Rhona Hoffman Gallery opens its first solo exhibition of Egyptian artist Wassef Boutros-Ghali

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, April 19, 2024


Rhona Hoffman Gallery opens its first solo exhibition of Egyptian artist Wassef Boutros-Ghali
Wassef Boutros-Ghali, Untitled, 2015. Acrylic on canvas, 38 x 38 inches.



CHICAGO, IL.- Rhona Hoffman Gallery is presenting its first solo exhibition of Egyptian artist Wassef Boutros-Ghali (b. 1924, Cairo, Egypt). Situated as both constructivist compositions and Levantine landscapes, the collection of bold canvases hover between formal geometric abstractions and distilled figural representations of channels, canals, buildings struck by sunlight, and the limitlessness of the desert and the sea.

Two primary facts surrounding the artist’s storied biography are often asserted in relation to his paintings. The first is that he was born into a long lineage of statesmen and politicians; his brother (Boutros Boutros-Ghali) orchestrated the Camp David Accords in 1978, his grandfather (Boutros Ghali Pasha) was Egypt’s prime minister for over one year prior to his assassination in 1910. The second is that, though studying in the Beaux-Arts tradition, Boutros-Ghali’s affinity toward the style of international modernism following WWII led him to be a self-proclaimed disciple of Le Corbusier.1 Each of these influences unfold throughout Boutros-Ghali’s decades-long career as a painter and an architect. At the time of this exhibition, the artist has lived through three political revolutions in his native Cairo—the impact of this fact upon his work is both remote (paintings that appear in a constant negotiation between push and pull) and tangible (in the artist’s availability of materials throughout his chronology).

Amid his work and life—which among being a painter has included roles such as the Principal Technical Advisor to the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and a consultant for UNESCO to the restoration of ancient monuments in Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco—the discourse surrounding Boutros-Ghali is intrinsically tied to both politics and the international project of modernism within the context of the Global South. It is the artist’s precise interest in the intersection between the built environment, urban planning, political conflict, and the sublimity of the landscape upon which these human histories develop that Boutros-Ghali’s paintings evoke.




The project of modernism has been perceived as “a quintessentially European and North-American movement, all other expressions have tended to be dismissed as ‘derivative’ or ‘mimicry’—a syndrome of ‘being relegated to the waiting room of history.’"2 A subsequent, more subtle form of occupation to colonial rule. As a text on Chandigarh, whose masterplan was re-designed by Le Corbusier beginning in the 1950s describes, “...modern urbanism in the Global South remains stuck in the discourses of center and periphery, of the original model and the copy of modernity and tradition.”3 Boutros-Ghali’s paintings exist not as a copy, translation, or distortion of this history, but rather evidence an ‘alternative modernism’ that has pervaded throughout his life and the majority of the regions he occupied while practicing from the 1940s to the present.

Following Boutros-Ghali’s return to Cairo in 1985, two paintings in particular from 2002 embody this pictorial and theoretical quality. In Dream (Rêve)(2002), a white square is cradled within the upper center of a square perimeter. Surrounding the interior shape, the span of an ochre kite form pulls down from the top right edge of the canvas, extending behind the majority of the composition. It is interrupted by minimal labyrinthine strips of black and white in the lower left quadrant. Alternating between positive and negative form, the geometry of the work through the economic use of three colors achieves an unpredictable mobility—fighting against inertia, the eye moves along the traces of Boutros-Ghali’s structure. At times the work is frontal, like a gateway or a wall; at others, we see an aerial view of a building upon sand, which is demarcated along the depths of a body of water. In either read of the image, the painting carries an inherently diagrammatic quality.

In Oedipus (2002), this figuration extends its schema toward mythology. Titled after the King of Thebes from the Athenian tragedy written by Sophocles, Oedipus’ prophecy was told that he would kill his father and marry his mother. Unaware of his adoption, he inadvertently fulfills his fate. In Boutros-Ghali’s representation, the bodily elements of the protagonist are similarly secreted, perhaps intentionally misleading the viewer to assume the composition is a pure geometric abstraction. As with the other works on view within the exhibition—which could appear as shadows cast by buildings, or glimpses of the sea—the collection of shapes upon the canvas both dissolve and come into focus. The personification within Oedipus positions a desaturated green figurewhose elongated arm reaches from behind a column. A blue triangle—painted in a brilliant ultramarine hue, a pigment once so rare it was reserved to adorn the Virgin Mary in depictions of Christ— rests atop an imposing white curved edge that occupies the space between us and the figure. It approaches his mouth.

Like Boutros-Ghali’s Oedipus, the position of the artist in relation to the subjects he portrays is one of both intimacy and abstraction. Of a love for, and opposition within, construction of the image. They arise from an artist who has witnessed enduring conflict; a record of perception unfettered by colonial attempts to dismiss their origin as evolutions of modernism. Though Boutros-Ghali has lived in many cities out of necessity, this collection of works, each made in his studio in Cairo, are indicative of arriving home.––Stephanie Cristello

1 Following WWII, in 1947 Boutros-Ghali visited the architect’s works in France and Switzerland.
2 Maristella Casiato and Tom Avermaete, Casablanca Chandigarh: A Report on Modernization, 2014. Canadian Center for Architecture, 44.
3 Ibid










Today's News

June 28, 2021

For the Medici, the last great picture show

'New type of early human' found in Israel

Egypt arrests former MP for smuggling antiquities

Colosseum's underground labyrinth restored to eerie splendour

"Red tourism' flourishes in China ahead of party centennial

Major show featuring more than 100 works by Alexander Calder and Pablo Picasso opens at the High Museum of Art

Dutch to check artwork stolen by Nazis for restitution

Galerie Barbara Thumm opens an exhibition of works by Sarah Entwistle

Rhona Hoffman Gallery opens its first solo exhibition of Egyptian artist Wassef Boutros-Ghali

Menstrual cups in museums? It's time.

MAGNUM 2020: A book by Magnum photographers

Fonts as puzzles: Can you solve them?

Jeanne Lamon, who led an early-music ensemble, dies at 71

A graceful place where Bhangra and Bollywood meet

Pandemic changed how musicians and investors see royalties

At Ailey's spring gala, different kinds of hope

New-York Historical Society creates a new division with a focus on New York City's marginalized communities

Artist jetsonorama creates new installation at Fort Garland Museum and Cultural Center

Heather Gaudio Fine Art opens Matthew Shlian's first solo exhibition at the gallery

Gilcrease Museum reveals concept design for new building

World Trade Center hosts art exhibit featuring 28 emerging and established artists

Alex Vardaxoglou opens an exhibition of works by contemporary British artist Mimi Hope

FOMU Fotomuseum of Antwerp exhibits work by ten promising phototographers

Library furniture & an important private collection coming up at Dreweatts

Tips and Best Practices for a Law Firm Website

Car Accident Injuries - When is a Passenger Liable?

What to Expect and How to Prepare for Divorce Mediation

Signs of High Testosterone In a Man

What to show To when one Website Design Company




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful