the artist Samia Halaby in her studio in New York. Courtesy Samia Halaby / Ayyam Gallery
the artist Samia Halaby in her studio in New York. Courtesy Samia Halaby / Ayyam Gallery

Abstract reality



At first glance, Samia Halaby's 1982 canvas titled Tribeca bears absolutely no resemblance to the Lower Manhattan neighbourhood in New York City. It is a seemingly abstract collection of squares and rectangles, of which about half are black and brown and the others, floating on top, are painted in bright colours such as yellow, purple, red, green and blue.

However, when Halaby explains her artistic thinking, the painting magically springs to life.

“Although the critics traditionally have tried to separate the two from each other, to me, abstraction is about reality,” she says. “But reality is not necessarily a photographic image. If you take 10 seconds turning your head from left to right, all the shapes and forms that you see cannot be captured in a photograph or a realistic image. When you walk down the street in New York, where it is so busy, to preserve your life you have learnt to look in certain ways and your eyes jump from blocks of colour, that is the rhythm you see in my paintings and explains where I place the squares.”

Thus the typically hectic nature of inner-city areas such as Tribeca, where Halaby has lived and worked in a loft apartment since 1976, is expressed within the language of abstract art.

The rhythms of life, the waves of the ocean and the people flowing in and out of the city exist simultaneously in Halaby’s paintings.

She follows general principles of motion and captures the variety of environments that she has immersed herself in over 50 years of painting. And when the work is collated in one show – as it is in the Ayyam Gallery in Al Quoz until the end of the month – the effect proves that Halaby is one of the most important international abstract artists of her time.

Samia Halaby: Five Decades of Painting and Innovation, is the first major retrospective to be organised for this renowned artist who was born in Jerusalem in 1936 and is also an outspoken activist for Palestinian rights. Curated by the art historian Maymanah Farhat, this comprehensive survey features more than 50 of her artworks from categories that are defined in the accompanying monograph. The paintings represent every period of the artist's oeuvre, which orbit around the subject of abstraction.

Tribeca is from a one-year period called Autumn Leaves and City Blocks, where Halaby compares meticulous studies she made of fallen leaves, in which she identified tiny shapes within the veined organic forms to the "truncated rectangles in city blocks and pentagonal land shapes between roads and highways".

Both, she explains, signified growth and so spawned a series of paintings of urban areas.

Farhat, in the process of curating the show, says that she was finally able to understand Halaby’s work by realising her use of materialism. “Abstraction has always been presented as something intangible or so based in theory that it is not accessible, but Samia makes it completely accessible,” Farhat explains. “She works from a materialist perspective, trying to recreate the sensations rather than the exact thing. So she is interested in how our eye understands light and how we comprehend the leaves falling from the trees and puts it there for the viewer to extract anything they can from it.”

In the enormous exhibition, which can take a couple of hours to take in if exploring all the corners of the gallery, Halaby’s explorations into visually representing these sensations are clear. She works through distinct modes such as geometric forms, helices and cycloids and a personal favourite: diagonal flight.

Here she uses lines of various width and colour to express the movement. In Tiger's Eye in Late Winter, two bright yellow lines wrap one line of black to represent the sharpness of the hunger in the tiger's eye. To me, it could just as easily depict the strata of the semi-precious stone that is also known as Tiger's Eye and that interpretation is equally valid. Halaby says: "I searched for a new language in visual art, but I am not inventing anything new. Sometimes there are references in my work that I am not aware of."

In 1986, Halaby began working with computers to produce art. She began by teaching herself computer programming on an Amiga console and developed a process called kinetic painting, which allowed her to paint “the way things sound, in addition to the way they move”. This was groundbreaking, especially in the 1980s, and confirms Halaby’s place as one of the pioneers.

The kinetic painting and the other experimental parts of Halaby’s creations, such as shredded canvas works and hanging three-dimensional works, are placed in the upstairs section of Ayyam Gallery and are the only parts of the show that are non-chronological.

Also up there is part of a series that Halaby was working on about the olive trees and the natural landscapes of her native Palestine. Look closely and you will see a self-portrait in the collection titled I Found Myself Growing Inside an Old Olive Tree, painted in 2007.

But it is back downstairs, in the rear of the gallery, where the show culminates in a large painting titled Pyramid. In this image, all the threads of her previous paintings come together in a series called Trees and the High Rising City. In Pyramid, Halaby says she has created a "feast for the eyes and an aesthetic game we can play sitting alone and imagining the places in our past that the painting evokes".

• Samia Halaby: Five Decades of Painting and Innovation runs until April 30 at Ayyam Gallery, Al Quoz, Dubai

aseaman@thenational.ae

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