Ibrahim el-Salahi

Ibrahim El-Salahi (born 5 September 1930) is a Sudanese artist painter and former politician and diplomat.

Life and career

El-Salahi was born on 5 September 1930, in Omdurman, Sudan to a Muslim family and is arguably one of the most important modern African artists. His father's career was running a Qur'anic school, which transpires to be the place where El-Salahi learned and practiced his calligraphy, which is predominant throughout his artwork. As a result of his lack of interest and his marks in school prevented him from pursuing medicine, which fortunately led to him beginning his art career. He studied Art at the School of Design of the Gordon Memorial College, currently the University of Khartoum. On the basis of a scholarship, he subsequently went to the Slade School of Fine Art in London from 1954 to 1957. At the Slade School of Fine Art, El-Salahi was exposed to European schooling, modern circles, and various historical artist that unintentionally alters the constructions of his artworks.[1] Studying here also allowed him to take formal and ideological cues from modernist painting, which helped him learned to balance pure expression and gestural freedom.[2] Additionally, in 1962 he received a UNESCO scholarship to study in the United States, from where he visited South America. From 1964 to 1965 he returned to the US with the support of the Rockefeller Foundation, and in 1966 he led the Sudanese delegation during the first World Festival of Black Arts in Dakar, Senegal.[3][4]

Due to the completion of his education training, he returned to Sudan. During the duration of his stay, he channeled calligraphy and elements of the Islamic culture that played a role in his everyday life. Trying to connect to his heritage, El-Salahi began to fill with symbols and marking of small Arabic inscriptions. As he became more advanced with incorporating Arabic calligraphy, the symbols began to produce animals, humans, and plant forms, providing more meaning to his artwork allowing viewers to connect to his work. El-Salahi learned to combine the European styles with the traditional Sudanese themes in his art, which evokes a transnational African-influenced surrealism.[5]

El-Salahi was assistant cultural attaché at the Sudanese Embassy in London from 1969 to 1972, when he returned to Sudan as Director of Culture under Jaafar Nimeiri's regime, then Undersecretary in the Ministry of Culture and Information until September 1975, when he was imprisoned without charge for six months for being accused of participating in an anti-government coup.

While imprison El-Salahi would use his 25 exercise minutes he received everyday to sketch out ideas for huge painting. He would secretly sketch and bury the small drawing into the ground to maintain his ideas.[6] Ten years after being released from prison he self-exiled himself from the country and for some years worked and lived in Doha, Qatar, before settling in Oxford, England.[3][4]

Art

External video
Ibrahim El-Salahi,[7]

He is considered a pioneer in Sudanese art and was a member of the "Khartoum School" that was founded by Osman Waqialla. In the 1960s he was associated with the Mbari Club in Ibadan, Nigeria.[3][4]

He developed an own style and was one of the first artists to elaborate the Arabic calligraphy in his paintings. His work has developed through several phases. His first period during the 1950s, '60s and '70s is dominated by elementary forms and lines. Then his work becomes rather meditative, abstract and organic. Subsequently, his work is characterized by lines, while he mainly uses white and black paint.[3][4]

In 2001, Ibrahim el-Salahi was honored with a Prince Claus Award from the Netherlands.[8][9]

In the summer of 2013 a major retrospective show of El-Salahi's work was mounted at Tate Modern, London, running from 3 July to 22 September 2013, The Tate's first retrospective dedicated to an African artist.[10]

Solo exhibitions

Group shows

Fellowships and awards

Education

Employment

Other cultural activities

Literature

References

  1. https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-ibrahim-el-salahi-the-pioneering-sudanese-artist-that-you-should-know
  2. https://www.artsy.net/artist/ibrahim-el-salahi
  3. 1 2 3 4 Ryle, John, Justin Willis, Suliman Baldo & Jok Madut Jok (eds), The Sudan Handbook, "Key Figures in Sudanese History, Culture & Politics", James Currey, 2011, p. 205. ISBN 978-1847010308
  4. 1 2 3 4 Culture Base (2003), biography
  5. https://theculturetrip.com/africa/sudan/articles/ibrahim-el-salahi-painting-in-pursuit-of-a-cultural-identity/
  6. africanpainters.blogspot.com
  7. "Exhibition curator Salah Hassan explains the Sudanese artist's crucial role in African Art", BBC Radio 3
  8. Ibrahim el-Salahi: a visionary modernist, Prince Claus Fund (2012).
  9. Profile, Prince Claus Fund.
  10. Hudson, Mark (3 July 2013). "Ibrahim el-Salahi: from Sudanese prison to Tate Modern show". The Guardian.
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