|
Mohammad Al Jaloos at the French Cultural Center "Women are the
Driving Force Behind The Artist" THE PAINTINGS
OF Mohammad al Jaloos may
be abstract, but they give clear and concrete expression for his passion for
love and women. "Love is key
to setting the artist's soul free and giving it full rein to touch
the sky says Jaloos. "This fresh love does not recognize exhaustion or peace
and transports the artist into a state of true creativity." "Love
encourages the artist to use his tools in a way that reflects his feelings and
his strong passion for life and fate," Jaloos told participants in a meeting of
the
Jaloos
said that the existence of a romantic woman in one's life created a huge surge
of creativity by penetrating into the man's being and imposing her rhythm on
his sketches and brush strokes. The
presence of women in any artistic work revolves around three foci, Jaloos said:
"the intrinsic female, the rebellious female and the physical model." The
painter said each category had its own characteristics and personification.
"The first kind represents ma's love and desire for life, but it undermines his
will to create life." The
second category, he said, represented the woman fighting for freedom from
slavery, the freedom of her country and her society. Jaloos
said the final category, in which the woman's body was used as a basis for
learning the art of painting, was purely academic. However, he added that this
kind of art alienated human values and spiritual existence of a woman from her
body. The
artist said memory and academic education played a role in his works. But "my
mother reflects my first experience with women, especially as she was my first
supporter," he added. Jaloos'
artistic experiences with women began with drawing lessons with female models.
He then moved on to the concept of woman who defended the land and fought
Zionism during the Palestinian Intifada. Then
came his first love, who left a deep impression on the painter's works as
represented in his love of 'the girl next door'.
"In
this love story, I started to feel the real presence of women in my work," he
said, adding "I became a dancing lover who drew his dancing steps in lines,
flying with colors and spreading details here and there on the white page." But
the real intrinsic female he found in his wife Amneh, who he said represented
beauty, sensitivity and tenderness. "This woman gave me faith in my work and
encouragement in my days of depression," he said. Or
as he said, love became the king of the artist's soul, giving him strength to
move forward and providing him with new reason to carry on. By
ANAN NASEREDDIN Arab
Daily September 15, 1999 |
|---|