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German-Syrian visual artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ali Kaaf (born 1977)[1] is a Syrian-born German visual artist. His artistic style focuses on pictorial language, and works to connect the worlds of Beirut, Berlin, and the United States.
Ali Kaaf | |
---|---|
Born | 1977 (age 46–47) |
Known for | visual art |
Website | alikaaf |
Kaaf studied Visual Art from 1994 to 1998 at the Institut des Beaux-Arts in Beirut and at the Universität der Künste Berlin (UdK) from 2000 to 2005.[2] His academic teachers there were Marwan Kassab-Bachi and Rebecca Horn.[3][4]
Kaaf is influenced by European and Arab cultures and art traditions. His abstract art is inspired by important locations in his life — Damascus, Beirut, and Berlin—and by concepts such as Sufi mysticism and Islamic philosophy. Balance between meditation and returning to everyday life is part of the artist’s thinking and is directly inscribed in his artistic activity.[5]
Kaaf’s work comprises various artistic disciplines, from drawing and photography to glass sculpture, sound, and video-to-room installation. He primarily works with paper and ink.
Kaaf finds his European inspiration in Modernism and the avant-garde of the 1960s: works like his series The Byzantine Corner were inspired by Henri Matisse’s paper cutouts and the collages of the Dadaists.[1] Influences from his delving into the German art movement Zero are recognizable. The principle of removal and readdition is characteristic of his working method. The works display their form language in relation to point and line, surface and depth, black and white, surfaces and forms, rhythm, fire, erosion, and light and shadow.[6] Kaaf’s abstractions are the result of his intense dealings with script, architecture, and history.
Kaaf’s works engage in dialogue with cultures and disciplines and, beyond them, through interdisciplinary collaborations, to Gesamtkunstwerke, syntheses of the arts. Examples include a 2018 video installation on 48 Variations for Two Pianos by John McGuire (Festival ME_MMIX 2018[7]) in the Es Baluard Museum for Modern and Contemporary Art in Palma; in 2015, Intima, a dance project in collaboration with Dawson Dance SF and the choreographer David Dawson, San Francisco, and the composers Ashraf Kateb and Kinan Azmeh; and his recurrent collaboration since 2011 with the glassblower James Mongrain in Seattle; the products are flowing sculptural forms cooled to glass with titles like Helmet, Tattoo, and Larynx (2014), which correspond with his works on paper (Rift, Dress, Wall, and Burn Trace).
Kaaf has presented his work in artist talks, lectures, and workshops, at institutions like Montana State University Billings and at the symposium on Syria and Yemen: making art today[8] with Anna Wallace-Thompson, Buthayna Ali, Fadi Yazigi, and Kevork Mourad in the British Museum in London in 2019. The Artist in Residence Program of Germany’s Foreign Ministry in cooperation with the Regional Association of Berlin Galleries, awarded to Kaaf in 2020, is the first in-house residence program of a German ministry. It is open to selected artists who come from abroad or whose work focuses intensely on the world outside Germany.
In 2022, the Museum of Islamic Art in the Pergamon Museum Berlin presented Kaaf's installation I Am a Stranger: Twofold a Stranger as the artist's interpretation of the 8th century Islamic Mshatta Façade, accompanied by a bilingual catalogue.[2]
Kaaf’s works are found in private and public collections, for example in the Darat Al Funun – The Khalid Shoman Foundation in Amman, in the Solidere Collection Beirut, in the MAXXI, the Italian National Museum for Art of the 21st Century (Museo nazionale delle arti del XXI secolo) in Rome, the Moontower Foundation in Bad König, the Museum for Islamic Art in Berlin, and the Peter Raue collection in Berlin.
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