Skip to content
center for installation art
center for installation art
  • main
    • definitions
  • tracker
  • news
  • opportunities
  • texts
  • contact
center for installation art
Ayman Baalbaki, 'Janus Gate'. Photo: Ayman Baalbaki

Lebanon pavilion at Venice Biennale to evoke the ‘chaos and beauty’ of Beirut

Posted on March 1, 2022March 2, 2022

The exhibition features an installation by Lebanese artist Ayman Baalbaki and a video directed by Danielle Arbid
Ayman Baalbaki’s ‘Janus Gate’ is inspired by Beirut’s urban landscape. Photo: Ayman Baalbaki

Ayman Baalbaki’s ‘Janus Gate’. Photo: Lebanon Pavilion at Venice Biennale.

Saeed Saeed
Feb 27, 2022
Beirut is the inspiration behind the Lebanese pavilion’s key works at the Venice Biennale in Italy, which runs from April 23 to November 27 at the Venetian Arsenal.

The Lebanon pavilion is curated by Nada Ghandour under the theme: The World in the Image of Man.

The centrepieces of the exhibition will be an installation by Lebanese artist Ayman Baalbaki and a video directed by Danielle Arbid.

According to the programme notes, both works are inspired by the urban and frenetic nature of Beirut, a city encompassing the “chaos and beauty” of Lebanon.

Baalbaki’s installation, Janus Gate, is potent and gritty. It features a structure whose walls are comprised of collage of a torn-up, neon-lit street signs, furious splashes of blood, coloured paint and images of decaying buildings.

Ayman Baalbaki, 'Janus Gate'. Photo: Ayman Baalbaki
Ayman Baalbaki, ‘Janus Gate’. Photo: Ayman Baalbaki

Inside the structure, amid the torn fabrics is a small analogue television humming away.

The installation also features a clothes line carrying singlets and trousers drenched in green liquid.

“This is the first time that I have presented such an ambitious and monumental installation, which is about five metres high,” Baalbaki said.

“It was also a new experiment from a technical point of view because I used ‘flex’, which is a material on which the colours do not cling easily. I also added posters and many other materials taken from the streets of Beirut.”

Danielle Arbid explores Beirut with short film 'Allo Cherie'. Photo: Danielle Arbid
Danielle Arbid explores Beirut with short film ‘Allo Cherie’. Photo: Danielle Arbid

Arbid’s video, called Allo Cherie, depicts a stroll through Beirut and captures skirting the line between exuberance and extinction.

“For me, it is a way of capturing Lebanon, a country that one feels could disappear tomorrow,” she said.

“The idea was to create a sense of immersion where one can put oneself in the shoes of my character and enter their life. This is why I chose to divide the video in two.

“The split screen and the cutting of the sequences reinforce the feeling of a turn, of a tilt. It accentuates the surprise. We find ourselves more immersed in the streets of Beirut and we are surrounded by the spaces of this city.”

READ MORE
What to see at Sharjah Art Foundation’s spring 2022 programme
Pavilion architect Aline Asmar d’Amman created an experience suggesting a walk through the “heart of Lebanon” and is inspired by the city’s brutalist architecture of the 1960s.

Asmar d’Amman says the stark visuals are a direct response to Lebanon’s dire situation. “The choice of such radical actions and sceno-graphic materials expresses a desire for sobriety in response to the country’s current situation.”

More information on the Venice Biennale is available at www.labiennale.org
Original post: Lebanon pavilion at Venice Biennale to evoke the ‘chaos and beauty’ of Beirut

Updated: February 27, 2022, 10:47 AM
ART, LEBANON, MENA, ITALY

Exhibition

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Exhibition

David Brooks, A Proverbial Machine in the Garden, Storm King Art Center

Posted on May 29, 2013March 3, 2022

The notion of a ‘machine in the garden’ is a cultural symbol that underlies the tension between the pastoral ideal and the rapid and sweeping transformations wrought by industrialized technology. brooks.stormking.org/ David Brooks from Storm King Art Center on Vimeo.

Read More
Exhibition

We Were Wild Reimagines “The Hut” in a New Installation at Alto Gallery

Posted on October 29, 2019March 2, 2022

ARCHITECTURE SUSAN FROYD OCTOBER 29, 2019 5:57AM   Houses, like living beings, grow old and wear out, carrying history and stories with them to the grave. Meredith Feniak and Risa Friedman — who make up the wheat-pasting Denver duo We Were Wild — want to excavate some of those stories. “Like human cells,…

Read More
Artist

Outlooks: Brandon Ndife at Storm King Art Center

Posted on May 26, 2022June 3, 2022

May 21 – November 7, 2022 For the ninth iteration of Outlooks, Storm King Art Center presents the work of New York–based artist Brandon Ndife (b. 1991). The Outlooks program offers an emerging to mid-career artist the chance to present a large-scale, temporary outdoor project in the landscape. Working primarily…

Read More

Pages

  • artists
    • Martha Whittington
    • Stan Woodard
      • Some Associated Sounds
  • contact
  • definitions
  • news
  • opportunities
  • posts
  • PXV
  • spaces
    • Charlotte Porch
  • texts
  • tracker

Recent Posts

  • Outlooks: Brandon Ndife at Storm King Art Center
  • Lebanon pavilion at Venice Biennale to evoke the ‘chaos and beauty’ of Beirut
  • Honoring the Covid-19 Dead
  • 111 LED Lights Create a Striking Starburst Illusion in an Abandoned Warehouse
  • We Were Wild Reimagines “The Hut” in a New Installation at Alto Gallery
Log in
©2026 center for installation art | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes