Sana Chamakh - Strata of being, أن تكون
Curatorial
SANA CHAMAKH - STRATA OF BEING, أن تكون
Solo show - From April, 19th to June 30th, 2024 at 32bis
Tunis
“And look, mother,
I am
a dark temple with your true spirit rises
beautiful
and tough as chestnut
stanchion against your nightmare of weakness
and of my eyes conceal
a squadron of conflicts and rebellions
I learned from you to define myself
through your denials.”
Audre Lorde, Black Mother Women, 1971
The flesh, in its myriad forms, emerges as a symbol—a raw remnant of our past, a tender fragment of our present, destined to fade with time. It bears witness to our struggles, etching memories into our very being. Our bodies, repositories of experience, shelter a visceral knowledge, a living testament to the events and emotions that have shaped us. Like an echo of the mind, the body replays the past through somatic symptoms—a silent language, conveying the weight of our history, the imprints of our trauma.
Have you seen that figure, draped in the trappings of society’s expectations? Its long coat, woven from the norms and dictates of the world, weighs heavily upon its shoulders. Hidden underneath this facade lies the essence of who we are—the unspoken truths, the silent struggles that shape their existence.
Chamakh’s introspective journey leads her inward, sculpting and shaping her skin to provoke feeling, to evoke alternate realities. Like a keeper of her own consciousness, she screens through the fabric of her being, selecting pieces that resonate with her present persona.
The body keeps the score of these experiences; it ‘knows’ the event in its ‘flesh’ and is a living reminder of the happening and the emotions felt at a particular time. Just as the mind can be triggered to recall past events, so does the body replay the past in the form of somatic symptoms. These symptoms are the stain of a history of emotions and trauma embedded within the tissues, which form a dynamic, unconscious memory system.
We, too, are complex tapestries—interwoven threads in the fabric of cultural and somatic systems. Our stories, entwined with others’, form the rich narrative of humanity.
Yet, beneath the surface lies a silent cartography—a map of our traumas, etched into the very fabric of our being. Each scar, each blemish, speaks volumes, revealing the burdens we carry, the wounds we bear.
In her artistic vision, Sana grants the body agency—the freedom to be molded and remolded, to wear its scars as badges of honor. She endows the body with the ability to un-pack the plethora of baggage it was carrying. And in the end, she proudly dons these fragments of her story, laying bare the layers of her existence for all to see. Here, we are encouraged to cast off the veil of fear and confront the intense depths of our emotions, revealing the concealed stories that reside within us – both those handed down to us and
those yet to be discovered.
Perhaps in seeing, we find bliss, and in breathing, we take a step into the unexplored raw realms. In this act of liberation, we find solace—a release from the burdens that bind us, a step toward reclaiming our true selves.
Amidst the scars, lies a paradoxical beauty—a cathartic release found in the transformation of pain into expression. Through the flesh, our stories find voice—words, screams, echoes of our deepest fears. Each scar, each somatic field, becomes a testament to our resilience, a testament to our ability to transcend.
Salma Kossemtini, Tunis, April 2024
More :
Celebrating imperfection and resilience: an interview with Sana Chamakh, by Emna Lakhoua for artframe
Les corps somatiques de Sana Chamakh au 32 Bis, Olivier Rachet for Diptyk Magazine
“Strata of Being” de Sana Chamakh au 32 Bis : La cicatrice, Asma Drissi for La Presse Tunisie
L’Atelier - Group show
Curatorial
L’Atelier - Group show
15 -17 July 2022
The studio is an imagined and imaginative space that takes many forms. It can extend from a table in the back of a room to a hangar of several square meters. It doesn’t matter much what shape it takes, but its definition according to each artist is fundamental. Each one defines appropriates, inhabits, and lives it in a singular way.
It is the space of tests, experimentation, contemplation, fragility, and frustration. The studio has hosted numerous artists, it is above all a social space through which you meet artists and lead you to other studios and discoveries. It is indeed a space capable of weaving a social link with the scene, anchored in a neighborhood with a very particular handicraft vocation. This exhibition is an open space that stems from the traces of brushes, which overflow on the canvas, capable of telling how many layers and the mixture of colors that each artist have mixed.
The patterns that are imprinted in the visual memory and reflected in the color in an insitu intervention. This studio space has seen the passage of several people with several mediums.
What if they were to find themselves in a common temporality?
What if they found themselves in a shared, common place, where usually the practice is individual ?
Will they weave in between their expressions, to find themselves in the mirror of the other, or to question the limit of this space?
It embodies the sketches or the premises of a new artistic statement that had an impact on the artistic approach, to the body of work in the journey of an artist.
As a break, a step forward or a step of change; reflected through the layered works.
From sketchs, drawing, painting, installation, video works, and work in progress, L’atelier is the embracing boat to all these plural expressions. It will be in dialogue between artists who have already started their career journey and young ones who have enhanced theirs. This exhibition is an attempt to give space and reflect an emerging scene. It is essentially about the studio, the artistic process and the approaches that come within. It’s an extension of the state of the budding art scene.
Salma Kossemtini, L’atelier Selma Feriani Gallery Tunis, July 2022
Thameur Mejri -Over the edge- Solo Exhibition
Curatorial
Over the edge - Thameur Mejri
Solo Exhibition
“A drawing would-it command not to name it.” This quote reminds me of the first time I experienced Thameur Mejri’s work. It’s like a puzzled feeling of not knowing where to look or where to begin navigating between the de-constructed lines and elements. My gaze started seeking elements I might know or that I could name as the eye generally seeks to settle on the familiar spots, in its background as the human being always seeks comfort.
The skull, the fly and the TV shed a statement by their scales and duplication. A quite complex and polysemic combination which leads me to compose their meaning, to look for plausible connections to the world in which we live, or simply in the artist’s narratives.
These were the first elements and milestones of Mejri’s body of work, the protagonists of his productions who appear in his paintings, drawings or sketches. The skull as an ultimate symbol of vanity which tends to orient the reading like a compass and the inevitable fate of death, along with the fly by its light and absurd presence and the weight of the television which influenced a whole generation allied to the information, to the advent of the mass media and of its power of influence.
The return to the fundamentals such as the pictorial elements used by the artist are at the centre of Over the Edge. The exhibition features the curious connection of a deconstructed reality characterized by shredded bodies and recomposed in a pseudo-anatomical logic that suggests rather a tumultuous being in juxtaposition of the artist’s mundane everyday practices.
Drawing with charcoal was a major artistic gesture for this exhibition. After painting and mixed media, the drawing has found its place in the space of a canvas as an act of rejuvenation and of research at the same time
Along with the pictorial leitmotiv that followed the artist’s journey, the body of work is centred on the genesis of any drawing, which is the point, the line, and the brushstrokes of the flashy colours that serve as a plenum background to black bold graphite hatches.
The assemblage of forms remains as a deconstructed anatomy as Mejri perceives society, the psyche, the political, transposed into the drawing as a metaphor or figurative meaning. As if we pushed the limits of the painting, had peeled its skin to see what remains. We will find a drawing with graphite powder with a hatched treatment where the skull, the fly and the television master elements that have driven the work of Mejri since its genesis are honoured.
The exhibition will deal with what can be kept of the traces of life, what can be maintained of a deconstruction process, resilience and exposure of the ordeals experienced by the artist, materialised by the remains of the characters who carry the pennant of vanity of socio-political postures, of a daily practice or of an introspective relationship to oneself.
One needs time to navigate, contemplate, decompose what Mejri’s work offer as an experience. A layered reading, where each time an element pops out or even a kid’s drawing in between of sharp elements, skulls or knifes. It pushes the limits over the edge of reading and perceiving giving space to time, colours and shapes to fulfill a contemplation on a complex reading journey.
- Derrida, prégnances quatre lavis de Colette Deblé,s.1, brandes, 1993,s.p.
Sophia Bsiri - Open studio
Curatorial
Sophia Bsiri Open studio
Over the past three months, we have had the pleasure of hosting the early career artist Sophia Bsiri at our Atelier, Artist Residency Program.
Following her studies in Mandarin, Sophia undertook, in 2018, private courses in academic drawing with the artist Ahmed Maaleb. She started experimenting with classical constructions of lines and shadows. She then drove her interest in the expression of the matter she used to draw, in its volumetry and its relation to the space.
Her practice is concerned with matter, materiality, gesture, and form in its primary function translated into a secondary one, that of modular sculpture and installation.
As she started experimenting in the atelier, her research was focused primarily on barbed wire and its origins. Coming from an organic and natural root, that took over the years the symbol of oppression of massive security in the streets.
The sharp prickles are made of dozens of interlocking fibres, which increases the resistance and the difficulty of destroying the stems.
She fragmented the wire into pieces, destructured it, and cancelled its repulsive nature, which served as a barrier but once untied, it takes on a free form. These hundred fragmented pieces once unified, find their natural origin, forming roots that spread out on the wall like a climbing plant.
With an affinity for sharp and bulky materials, she turns nails, the sharp tool intended to hang o to carry a form and that it became itself subject. As if it’s a dot or line on a drawing.
She integrates it into the fabric. By dint of using it, repeating it on a porous canvas she multiplies its weight, giving shape to volumetry that associates itself with the movement that it decides.
She works the nail as a weaver works the thread of a repetitive gesture to integrate the canvas one by one as if she is sewing a fabric to end up with a massive and thorny fabric which in the movement generates a form, each time random and a sound of tickling metal. The nail is denatured from its form. It adopts the function of a thread or a line.
She is also well rooted in the alternative scene giving a way into her practice through materiality and subtle selfgenerated sound that translate through the raw and fine tools. On the other hand, Bsiri tends to reflect on analog photagraphy, the density of colours, lights and shadows through her paintings which combine both charcoal drawing and spray paint.
Bsiri navigates between these classical assets by combining them with her new research, explores the potential of the materiality and omits in defining raw tools for her work.
Special thanks to Sophia Bsiri for her trust and the exchange Haithem Toumi for handling the artworks Rania Hentati for the communication Insaf Mejri for the production follow-up Selma Feriani for supporting the Atelier
Sonia Kacem - Jelliz & Gestes
Curatorial
Jelliz & Gestes - Sonia Kacem
8 May- July 2023
In May 2022, Sonia Kacem took part in the residency program at l’Atelier Selma Feriani Gallery.The idea of abstraction and what it represents in the Arab world interested Kacem even before her residency at L’Atelier Selma Ferani Gallery. Once in Tunis, Kacem’s wanderings in the Bhar Lazreg neighborhood (an artisanal and industrial district where the studio is located) served as a landmark to define her forms, gestures, and colors.
The random scratches and engravings on the concrete walls she encountered often implied a spontaneous gesture rather than a precise and well-measured approach. This motivated her to create paintings and patterns emanating from the various impressions she gathered during her visit to Tunis.
Initially, her intuitive movements guided her thoughts through the enclosed space of the Gallery. Consequently, the idea of a concept that could be present in each room as a leitmotif took hold to act as a guide and a common thread to navigate of the different spaces.
Her watercolor books, a tool ever-present in this residency and in that of Cairo, served as a base for her work to document her stay in Tunis. Influenced by urban life, stories she heard and the emotions she felt when in urban environments (or settings), whether it is the soundscapes, stories, the architecture and its volumes, everything has been translated into colors and forms that reflect the characters they have transmitted to the artist.
Usually, Sonia Kacem responds to spaces insitu by working on large-scale installations with more sculptural environments where the audience navigates between artifacts.
For the Jelliz & Gestes, Kacem studied the gallery’s blueprints as volumes nested within space. She noticed that rooms were generally rectangular, placed one after the other, producing a sense of reaching a dead-end and turning back. The repetitive act of forms, such are gestures in her watercolor books served as a leitmotif also present in traditional Tunisian architecture.
This work was done in close collaboration with different artisans, aligning discussions with feasibility and know-how. This gave form to a multi-layered idea through knowledge transfer that serves as an intrinsic component to the realization of her works.
The patterns are not just ornamental, each having a form and characteristic that serve a purpose in each tile and can convey meaning through their creation and interpretation. The form thus becomes a transmissible and translatable language handled as typography written with different hands.
Working manually with gestures involves a sensitive study of the color, the brushstroke and its direction. An expert master craftsman guided her through the process. The act of enlarging, of passing from the watercolor to an enameling which reacts to heat provided an opening to draw from ancestral know-how, centuries old and present in decorations of traditional houses.
Echoing Chamla’s ceramic panels, Kacem thought of her interactions with urban space as a contemporary composition in a built-in environment of patterns.
The master artisan managed the entire process of constructing the clay tile, from shaping to drying it until it was dry enough to go in the oven. Engineering the shape involves consideration for changes that occur from heat in the kiln.
Kacem emphasizes the importance of gesture transfer, demystifying the form as the tiles are glazed by hand one at a time.
The collaboration was characterized by a fruitful exchange of ideas, movement, character and knowledge brought to the ceramic panels. The artisans she collaborated with had a great deal of knowledge of the artistic process and could bring that expertise in service of the idea.
The titles “Arches, Lunes, croix et points” serve as keys to read the abstract forms on the ceramics helping to communicate the context in which they were perceived and as codes of communication and identification of specific patterns between the artisans and the artist.
There is a sense of intendedness and even poetry in these compositions, as different hands have appropriated, repeated and interpreted them. The architecture of the space has been strongly amplified by color creating an atmosphere by altering the empirical experience of the viewer.
Jelliz & Gestes, is a sequel of an urban experience translating Sonia Kacem’s expressions and impressions into shapes and vibrations. The idea was to create a sense of energy and movement in space, drawing the viewer’s eye and creating a dynamic visual experience.
The use of pattern on pattern creates a complex image that requires both a sense of proximity for a detailed view and a step back for an overall perception. The public is thus confronted with different angles of interpretation and submerged by different scales of patterns and the intonations of colors.
Salma Kossemtini, Selma Feriani Gallery Tunis, May 2023
Open studio - Myriame Dachraoui
Curatorial
Open Studio - Myriame Dachraoui
14th - 16th of July 2023
An architect by background, Myriame Dachraoui is a self-taught artist, that I got to know through her seamless navigation of the digital realm and the traditional canvas to craft scenes that delve deep into dreamscapes and the labyrinth of the subconscious mind, all while embracing a palette of bold and vibrant colours.
During her residency, Dachraoui embarked on an exploration of techniques, of colour palette between going back and forth on a drawing construction.
She drew inspiration from her memories, as well as images that had been imparted to her through her dreams. Her journey even led her to dig into a grimoire in search of postcards and elements that had left a remarkable mark on her as a child – postcards her father had brought back from his travels to Russia during his academic journey.
This pursuit ignited a curiosity within her, primarily concerning the construction of miniatures, the intricacies of color palettes, and their spatial arrangement. She unearthed certain elements from this treasure quest, such as a turquoise blue that she expanded into an entire palette within her canvases, creating an illusion of retro-illumination in the middle of an enchanted forest.
Another standout feature is a miniature nestled at the core of her compositions. The verticality in her works is, in part, influenced by Japanese prints, which, like the postcards, predominantly embark on a reading from a vertical perspective, guided by a succession of elements.
Dachraoui leads the character’s gaze in the middle of her canvas to the hidden corners of her compositions. These hidden corners often take the perception into lush, enigmatic spaces, where the character’s view disappears among the intricate interplay of foliage and shadows. We are given a taste of the character’s contemplative or perhaps, introspective moments off the canvas, as they become one with the natural world that surrounds them.
In other instances, the perspective offers a bird’s-eye gaze, creating a sense of elevated view. It invites the viewer to appreciate the vastness of the landscape, the intricate patterns of fields and waters, and the seemingly infinite horizon.
The discerning eye of an architect distinguishes her work, allowing her to construct layers of narrative, from foreground to background. This open studio experience is thought of as a voyage into Dachraoui’s imagination. With each brushstroke and experimentation, she directs us through her gaze towards a dream, an element, or a narrative that unfolds with layers and vibrations of colour, at times dark and distant, and others, vivid and lucid.
It’s a journey through the distinguished territories of the mind, a testament to the artist’s ingenuity and her ability to take us on an odyssey through the realms of dreams and colour.
Salma Kossemtini, Tunis, July 2023
K Off x Dream City 2022
Curatorial
K Off x Dream City 2022
K Off is the Video Art section of the Gabes Cinema Fen Festival dedicated to early-career Tunisian artists. Each year an early stage curator is given carte blanche to feature artists using the moving image as their medium.
This year, K OFF is exported to Dreamcity, in the medina of Tunis, and places artists at the heart of this budding scene to be seen.
Merging the first and second editions, presented in 2021 and 2022 , K OFF x Dream City presents the work of eight young Tunisian artists and represents a fostering of a true plurality of perspectives and approaches. It takes as its anchor these artists, their individual practices and enhances the emergence of an art scene where the reality, and experience of each artist is the inspiration.
The 2021 and 2022 selections proposed respectively by the curators Salma Kossemtini and Kenza Jemmali will be presented.
The audience of Dream City will be able to view the works of 8 Tunisian artists including:
Ahmed Ben Nessib, Achref Bettaieb, Nada Chamli, Ghassen Chraifa, Syrine Eloued, Rim Harrabi, Wafa Lazhari, Toxic Club
KOFF
Curatorial
KOFF
The new Video Art section, K OFF is dedicated to young Tunisian artists, located in the downtown of Gabes as a linking point between el Kazma and Agora. This exhibition consists of a heuristic research of the moving image, highlighting the video as a medium, a material of creation, reflection and criticism. Reflecting on its limits; is it a succession of images? Still or in movement? Is it the device of display that defines it? Or the process of its creation? Is it a dialogue between the sound and the image? or the reflection of the space of its genesis?
This relationship to the image that each artist entertains with the video, as denotative as it may seem, is fundamental to understanding the process that it has undergone. Declined in different possibilities by the artists, it is not limited to what is perceived, but to what it represents for each one of them. It takes the shape of a drawing, a sound, a journey, a memory or a criticism. As ambiguous as it is, it is defined by the process and the context of its genesis.
Exploring video in its raw, metaphorical, experimental and sound state, it offers a crossover of an aesthetic that evolves from an itinerant approach dealing with the being and becoming of words, identity, the intuitive and a reflection of a socio-cultural reality. As complex as the sphere in which it emerges, the artists featured on the K OFF have found in the image and more specifically, the moving image a field of experimentation and exploration mixing different media and visual techniques.
The approaches and the processes they crossed are diverse. Starting from experiencing the text; for Ahmed Ben nessib “to work from the text”, means for him to do everything to exceed it. From a back and forth between the illustration and the tale of Isaac, the artist sets up a technique that he defines as “the technique of the swimmer”; which implies to rewrite the words in dichotomy. Drawing by drawing, he animates them letting what it precedes and what it succeeds in reach. He explores the animation to define one that does not lie in between the drawings but in the drawing itself. Investigating this fragmented process between the word, the drawing and the animation, Ben Nessib questions their literal definitions and ends up creating his own.
The text has, also, accompanied Rim Harrabi, in dealing with the experience of the vanity of Galway Kinnell’s poem in her imagination. Its experimental representation is located in the knots that the poem presents, it stages the latency of the characters in a bewitching atmosphere, to the extent of chimera. Stated in prose from the adult to his child and translated by Harrabi into an audiovisual installation.
As for the work of Cheb Terro, it is a process that turned into a tribute to an artist of the underground hip hop scene in Tunisia. An installation that reflects the movement he created “Toxic Club” and the polyphony of his writing. In this context, will the video clips he creates serve as vectors of transmission by the nature of their proximity to the young public? Will they serve as an archive for the critical outline of a socio-cultural space that he describes as a “sub-planet”?
To define these dimensions or to record a space, Asma Laajimi traces a memory of her childhood and a place that is getting altered. With an observant and at the same time passive glance, she walks along the urban space deprived of its seasonal dynamics, vowed to a decisional power of an inert government. From an absurd image on her happy steps, she documents this space that cradled her summer routine and that is now disintegrating. A present outline that reflects the urban context of Gabes.
The space serves, in fact, as a medium for Ghassen Chraifa. With an intuitive gaze, his daily life is provided with aesthetic gaps that accompany him in different temporalities. He records moments of stillness or mouvements in visual frames like a road journal.
For Dora Dalila Cheffi, her understanding of the space extends from the geographical construction, towards a link to her identity and herself. She unravels the relationship of her mixed roots into an ode to identity through an interpretation of the Finnish national anthem in Tabbel Kerkennah, visually accompanied by forms of contrasting colors that interact in a tryptic installation. From these poetically assembled forms, she attempts to achieve a balance between her plural identity, heritage, language and music.
KOFF is in a sense a space of reception, leading to the visual perception of these multi-layered realities, lived and experienced by the artists. The transcripts of how it influenced their aesthetic expression, displaying their point of intersection around their approaches. The audience will navigate between six distinct experiences between several visual, digital, raw or edited mediums having their contexts defined as an anchor point.
Ghassen Chraifa - Open studio
Curatorial
Ghassen ChraifaOpen studio
In residence at L’Atelier since February, Ghassen Chraifa continues to develop his research started at Résidence K in Gabes, surrounding the archives, ecosystem, and toxic environment of the coastal city. He navigates between the still and moving image, exploring different mediums such as transfer.
On a blade of grass - Fares Thabet
Curatorial
ON A BLADE OF GRASS - FARES THABET
13 DECEMBER 2021 - 5 FEBRUARY 2022
“Subtle nuances of a hue that progresses and spreads “[1] appear in the back- ground of his canvas, overlapped by a layer of colors that shape the appearance of the landscape sensed in Fares Thabet’s imagination. Semblances of forms emerge from his imagination, weathered materials lying at the threshold of his reality and his dreamscape. He sketches the outlines of his paintings in charcoal on the wall of his studio next to his blank canvas. He works his backgrounds first, studies his palette and looks for the vibration of his colors, one next to the other. Thabet places the locations of his flat surfaces often with strong luminous intensity and gradually adorns his paintings with details that mark his large land- scapes. His spaces evoke a familiarity and invite the audience to slip into his leafy world. He invokes miniatures that arise from Derek Walcott’s poems, from a light that stunned him on an early morning or from a stroll. As an extension of his reality, his paintings are conceived by brushstrokes soaked in paint, some dense and others less greasy. His touches of color define the limits of the surfaces, which occasionally blur, marking areas of impact or surface change. Each scene “develops and accentuates what is specifically precious in the things that give us daily pleasure”[2] , he treats painting as a purely sensory connection to the world he perceives. The colors like musical notes that he feels and that he does not necessarily manage to put into words but to perceive in form or vibration. “I paint for the sake of painting” he says.
The color works as an energetic detonation by its vibration and can still define a painting or his state of mind at the time of its conception.
Thabet bends in two to see, steps back, settles in his small terrace to paint. A landscape indoor or outdoor, is an open door to a pre-established experience that emerges from the material to the common world.
By tracing the fields, climbing the hills and stops at the seaside landscapes, the intra or extra-muros are scenes printed in his memory from his daily life or even postcards found in flea markets in downtown Tunis, “transformed into aesthetic substance”3. The color itself becomes matter and material of processing his daily life, working as a thread of narratives that he weaves between his paintings, with puzzled temporality; sometimes brightness of a pastel pink and other times darkness of an ultramarine blue. Thabet sought to escape the conceptual or politicized academism of the art schools he attended in Spain, in search of his own color, a slowness and a technique of his own. His return to Tunis, marked a turning point in his painting, he returned to seek an apprenticeship to follow a rhythm dictated to his artistic practice. “On a Blade of Grass” is the eulogy of the color, imagination and lucid dreams that arise from the world of Fares Thabet.
Salma Kossemtini, November 2021 Selma Feriani Gallery, Tunis
1. JHON DEWEY, translation coordinated by JEAN-PIERRE ,L’art comme experience,COMETTI, p84,2010
2. ibid , p42
3. ibid, p190