By
Love and by Likeness (By Salah Stéitié)
A century of
Lebanese painting is very little, and yet a great deal. Indeed,
in this plot of Eastern land, History has left its prestigious traces:
monuments and debris, glassware and tombstones, inscriptions and
statuettes, convents and mosques and three famous arches in the
facades of our houses that turn towards the setting sun. (…)
A glance at our painting and sculpture from the last one hundred
years shows that even in its contradictions this panoply of more
or less happily imagined signs expresses the totality of our vocation.
And for us it is first of all a question of being. It is through
the exploration of the immediate and visible that one has some chance
of linking to a destiny that autonomous being which every nation
dreams of, whether it be like ours both ancient and yet very young.
When one is, when one desires to be the son of a land and a people
and a light, it is important that this land should be told by revealing
its countryside, its people delineated by seizing and fixing their
expressions and their customs, whether the techniques employed be
rudimentary or skillful, borrowed from others or issued from some
spontaneous depths as is notably the case with the naïf artists;
it is important, I say, that this light be expressed in the moving
theatre of the unending performance that the light gives to itself
and to us. If so many artists of ours have patiently and humbly
devoted themselves to catching the day-by-day manifestation of Lebanon
in the net of their drawings, watercolours and canvases, depicting
the men and the objects, the souls and the faces, nature and nuance,
it is usually by an enchanted of the most constant love. It is thus,
the painter seems to say, thus that these olive trees are mine in
all the sparkling glory of their foliage, mine this sea brightened
by red tile roofs, mine these peasants in the pride of their powerful
moustaches or the women dressed in the coarse black of their baggy
garb. Their faces marked with the blue tattoos of their magic kingdom
these “ arabyés ”- the washerwomen or the sellers of sweet-smelling
herbs, beautiful as empresses of old antiquity. Indeed, long before
the irruption of philosophical anguish brought in from elsewhere,
painting and sculpture in Lebanon have always been a peaceful and
consenting way of taking possession of the apparent simplicity of
the visible.
For Lebanon, however – and it is one of this country’s vocations
- the world beyond exists and must be admitted. One could not with
impunity be this little country that since its beginnings History
has ploughed and travailed in every direction – for better or for
worse; this country could not be without reacting instinctively
in its every element, I would say, to all that comes from beyond
its borders, be it a caress or an assault. The tableau of our tropisms
will one day have to be described. Our openness to the world could
also be one of the effects of our porosity. I have written somewhere
that if the inhabitants of these shores since time immemorial have
always and so easily adopted the gods of others, it is probably
through a sort of existential doubt as to the solidity of their
own foundations, a doubt eminently favourable to the birth and development
of all culture. For no culture is alive unless it is open. Mediterranean
by nature, Lebanon is both recipient and donor to this sea that
is open above all others, a zone of exchange and reciprocal impregnations,
a great spiritual and intellectual battleground that has cast up
on its shores like admirable wrecks the driftwood traces of mutual
clash and meeting.
To this geographical position and to the historical situation already
described must be added the taste of all Lebanese for adventure,
for departures and journeys which in a way complete and justify
their propensity for repatriation. From the very beginning, these
factors have caused our painters and sculptors to traverse the shared
sea – either physically or mentally – in quest of the expression
of modernity or the teaching of great pasts wherever they might
be found in Rome or Paris or New York. With the emigration factor,
too, Sao Paulo and Buenos Aires have provided a welcome and in certain
cases a permanent home for some of our artists. Today, indeed, there
are those who belong to the Paris School or who contribute to artistic
creation in one or other of the Americas, brilliant artists with
singular sensitivity. (…)
It is obvious that the battle to recover one’s identity is neither
easy nor a foregone conclusion – be it in one of many of the countries
of this planet or in our Lebanon that is no exception to this rule.
Our painters and our sculptors, I repeat, have had the merit since
the very beginning of posing the problem of their artistic testimony
at its profoundest level where meet and melt the lightning stroke
of identity, the illumination of love for one’s land and it’s traditions
they wish to guard perpetually inventive. The already numerous forms
of painting or sculpture which have succeeded in laying a strong
foundation for the Lebanese museum of the imagination over the last
one hundred years tell of the multiplicity of meaning attached to
the epiphany of the sign, beyond the plasticity of that sign or
its possible single significance. Moreover, any living sign is and
remains interrogation – in that all around stirs and shifts, even
the signification it claimed to express once and for all. Legends
are such that they renew and recreate themselves every day God gives.
Since Lebanon has existed, and more particularly during the last
hundred years, our painters and sculptors, our water-colourists
and engravers have illustrated a legend – a golden legend sometimes,
and sometimes afflicted and overcast, the legend of a land we had
long thought created only for joy in the miraculous cradle of its
colours and guarded by its rocks – and they are obstinate unyielding
rocks, O Rachana!
Countries which
no longer have legends
Will be condemned to die of cold,
assures Patrice
de la Tour du Pin. I do not think that we Lebanese ever risk dying
of cold.
Salah
Stéitié
Member of the International Association of Art critics (AICA)
President of the Committee Inter Governmental to restitute culture
to their countries. (UNESCO)
President of the Lebanese Section of AICA
One
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