Success stories of Palestinian achievers from all over the world

JULIANA SERAPHIM

Personal Info

  • Country of residence: Palestine
  • Gender: Male
  • Born in: 1934
  • Age: 91
  • Curriculum vitae :

Information

Juliana Seraphim was born in Jaffa, Palestine, in 1934. Following the Palestinian Nakba, she fled with her family to Sidon, Lebanon by boat in 1949, and four years later, faced with the impossibility of returning home, they moved to Beirut. In the Lebanese capital, Seraphim worked in the UNRWA headquarters as a secretary before leaving Lebanon to complete her education in the arts.  She studied at the Academies of Fine Arts in Florence and Paris, as well as the Royal Academy of San Fernando in Madrid.

Beirut’s cultural golden age was in full bloom when Seraphim arrived in the city. Music, theater, cinema, and the visual arts flourished, and a vibrant international intellectual culture was growing at a rapid pace. Unlike most Palestinian refugees, Seraphim and her family were able to attain Lebanese citizenship, and the artist was lucky to benefit from experiences her countrymen in the camps could not access. After secondary school, Seraphim did not enroll in university, but maintained a busy work schedule; fortunately, she was able to pursue her passion for art through lessons with painter Jean Khalife after work hours. Her first exposure to Beirut’s art world came through subsequent exhibitions at Khalife’s studio in the 1950s. In the late ’50s, she spent a year in Florence, followed by a year in Madrid, which was a very formative period for the artist. In Madrid, she met art critic Carlos Ariane, who suggested that India ink was the medium best suited to translate Seraphim’s surreal imagination into the dreamlike compositions she strove to create. After participating in several exhibitions both locally and internationally, Juliana exhibited in the hotly anticipated inaugural Salon d’Automne at the Sursock Museum in 1961. This exhibition marked the beginning of Seraphim’s career as a professional artist.

Just fourteen years old, when Zionist forces conquered Palestine, Juliana Seraphim was part of the first generation of Palestinian artists whose practices evolved in exile. While she derived inspiration from her homeland –particularly her grandfather’s home in Jerusalem and the seascapes she grew up observing in Jaffa– she did not make art that directly addressed the politics of Palestinian liberation. This choice distinguished her from what the late Palestinian artist and art historian Kamal Boullata calls the “camp artists,” i.e., a group of male, often self-taught artists that coalesced in the refugee camps around the nascent Palestinian Liberation Organization. Because of her family’s citizenship status, she had access to Beirut’s art world in ways that the camp artists didn’t, as well as the all-important ability to travel throughout the globe. She was primarily considered an outsider by the more politically active Palestinian contingent in Beirut because she created surreal and fantastical art instead of focusing on the Palestinian national cause.

Seraphim’s signature style was a loose form of surrealism that allowed her to express her imagination in a free-flowing, dreamlike way as if peering into her own subconscious. Her work was influenced by her life in a city where topics of feminism and female sexuality were being discussed by Beirutis and foreign expats alike. She lived in a time where spirituality, exploration of alternative forms, and fighting for freedom—especially women’s rights—were central to social, political, and artistic movements, and these elements are reflected in her work’s central motifs. Magical architecture, mystical flowers, and the (often sexualized) female body are recurring figures in both her paintings and her ink drawings. Outlandish cityscapes consisting of spirals, dendritic towers, lacy ornaments, and pointed arches convey a sense of mystery, constructing elusive but entrancing utopias. Her women morph into flowers and vice versa, begging meditation on the complexity and delicacy of the female physical and emotional being. While many of her paintings carry a sensual undertone, the vision in her drawings is often more explicit –in fact, some of her ink drawings are unabashedly erotic, though the artist coyly denied intending them to read in such direction. Though women dominate these scenes too, males and androgynous figures also enter the fray, sometimes even represented as the domineering center of by sharper-edged cities with little place for the delicate “fleur” characters.

Seraphim often likened the female’s emotional complexity to a flower’s fragility, but she herself was no shrinking violet. Remembered as a bon vivant as well as a fiercely independent individual, she never married; as her friend and fellow artist Helen Khal recalls in The Woman Artist in Lebanon (1987), she felt that “the woman was too complicated and the artist too independent” to settle down with a husband. Indeed, her work’s emphasis on the female form –and its exploration of liberated female sexuality– shows the artist’s investment in eroding gender norms and the power structures they perpetuate. Her bizarre, often garishly colored paintings and dense, highly detailed drawings seem to call forth Seraphim’s own version of utopia: a world where femininity and sensitivity are widespread and celebrated, overpowering the coarse-edged male presence.

Juliana Seraphim lived as a professional artist between Paris and Beirut until she passed away in 2005.

 

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