ART: Palestinian exile refuses to be boxed in 5Jun13 June 5, 2013
by Matthew Reisz     -   Times Higher Education     -    30 May 2013
Few people illustrate how the lives of academics – or artist academics – have become globalised better than Bashir Makhoul.
Born in Galilee in 1963, based in Winchester but with a studio in China and an exhibition coming up in Japan, Makhoul has spent the past week in a garden in Venice. Here, with a team of assistants, he has turned about 4,000 cardboard boxes into houses.
When the international Venice Biennale art exhibition opens on 1 June, visitors who want to see the installation, titled Il Giardino Occupato, will be given boxes and encouraged to place them in the garden, too. The idea, explains Makhoul, is that âthe garden will be completely filled up and turned into a sort of shanty town, with completely random and unregulated forms of housingâ.
Exhibiting alongside him will be Aissa Deebi, his former PhD student and fellow âvoluntary exileâ, now assistant professor at the American University in Cairo, who has created a video called The Trial. This draws on Franz Kafkaâs novel to re-enact the testimony of Daoud Turki, the Palestinian poet who was charged with treason by Israel in 1973 and sentenced to 17 years in prison. Together, the two works form Otherwise Occupied, the unofficial Palestinian contribution to the Biennale (the country does not have its own official pavilion in the main garden).
So how did Makhoul end up here? He attended art school in Israel, where he was a member of the Communist Party, which called for a one-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict – something he still believes offers the only long-term route to peace (âsplitting a little piece of land into two or three separate pieces is just absurdâ). He then moved to the UK for a PhD at Manchester Metropolitan University, which he completed in 1995.
He has since become a British citizen, headed departments at the University of Bedfordshire and now has a demanding day job as rector of the University of Southamptonâs Winchester School of Art. He oversees a total student body of 1,750, including 400 attending Southamptonâs Dalian campus in China.
Artistic licence
Alongside his rise through the ranks in British higher education, Makhoul has ânever stopped making work, no matter what job I do, because I donât see the point of having ideas and keeping them to myselfâ. He has thereby forged an international reputation as an artist through work largely addressing issues of Palestinian identity.
Coming to the UK allowed him to start breaking taboos, producing bright abstract paintings using the colours of the Palestinian flag, which was then strictly illegal in Israel. When Makhoul went to Lebanon to visit his grandmother in 1997, he photographed the bullet holes still marking many of the walls in Beirut and juxtaposed repeated images of them in an eerily beautiful wallpaper pattern he called Points of View (1998).
He has also produced several works incorporating images of an olive tree that he inherited from his father, although by a strange quirk of history he does not own either of the two pieces of land it separates. And in Return (2007), he used the technique of lenticular photography to juxtapose images of Palestine during the British Mandate (1917-48) with the same settings today so that the past and present haunt each other, with the ghostly past appearing, disappearing and reappearing as viewers look at the work from different angles.
Since he calls himself âa thinker and maker, not a typical artist who sits in a studio to produce work all yearâ, Makhoul has been working for many years with al Hoash, a cultural organisation he describes as âessentially the Palestinian museum in Jerusalemâ, producing English-language books designed to âenrich the debate around Palestinian issuesâ.
All this has created something of a double life. Although powerful and accessible, Makhoulâs work has a far more obvious and direct resonance for those living in Hebron than their counterparts in Hampshire. When he came to Winchester about eight years ago, he says, he âtried to keep his personal research interests to myselfâ, but an exhibition he held attracted criticism for his use of terms such as âresistanceâ and âZionist lobbyâ.
âPeople inside and outside the university didnât want to allow people like me to use language like that. That was quite an experience.â
Makhoul has had similarly unhappy experiences exhibiting in the US. (âThe attitude towards Palestinians in New York – God almighty! You are not allowed to say anything. As soon as you open your mouth you are anti-Semitic.â)
Matters of identity: Makhoul is a âthinker, not a typical artistâ
International exposure
After a good deal of exposure in the 1990s alongside âYoung British Artistsâ such as Damien Hirst and Rachel Whiteread, he hasnât exhibited in the UK for eight years. Perhaps rather surprisingly, his work now attract most interest in China, Japan and Germany.
Since much of it is planned digitally but requires a labour-intensive manufacturing process, Makhoul has a studio in Beijing where he spends âfour or five focused weeks a year when involved in a projectâ.
The one that arose out of Return and immediately preceded Il Giardino Occupato was called Enter Ghost, Exit Ghost. It was shown at the Yang Gallery in Beijing last year and is now being shipped to the Aichi Triennale in Japan. It will be resurrected at the Asian Triennial in Manchester next year.
Enter Ghost, Exit Ghost was partly inspired by the stage directions in Hamlet, which pose directors a technical challenge to make Hamletâs fatherâs ghost appear and disappear. Yet Makhoul had also become fascinated by a huge training camp set up by the Israelis in the Negev Desert, where âthey have built streets made of concrete, similar to real places in Gaza, Jerusalem, the centre of Beirut, parts of Jordanâ.
He adds: âThe idea is that they wonât get so many surprises if they carry out an invasion, and soldiers will perform better on the field. They even use special effects to create arms and legs and blood, so a full picture of what you might face is simulated there.â
Disturbed by âthe way CGI for training in war merges playfulness with killingâ, Makhoul decided to create a work that âwidens the gap between reality and the virtual which the army had tried to closeâ.
To do this, he constructed a maze with 120m of lenticular photographs of street scenes from refugee camps projected on to it, so âyou get lost and can never see the image from the same point of view twice. You have to move in order to see the images, which animates them – so itâs disturbing, disorientating and gives the sense of getting lost.â
As spectators emerge from the maze, they find themselves in a claustrophobic cardboard city with walls 9m high.
Il Giardino Occupato uses the same material to explore similar themes of dispossession, occupation and even the semi-exclusion of Palestine from the international art scene represented by its unofficial status at the Venice Biennale.
Despite the challenges of coordinating a team scattered between Beijing, Cairo, Jerusalem, Venice and Winchester, the exhibition should open to the public as planned.
Thank You.