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- Country of residence: Palestine
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Kamal Boullata was born in Jerusalem in 1942. He earned a degree in fine arts from the Academia di Belle Arti in Rome and from 1968 to 1971 continued his studies at the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design in Washington, D.C. Boullata taught at Georgetown University while producing his work and in 1993 was granted the Fulbright Senior Scholar Fellowship to research Islamic art in Morocco. He lived and worked between Paris and Morocco throughout the ‘90s and currently lives in Berlin. In addition to making his own work, Boullata is a leading historian of Palestinian art; his Palestinian Art From 1850 to the Present remains the most comprehensive survey written on the topic of modern art in Palestine.
Boullata grew up in the Christian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, and this experience was integral to his development as an artist. At age eight, he began studying with Palestinian icon painter Khalil Halaby and, for the next five years, learned to paint from photographs using the grid method, as Halaby used in crafting his icons. Though he began with religious icons, Boullata’s true passion as a young artist was painting from life; Jerusalem’s cityscapes, streets, souks, architecture, and people flooded his early canvases and would continue to play into his work following his eventual turn to abstraction. Of course, the tumultuous history of modern Palestine impacted Boullata, who grew up in the Jordanian-controlled sector of a newly-divided Jerusalem. With the Zionist conquest of West Jerusalem in 1948, the city began to change rapidly under the Israeli regime of militarized urban planning. Even while living in a city divided by barbed wire and militias, however, Boullata’s spirits were lifted by the solidarity that united Jerusalem’s Palestinian community across religious differences.
Boullata was always fascinated with Arabic script, particularly the geometric Kufic style, which would come to play a significant role in his mature oeuvre. The inscriptions on the Dome of the Rock were a primary source of this passion; as a child, the artist would spend hours visiting the sacred monument, which he would sketch to bring home some of its beauty.
Though Boullata spent most of his adult life away from Jerusalem, his hometown remains salient in his creations. The Kufic script he so admired as a child has become central to his oeuvre, appearing in the colorful silkscreens that have become the artist’s trademark. These appear, at first, to be patterns or abstract compositions, but upon closer inspection include repetitive phrases that are frequently derived from Arabic maxims, the Bible, and the Holy Qur’an.
Boullata creates these harmonious compositions from the books of all three Abrahamic religions, perhaps to suggest the importance of transcending religious divisions and asserting the unity of his homeland. Furthermore, he frequently plays with common religious phrases to re-code them in a secular, humanistic framework. An example of this can be found in La Ana Ila Ana (1983), which references the Muslim profession of faith, “There Is No God But God,” but which means, instead, “There Is No I But I.”
Kamal Boullata’s silkscreen work reflects an encounter between Islamic and Byzantine aesthetics as well as his own visual and verbal memory. His creative, methodical use of Arabic script can illustrate Hurufiyya, a set of aesthetic principles originating in the mid-twentieth century that seeks to combine tenets of Western modernism with Islamic traditions of calligraphy. One of the most inspirational figures in Boullata’s work was Hasan Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen) (c. 965-1040), the renowned medieval optician and master aesthetician. Alhazen’s observations left a mark on the history of conceptual aesthetics and resonated with Boullata’s studies on the relationship between sight, perception, and color. Boullata commemorated Alhazen in his 2009 exhibition Homage to al-Hasan Ibn al-Haytham, a collection of geometric, iridescent silkscreen compositions at Artspace Gallery in Dubai.
In addition to his silkscreens, the artist is well known for abstract geometric compositions painted in acrylic on canvas. He has described creating these works as a process that goes from the mechanical to the organic: he begins with a pencil, compass, and ruler to create a mathematical rendering, and once a pattern forms in his work, it becomes a skeleton ready to receive color as flesh. Just as his calligraphic works pull from historical and cultural sources, his abstract works frequently reference ancient and mythological events: the series Bilqis (2014), named after the legendary Queen of Sheba, exemplifies this angle.
According to the story, the pagan Bilqis first encountered the monotheistic King Solomon in his crystal palace, where the transparent floors were so reflective that she mistook them for water and lifted her skirt to avoid wetting its hem. Amazed, the queen nevertheless asked Solomon a series of riddles; when he solved them all, she acknowledged his great wisdom and converted to monotheism. In his series of abstract paintings, Boullata translates the aesthetics of fragmentation and transparency that gave Solomon’s floors their silky mirror effect.
A leader in Palestinian modern art and art history, Boullata passed away in August 2019.
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