On Demand
Life Under the Gun
Friday, December 12, 2008
Iraqi-born artist Wafaa Bilal’s attempts to create a dialogue between Iraqis and American include being shot at tens of thousands of times by a paintball gun fired over the internet, and trying to blow up an Iraqi farmhouse he built at an art colony in California. His new memoir is Shoot an Iraqi.
Event:
Wafaa Bilal will be speaking and signing books
Fri. Dec. 12 at 7:00 PM
Pomegranate Gallery
130 Greene St. in Soho
For more info, go here or call 212-260-4014
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A combination of Joseph Beuys and that artist that had someone shoot him in the arm for performance art.
Could you please ask what he thinks the long term outlook for Iraq will be? Basically, Was the invasion worth it?
The art world is shot. This artist embodies the state of the art world/market today. Everything from politics to 'issues' from the war to aggression to interativity are relevant. He teaches and encourages this practice. BUT ART IS ON THE VERGE OF MOVING DRASTICLY AWAY FROM THIS NONSENse. This clown has real personal history that is interesting, but as an artist he is a clown and he and his art will soon be forgotten. The significance of the color of the paint ball?!? Give us a break! How about these "issues": Perspective, draftsmanship, creating great timeless art objects of permanent materials. Remember these?
I know an Iraqi refugee here in NJ who was an artist in Bahgdad and Basra. He is looking for work in the metro area. Can your guest please contact me to help a fellow Iraqi?
I would never shoot @ any living creature unless I or my family were under direct threat. It is difficult to imagine how people can be so sadistic. I shall renew my prayers for peace.
I really appreciate this discussion, both for its relation to art practice and to issues the world is confronting. I am a new listener to the Lopate show, but it is definitely on my radar now. The same goes for the earlier discussion with Coco Fusco. It's excellent to have these discussions to listen to. More, please.
tom you must be living in some serious denial. Who died and left you in charge of artistic expression? I for one am grateful to hear an artist working through PTSD, which I hope you never have to try to face, especially if you are not able to connect it to your artistic dimension (which in my humble opinion has very little to do with/or os far deeper than whatever the preferred technique - and I'm a pretty accomplished draftsperson, painter and printmaker, in some museums...)
oh and PS Tom I was diagnosed with PTSD long before 9/11's aftermath, when the acronym became more widely known. You might want to read Harvard psychiatrist Denise Herman's "Trauma and Recovery," the first serious scientific investigation into the effects of trauma, before pouncing on something you evidently have very little awareness of. I always thought love and compassion were as much a part of art as perfect rendering of anything.
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