From A World to Win News
Service:
A Cairo art gallery recently held a show of work by
Egyptian artist Mona Marzouk called Trayvon, named after the
African-American high school student Trayvon Martin murdered in Florida (U.S.)
in 2012. In a newspaper interview, she says she obsessively followed the case
and trial of the vigilante George Zimmerman, who stalked and shot the
17-year-old. "The first thing Zimmerman said to police," Marzouk
says, "was 'he's Black.'... I thought it was important to express what happened
to this young man for no reason."
Marzouk explains that the surreal trial, in which
facts were uncontested and yet the only result was to ratify the
"right" to kill Black youth in America, reminded her of the way that
Egyptian courts similarly turn right and wrong upside down. All over the world,
she says, "people are looking for justice and they [are] in jail."
She might have been thinking of the last months in her own country, where the
American-favoured former president, general Hosni Mubarak, was acquitted of
murder, even though he ordered the killing of many hundreds of demonstrators,
while youth prominent in the movement that led to his overthrow were sentenced
to prison for holding public protests against his successors.
The work in this show, however, is not about any
particular case or indeed any particular injustice. A bright yellow wall swarms
with black, sharply outlined silhouettes that recall real objects, but rather
than representational, they are suggestive, working on many layers of reference
and emotion at once. Helicopters, a recurring theme and a symbol of ubiquitous
state violence throughout the world, bring to mind birds of prey or malefic
insects. Guillotines, electric chairs and nooses combine with grand pianos and
clawed creatures. Versions of the American flag replace the stars with
terrifying but indeterminate beasts and objects that suggest empires and
executions throughout the ages. Grim castles meld minarets and cathedrals,
hinting at Pharaohs, Romans, Ottoman and European potentates. A turreted tower
gulps down the setting sun as if it were an egg yolk. These architectural
structures, like her innumerable helmets, project political dominance and male
authority – and hurt. In "Curse Carriers", a giant shark-jawed monster
with an airplane body on a tripod confronts a crab-like creature that could be
a tank with minarets. The images are razor-edged, frightening and painful to
the viewer's very soul.
See:
Http://gypsumgallery.com
www.dailynewsegypt.com/2014/10/22/trayvon-martin-inspires-gallery-display-zamalek
www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/20404/mona-marzouk's-"trayvon"-takes-inspiration-from-eg
Born in 1968, Marzouk lives and works in Alexandria,
Egypt. She is a painter, muralist and sculptor. Her work has appeared in
international biennials, and in solo shows in London and New York.
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