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Artworks

Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Yazan Khalili, Colour Correction 1.5, 2007-10

Yazan Khalili Palestinian , b. 1981

Colour Correction 1.5, 2007-10
Lightjet on Kodak Premier
61 x 100 cm
24 1/8 x 39 3/8 in
Edition of 6 plus 1 AP
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Here Khalili takes a picture of the Al-Amari Refugee camp, located inside/beside/outside Ramallah city. The form of the camp doesn't represent its economical status but rather represents its loss and...
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Here Khalili takes a picture of the Al-Amari Refugee camp, located inside/beside/outside Ramallah city. The form of the camp doesn't represent its economical status but rather represents its loss and trauma as a political manifestation by the continuous production of the ephemeral structures, ways of living and relation with the surroundings.

Changing the refugee camp's colours is a symbolic act to fill the loss -like a child filling a coloring book- and produce the possibility of hope. Here the artist appropriates an urban landscape that reminds us of the the tragedy of the displaced -of their existence and disappearance- in order to subvert memory into a desired future.


Colour Correction - Camp Series
2007 - 2010

The trauma, the losing of the homeland in 1948, losing the vital space, the landscape, the
way of living, the potential of maintaining freedom of choice, and becoming -as Slavoj Z?iz?ek says- always in a state of emergency, where the possibility of thinking and living in the present becomes impossible.

This project is a re-production of space by using its architectural elements -that maintain the trauma- to create a space that produces the possibility for hope (hope in this sense is the ability to imagine a better future, to think of unessential events to happen, and mainly to be able to be sarcastic of the present).

Here Khalili is dealing with Al-Amari Refugee camp, located inside/beside/outside Ramallah city. The form of the camp doesn't represent its economical status but rather represents its loss and trauma as a political manifestation by the continuous production of the ephemeral structures, ways of living and relation with the surround.

Changing the refugee camp's colours is a symbolic act to fill the loss -like a child filling a coloring book- and produce the possibility of hope. Here he is attempting to appropriate an urban landscape that reminds us of the tragedy -of their existence and our disappearance- in order to subvert memory into a desired future.
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Exhibitions


The work has been exhibited in various exhibitions (among others)
2013 Edition #1 (London, EoA Projects)2012 Beyond the Last Sky (Australian Centre for Photography)2012 #COMETOGETHER (London, EoA Projects)2012 PARADISE NOW (Beursschouwburg, Brussels)2011 The Future of a Promise (Venice Biennale)2009 Mapping (Art Dubai)


Exhibitions: 
2013 Edition #1 (London, EoA Projects)
2012 Beyond the Last Sky (Australian Centre for Photography)
2012 #COMETOGETHER (London, EoA Projects)
2012 PARADISE NOW (Beursschouwburg, Brussels)
2011 The Future of a Promise (Venice Biennale)
2009 Mapping (Art Dubai)

Publications


Contemporary Art: World Currents (edited by: Terry Smith, Publisher: Pearson/Prentice Hall)Subjective Atlas of Palestine (Edited and designed by Annelys de Vet, 010 publishers, 2007)

 Publications (among others)

Contemporary Art: World Currents (edited by: Terry Smith, Publisher: Pearson/Prentice Hall)
Subjective Atlas of Palestine (Edited and designed by Annelys de Vet, 010 publishers, 2007)

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