Art Dubai: Shifting perspectives on Modernism and the body

Museu de Arte de São Paulo
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Art Dubai: Shifting perspectives on Modernism and the body
Palm orchards, Jadriya, Baghdad, 1970, 2019
Inkjet print on Hahnemuhle fine art photo rag pearl 320 gsm paper
100.0 x 100.5 cm (39.4 x 39.6 in) (Edition of 3 (+2 AP))
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Self-taught with a career spanning from the late 50s to the late 70s, Latif Al-Ani is considered the founding father of Iraqi photography. Starting his career as a photographer for the Iraq Petroleum Company in 1950, the overthrow of the monarchy in 1958 migrated the company's photographers to what later became the Ministry of Culture. After the coup in 1958, Al-Ani started the process of archiving with intent - almost forecasting the political instability that would plague his country for years to come.

His seminal work was produced over two decades. Often referred to as a 'golden age' for Iraq, it encompassed a period of increased cosmopolitanism and openness in the country. His archive was integral to capturing these transformations in urban and rural Iraqi society, offering a testimony of the transitional and prosperous moments in Iraq's modern history; the effect of the booming oil industry and the modernist project playing out across Baghdad. In 1980, the outbreak of the Iran-Iraq war, coupled with the increased threat to photographers, made it impossible to continue his work and halted his career for good.

A chance meeting with the artist Yto Barrada directed Al-Ani's archive to the Arab Image Foundation in Beirut, in whose care they now lie. What motivated him throughout his career was the insistent urgency to document his country for posterity, leaving a record for the next generation and which took as its tenant the beauty of the image itself.

... read more
Palm orchards, Jadriya, Baghdad, 1970, 2019 | Inkjet print on Hahnemuhle fine art photo rag pearl 320 gsm paper 100.5 x 100 cm

Self-taught with a career spanning from the late 50s to the late 70s, Latif Al-Ani is considered the founding father of Iraqi photography. Starting his career as a photographer for the Iraq Petroleum Company in 1950, the overthrow of the monarchy in 1958 migrated the company's photographers to what later became the Ministry of Culture. After the coup in 1958, Al-Ani started the process of archiving with intent - almost forecasting the political instability that would plague his country for years to come.

His seminal work was produced over two decades. Often referred to as a 'golden age' for Iraq, it encompassed a period of increased cosmopolitanism and openness in the country. His archive was integral to capturing these transformations in urban and rural Iraqi society, offering a testimony of the transitional and prosperous moments in Iraq's modern history; the effect of the booming oil industry and the modernist project playing out across Baghdad. In 1980, the outbreak of the Iran-Iraq war, coupled with the increased threat to photographers, made it impossible to continue his work and halted his career for good.

A chance meeting with the artist Yto Barrada directed Al-Ani's archive to the Arab Image Foundation in Beirut, in whose care they now lie. What motivated him throughout his career was the insistent urgency to document his country for posterity, leaving a record for the next generation and which took as its tenant the beauty of the image itself.

... read more