, one Arab and the other Zionist.

Akram Zaatari, Un-Dividing History, 2017, 4 pairs of glass plates and 8 cyanotype contact-prints, 18 x 24 cm each
Akram Zaatari, Un-Dividing History, 2017
one of 4 pairs of glass plates adn 8 cyanotype contact-prints, 18 ⁠× ⁠24 ⁠⁠cm
Akram Zaatari, Un-Dividing History, 2017, 4 pairs of glass plates and 8 cyanotype contact-prints, 18 x 24 cm each
Akram Zaatari, Un-Dividing History, 2017
one of 4 pairs of glass plates and 8 cyanotype contact-prints, 18 ⁠× ⁠24 ⁠⁠cm

The exhibition ultimately communicates Zaatari’s expanded definition of photography, acknowledging the fluidity while merging media and forms of production, allowing for ellipsis, short-circuits that remain crucial while reading conflicting yet shared histories.

Akram Zaatari, Victims of prolonged struggle, 2022, Set of 7 C-prints, 90 x 60 cm each. Based on a photograph from Studio Houmani, Ouzai, 1980
Akram Zaatari, Victims of prolonged struggle, 2022, installation view, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2022
Akram Zaatari, Akram Zaatari, Victims of prolonged struggle, 2022, C-print, 90 x 60 cm. Based on a photograph from Studio Houmani, Ouzai, 1980
Akram Zaatari, Victims of prolonged struggle, 2022
one of 7 C-prints, 90 ⁠× ⁠60 ⁠⁠cm, based on a photograph from Studio Houmani, Ouzai, 1980
Akram Zaatari, Akram Zaatari, Victims of prolonged struggle, 2022, C-print, 90 x 60 cm. Based on a photograph from Studio Houmani, Ouzai, 1980
Akram Zaatari, Victims of prolonged struggle, 2022
one of 7 C-prints, 90 ⁠× ⁠60 ⁠⁠cm, Based on photograph from Studio Houmani, Ouzai, 1980