Articles
"First
Class Entering Academy of Art"
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Published September 2007
Maria C. Khoury, Ed. D.
This
September 2007, The International Academy of Art
Palestine opened its doors to the first set of ten
students to study for four years in the experimental
program leading to a Bachelor of Arts degree in
contemporary visual arts. Such a unique project is
an effort to support institution building and
capacity building during these difficult times in
the Occupied Territories. The leading artists of
Palestine consider this event a significant cultural
achievement aiming to establish the academy as a
distinctive higher education institution.
While the
academy project seeks accreditation from the
Ministry of Higher Education, degrees will be
granted by the partner institute, the Oslo National
Academy of Arts (KHIO) who collaborated with The
Palestinian Association for Contemporary Art (PACA)
on establishing this unique art institution funded
solely for three years by the Royal Norwegian
Foreign Ministry in June 2006. This ambitious
project is being carried out amidst harsh
circumstances that Palestinians live daily yet
seeing in art a tool to resist injustices and
oppression.
Promoting
the highest level of art lectures and studio
practice applicants and their portfolios were
evaluated by a steering committee of local and
international artists in April during what will
become the Annual Spring Encounter to recruit
incoming talent. Over forty-five student
applications were received from all over Palestine
and twenty-five applicants were specifically invited
for a week of evaluation at the academy. The
committee exclusively selected the first class of
ten students to graduate 2011.
The
committee consisting of the Arts Director, Khaled
Hourani; Academic Director, Reem Fadda; Project
Advisor on behalf of Olso, Henrik Placht included
two well known Palestinian artists, Nabil Anani and
Tayseer Barakat and Dean of the Academy of Art Malmo,
Gertrud Sandquist who is also serving as member of
the curriculum committee.
The
Academy aspires to have an independent campus
dedicated solely to the arts that will guarantee the
technical needs for a better education. To do so,
land must be located and funds raised for a new
building that encompasses state of art facilities
including a modern and specialized library, digital
art labs, large exhibition halls, auditoriums,
workshop spaces, and studios as well as all
administrative and technical facilities. Sami
Bandank, originally from Bethlehem has been inspired
to help create an endowment fund to help sustain the
academy for future generations. Rita Janssen, the
former director of the Cultural Palace is helping
establish policies, systems and guidelines for the
academy. These two expert consultants are the new
big force behind the academy.
The
International Academy of Art Palestine will take a
new positioning in the global art world by offering
the local population and the international community
new images of Palestine and Palestinians.
Contemporary visual arts will be used as a means to
help maintain the collective Palestinian memory,
history, and identity.
“Building
an Academy was a dream for a group of us Palestinian
artists. It started off through Birzeit University
in the early 80s” state Suleiman Mansour, leading
Palestinian artist and Nabil Anani having served as
Chairperson of Palestinian League of Artists. Both
agree: “… the academy will facilitate communication
between the local and international art scenes and
will provide for a new and innovative openness to
the world. It also adds to the civilized aspects for
our society.”
The
individual who has made a huge difference behind the
scenes is Henrik Placht, an accomplished artist from
Norway, who has worked hard for more than four years
to organize, lobby, curate, network, and fundraise.
Henrik came to Palestine during the Second Uprising
and met with many local artists in 2002 including
Suleiman Mansour, Nabil Anani, Khaled Hourani,
Sameer Salameh, Tayseer Barakat, all helping to
initiate the project to establish the International
Academy of Art in Palestine. Dr. Musleih Kananeh,
professor of Birzeit University was the link between
the Palestinians and the Norwegian artists who
accompanied Henrik.
Henrik
remembers from his early visits: “…we received many
support letters, especially from high-ranking
officials such as the Palestinian Minister of
Culture at the time, Yasser Abed Rabbo and many
cultural personalities and centers.’
“We
thought that through art we could express more about
our spirit and our heritage and the importance of
this era and how it has very rich and mixed
culture. We thought through art we can show this
culture and also we can express our life and our
aims to be free,” are the reflections Tayseer
Barakat holds for the importance of the academy.
Samir
Salemeh describes his vision: “My hope for the
academy is to have a good foundation and to help
develop artists by using good methods and having a
good program for students. There should be a place
for this artistic development and it was my job as
an artist to participate in the discussions and
share the dream in establishing the academy. What
we hope is to see a movement in Palestinian art.”
The staff
and students are pleased that the chairperson of the
Board of Directors at The Palestinian Association
for Contemporary Art (PACA) is Mazen Qupty, a renown
Palestinian philanthropist and patron of the art.
The new nine-member board also includes Tayseer
Barakat, Suleiman Mansour, Nabil Anani, Mohammed
Odeh, Iman Aoun, Dina Gazal, Ibrahim Emzian and Dr.
Mohammed Shaheen.
As a
renown Jerusalem lawyer, Mazen suggests: “I foresee
that there should become a Board of Trustees for the
Academy, which is mainly made up of qualified and
substantial artists and intellectuals that can
support the Academy in the future. These individuals
should also be chosen by merit and by how they
benefit the Academy; this should be the only judging
factor for such honorary membership.”
Funds for
sustainability are most critical and the academy of
art seeks networking on a local and international
level to gain the partners it needs for long-term
success. A fundraising initiative started at the
launch seeks a donor to name the only “white cube
room” in Ramallah at the current location. Please
contact the Academy if you can help. As Khaled
Hourani believes:
“We hope this nice fruit will make us so proud to
have this institution in the right time and the
right place and the fruits will be different for
sure, not all apples or apricots. A nice fruit
should be free to be in its own character. “