'I think people who don’t know Arabic fall in love with calligraphy for the same reason I first did in class,' Shawkat says. 'It’s because they enjoy the form. They look at them as a beautiful abstract shapes. As simple as that.'
Wissam Shawkat's solo exhibition Letters of Love II is on show at Mestaria Gallery in Alserkal Avenue until November 30. All Photos: Antonie Robertson/The National
The exhibition was launched on November 11, a significant date for the artist. Not only did he leave Iraq on the same date in 2002, but 11 years ago his solo exhibition, Letters of Love, was exhibited in New York to major critical success.
The new body of work is an extension of the technical ideas he was experimenting with 11 years ago. They are also an homage to the personal and artistic milestones in his life and career and, of course, a celebration of love.
Shawkat took the Arabic word for love, hub, and some of its variations such as mahaba (to have love for something), ishq (to long for something) and gharam (meaning desire), and reconstructed them.
'Letters by themselves are like an abstract shape,' Shawkat tells The National. 'If you take any letter in Arabic or in English, any part of that letter, you will end up with an abstraction. We give it sound or when it’s merged with another letter, we give it meaning. But in reality it's a form, a beautiful form.'
The expansive sets of paintings he created from the word love and its variations possess a unique sense of balance through Shawkat’s conscious decision to move away from the rules of traditional calligraphy.
'When I started planning for this show, I went back and opened my old files from the New York show,' Shawkat says. 'I found some ideas that were interesting, but weren’t refined yet. I took some of them and made them work, and now they are pieces in this show. It's always a process, it's progress. Sometimes it fails and sometimes it works.'
All the paper Shawkat used was handmade, while the ink is made from handmade pigment colours. Each piece is a juxtaposition of these traditional materials with Shawkat’s forward thinking experimentation in calligraphy.
Shawkat's part conscious, part instinctual decisions make his work timeless and appeal to an international audience, many of whom don’t speak or read Arabic.
'I think people who don’t know Arabic fall in love with calligraphy for the same reason I first did in class,' Shawkat says. 'It’s because they enjoy the form. They look at them as a beautiful abstract shapes. As simple as that.'
Wissam Shawkat's solo exhibition Letters of Love II is on show at Mestaria Gallery in Alserkal Avenue until November 30. All Photos: Antonie Robertson/The National
The exhibition was launched on November 11, a significant date for the artist. Not only did he leave Iraq on the same date in 2002, but 11 years ago his solo exhibition, Letters of Love, was exhibited in New York to major critical success.
The new body of work is an extension of the technical ideas he was experimenting with 11 years ago. They are also an homage to the personal and artistic milestones in his life and career and, of course, a celebration of love.
Shawkat took the Arabic word for love, hub, and some of its variations such as mahaba (to have love for something), ishq (to long for something) and gharam (meaning desire), and reconstructed them.
'Letters by themselves are like an abstract shape,' Shawkat tells The National. 'If you take any letter in Arabic or in English, any part of that letter, you will end up with an abstraction. We give it sound or when it’s merged with another letter, we give it meaning. But in reality it's a form, a beautiful form.'
The expansive sets of paintings he created from the word love and its variations possess a unique sense of balance through Shawkat’s conscious decision to move away from the rules of traditional calligraphy.
'When I started planning for this show, I went back and opened my old files from the New York show,' Shawkat says. 'I found some ideas that were interesting, but weren’t refined yet. I took some of them and made them work, and now they are pieces in this show. It's always a process, it's progress. Sometimes it fails and sometimes it works.'
All the paper Shawkat used was handmade, while the ink is made from handmade pigment colours. Each piece is a juxtaposition of these traditional materials with Shawkat’s forward thinking experimentation in calligraphy.
Shawkat's part conscious, part instinctual decisions make his work timeless and appeal to an international audience, many of whom don’t speak or read Arabic.
'I think people who don’t know Arabic fall in love with calligraphy for the same reason I first did in class,' Shawkat says. 'It’s because they enjoy the form. They look at them as a beautiful abstract shapes. As simple as that.'