The world’s first major museum exhibition of Lebanese artist Saloua Raouda Choucair celebrates this remarkable artist’s extraordinary body of work.
Choucair is a pioneer of abstract art in the Middle East and, born in
1916, takes her rightful position as a significant figure in the
history of twentieth-century art.
Through painting and drawing, architecture, textiles and jewellery,
as well as, of course, her prolific and experimental sculptures,
visitors can discover how Choucair worked in diverse media pursuing her
interests in science, mathematics and Islamic art and poetry. Many of
the works, made over a period of five decades, have not previously been
seen outside of Lebanon.
A rare female voice in the Beirut art scene from the 1940s onwards,
Choucair’s work combines elements of western abstraction with Islamic
aesthetics. It is characterised by an experimental approach to materials
alongside an elegant use of modular forms, lines and curves drawn from
the traditions of Islamic design.
The exhibition focuses on Choucair’s sculptures from the 1950s to the
1980s, created in wood, metal, stone and fibreglass, as well as
extensive examples of her early abstract paintings and some key
figurative works such as Self-Portrait 1943 and Paris-Beirut 1948.
Tate Modern: Exhibition
17 April – 20 October 2013
Concession £9.50 (without donation £8.60)
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