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Black Milk
Armando Andrade Tudela, Boris Mikhailov, Dor Guez, Miroslaw Balka, Pavel Wolberg, Brussels, 11 June - 7 July 2022

Black Milk: Armando Andrade Tudela, Boris Mikhailov, Dor Guez, Miroslaw Balka, Pavel Wolberg

Past exhibition
Dor Guez, Scanograms #2, September 2011, Government of Palestine, Passport, El Monayer Family, 2011

Dor Guez

Scanograms #2, September 2011, Government of Palestine, Passport, El Monayer Family, 2011
manipulated readymade
80 x 80 x 65 cm
edition of 6 + 2AP
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Dor Guez developed an artistic practice based on his personal history. By means of genealogical research he addresses an issue deeply rooted in the history of his homeland of Israel...
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Dor Guez developed an artistic practice based on his personal history. By means of genealogical research he addresses an issue deeply rooted in the history of his homeland of Israel – the relationship between different ethnic groups who share the same nationality. As a common denominator his works share a tension that runs through the country which mirrors itself in his own family: His grandmother, Samira, links the Jewish Israeli Guez to the Christian Arab minority to which that branch of his family belongs. The Christian-Arab minority is a reference group which until now has not received significant attention as a differentiated ethnic group in the cultural field. The basis for one of his new series’ of images, SCANOGRAMS #1 (2010), are the old, torn, worn out photographs of Samira and her relatives, documenting the important events of their lives at a point in the past before the family was dispersed from Jaffa to Lod, Amman, Cyprus, Cairo and London. Dating from the year 1938 to 1958, the fifteen scenes portray Samira and her siblings. Several images from this series depict Samira’s wedding to Jacob in the ghetto of Lod in 1949, one year after what was a canonical date for them: July 13th, 1948. On this day, the city of Lod - or Al-Lydd, its Palestinian name - was occupied by the Haganah, a Jewish paramilitary organization. Less than one thousand citizens stayed, hiding in the local church, which later became the center of Lod’s ghetto - a small area fenced off with barbed wire and under the rule of the Israeli military. In the end, 95 % of Al-Lydd’s population was displaced.

Scanograms #2, 2011
The thematic series ‘Scanograms # 2’ is taken from Guez’s Christian- Palestinian Archive, which he has been compiling continually over the past three years. Ongoing and adaptive archiving practices are a major component for producing and forming a culture’s collective identity. Guez’s project is the first archive dedicated to the Christian-Palestinian community, a territorially spread out and disjointed series of communities, for whom Christianity is the common denominator. The archive’s starting point was the artist’s own family’s albums, which include testimonies of the life of the Christian- Palestinian minority. Today the archive has grown to include thousands of photographs and documents from the first half of the 20th century, representing communities in Jordan, Syria, Egypt, Israel and Palestine. The project’s main goal is to create an online visual database, which will document and present the community and its history and will be accessible to the general public. The installation ‘Scanograms # 2’ contains nine black wooden objects, each presenting passport pages from the British Mandate of Palestine, before Israel was established.
Each of the nine objects is presented alongside written testimonies in Arabic, which the artist has recorded over the past few years as part of the archive project. The visa stamps (from Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan etc.) and the testimonies evoke an image of a very different region than we know today, an open Middle East, with free mobility and open borders. The last stamp in the record is from 1947.
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