
Galerie Tanit is celebrating 15 years in Beirut with a group exhibition titled Crossed Perspectives. The unique exhibition format is the result of a survey sent to the gallery’s roster of artists, asking them which artistic, literary, or filmic works shown in Lebanon marked or transformed their practice over the past 15 years. The survey was based on philosopher Alain Badiou’s idea of the artwork as an event. The event, Badiou explains, exerts a form of violence upon those who experience or suffer it (Badiou_, Being and Event_, 1988). This violent irruption is also an eruption, a breach in the daily life of the subject who undergoes its experience, and for whom nothing will ever be the same (Lecercle, 2005).
Yet, the event is also what is memorable, what remains. Which artworks will be remembered from the last 15 years? Which works will be remembered as time’s marker?
In total, 15 works were chosen by the gallery’s artists, Naila Kettaneh, and myself as guest curator. This allowed us, on the one hand, to outline a map of cultural life in the city; but also, to reminisce about past events and places in the city. Hence artists’ lives are revealed, marked by encounters and friendships, such as the relationship between Gilbert Hage and Jalal Toufic that has resulted in several projects. The mapping of cultural life revealed ongoing discussions between artists, such as Nesrine Khodr and Nadim Asfar’s exchange around the notion of imprint, of images sculpted by time; as well as an ongoing dialogue between the photographers Gregory Buchakjian and Fouad ElKoury.
The selection revealed recurring themes such as war, apparent in Toufican Ruins by Gilbert Hage and Underwriting Mathaf by Lamia Joreige. Other important themes such as landscape and nature emerged through works by Daniele Genadry, Abed El Kadiri, Charbel Samuel Aoun, Nadim Asfar, and Etel Adnan, unveiling mystical mountains, invading trees, and the ever-so distinctive light of the Mediterranean. Naila Kettaneh and Ghassan Zard highlighted Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige’s work through their selections: A Letter Can Always Reach its Destination about internet scams and the conditions of belief; and Scenarios for a Space Museum, four bas-reliefs created for an unfinished space museum and exhibited at the Tripoli fair in 2018. These works interrogate personal practices and obsessions with latency, imaginary constructions, utopia, poetry, and politics. Jalal Toufic also haunts this selection, a word purposefully chosen to define the importance of his writings, as a ‘mortal thinker’ he writes about the ghosts and zombies of Beirut.
The crossing and intersecting of perspectives begin to uncover the living memory of a city and the constellation of a creative world, through which we gain access to intimate exchanges, solidarities, as well as rhizomes of inspiration.
Press release courtesy Galery Tanit, Beyrouth. Text: Karina El Helou.



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