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Lot 530: L'Armonial Total: 255 x 300cm (100 3/8 x 118 1/8in) Each Panel: 255 x 150cm (100 3/8 x 59 1/16in)

Est: £70,000 GBP - £100,000 GBPSold:
BonhamsLondon, United KingdomOctober 07, 2014

Item Overview

Description

L'Armonial acrylic on canvas in two parts (dyptich) executed in 2011 Total: 255 x 300cm (100 3/8 x 118 1/8in) Each Panel: 255 x 150cm (100 3/8 x 59 1/16in)

Dimensions

255 x 300cm

Artist or Maker

Exhibited

: London, Rose Issa Projects, Ayman Baalbaki: Beirut Again and Again, 2011

Provenance

: Property from a private collection, London

Notes

Published: Rose Issa,Ayman Baalbaki: Beirut Again and Again Beyond Art Publications, 2011 "Buildings, too, are children of Earth and Sun." - Frank Lloyd Wright Ayman Baalbaki's inimitable depictions of war-torn Beirut are a visceral, aesthetically overpowering testament to the destructive power of conflict, a destruction whose genesis, whilst physical, infiltrates, scars and distorts the collective consciousness of its sufferers. Baalbaki's fixation with conflict is manifest throughout his life and work. Born in 1975, the year of the outbreak of the Lebanese Civil War, his family were forced to flee Rass-el Dikweneh when he was only a few months old. The sceptre of war would loom over Baalbaki's head throughout his life, with his home in Haret Hreik being obliterated during the Israeli attacks of 2006. When it came to approaching his work as a painter Baalbaki naturally drew from the deep reservoir of memory formed by these disturbing experiences. Concerned with the link between imagery and memory, Baalbaki uses his art as a haunting aide-memoire to the conflict that has plagued Beirut, reminding people that even in times of relative piece, they should not disregard the deep systemic divisions that gave rise to conflict in the first place. Baalbaki explains that this conceptual initiative is "based on what Nietzsche called the "imposition of memory. After the war, whoever had experienced it, tried to erase its effects and impact from his/her memory and surroundings, although the causes of war and its essence [were] still present in the city". In light of this overarching agenda, Baalbaki's works accordingly focus on the aftermath of conflict, and the remnants of its destructive influence. The gap between the act of destruction and the time of depiction, which Baalbaki's works occupy, is part of a concerted effort to place a reflective emphasis on the theme of war; it is seldom in the eye of the storm where one can truly measure, discern and recognize the effects of destruction, it is only when the impact of war breaches the heat of the battle, permeating into the visual, emotional and psychological landscape that its true imprint becomes manifest. The medium through which this imprint is made palpable by Baalbaki, is through the depiction of Beirut's war torn buildings; these buildings, like the individuals they contained, are perhaps some of the city's most important inhabitants, they are the edifices that signify identity, civilization, the existence of families and homes, they are the structures which give shelter, congregation, life, and industry to a population, they are the building blocks of the communities they house, and it is through their facades that the culture, history and collective narrative of their inhabitants are most immediately recognized. It is these buildings which therefore wear most overtly the wounds of war, and whilst the human impact of conflict lives within the hearts of those who have survived it, and through the memories of those who have the fallen, the visual insignia of conflict is most tangible in the fragmentation of the civic space. It is this fragmentation which Baalbaki seeks to document, reflect on, and ultimately immortalise in his canvases. Executed in a scale which captures both the architectural enormity of the buildings depicted, and the severity of the damage they have suffered, Baalbaki's paintings are striking vignettes of a city whose urban fabric has been punctured and mutilated. L'Armonial, the largest of Baalbaki's works ever to come to public auction, is perhaps one of the most ambitious and monumental of Baalbaki's architectural vignettes. Depicting a well known traditionally built mixed use structure constructed in the 1920's, the Armonial building's façade balances delicately within a expansive mesh of green scaffolding, awaiting its reconstruction. This process of reconstruction is a powerful analogy for the collective healing process undergone by a society after times of conflict; its façade preserved but its foundations shattered, the Armonial building reflects a Lebanon whose outward subsistence masks its inner torment. Amidst this torment, however, remains a glimmer of hope, originally titled "Beirut Reconstructed", the present work is evidence of a societies regenerative resilience and its ability to renew whilst preserving its past, a fitting testament to a cultures belief in the strength of its communal identity.

Auction Details

Islamic and Indian Art

by
Bonhams
October 07, 2014, 09:30 AM UTC

101 New Bond Street, London, LDN, W1S 1SR, UK