GRATIS KUNSTADVIES

x
Print kopen Print kopenBestel schilderij Bestel schilderij VerstuurVerstuur
DetailsDetails Toevoegen aan favorieten Toevoegen aan favorieten DownloadDownload Vergelijkbare werkenVergelijkbare werken RöntgenfotoRöntgenfoto DiavoorstellingDiavoorstelling

3-D Cities

Mona Hatoum: Brits-Palestijnse kunstenares die met schilderijen en installaties thema's als identiteit, verplaatsing & politiek onderzoekt. Uitdagend voor percepties van thuis, lichaam & ruimte.

Koop een digitale afbeelding met hoge resolutie en verbeterde kwaliteit, die veel superieur is aan de online voorvertoning.

Elk bestand wordt met uiterste precisie voorbereid door onze interne specialisten, met behulp van geavanceerde tools en deskundige handmatige retouche. Wij garanderen dat elke afbeelding een uitzonderlijke helderheid, nauwkeurige kleurweergave en verfijnde details bezit.

Het uiteindelijke bestand wordt binnen 72 uur per e-mail geleverd, geoptimaliseerd voor direct gebruik in professionele, redactionele en printomgevingen. Dit is dezelfde kwaliteit waarop topontwerpstudio's, uitgevers en galerieën vertrouwen.

Digitale afbeeldingen

Download een bestand met hoge resolutie voor persoonlijke weergave, afdrukken en creatieve projecten.

Totaalbedrag

$9.99

Inbegrepen bij elke bestelling van een digitale afbeelding

Professionele digitale levering, gegarandeerd

Wanneer u kiest voor WahooArt.com, ontvangt u niet alleen een afbeelding – u krijgt een professioneel verbeterd digitaal kunstwerk, met precisie vervaardigd en voorzien van een tevredenheidsgarantie. Dit is alles wat automatisch bij uw bestelling is inbegrepen:

shipping_icon
Snelle digitale levering

Uw hoogwaardige digitale afbeeldingsbestand wordt binnen 72 uur na bestelling naar u gemaild – klaar voor direct gebruik.

canvas_icon
Met AI verbeterd digitaal bestand

Uw kunstwerk wordt professioneel geoptimaliseerd met behulp van geavanceerde AI-tools en handmatige bewerkingen, waardoor maximale details, helderheid en kleurnauwkeurigheid worden gegarandeerd.

insurance_icon
Gratis levenslange herlevering van digitale afbeeldingen

Je bestand per ongeluk verwijderd of kwijtgeraakt? Geen zorgen – we sturen het u op elk gewenst moment gratis opnieuw toe.

tax_icon
Geen invoerkosten - Altijd

Geniet direct van uw kunstwerk zonder invoerrechten, belastingen of verzendkosten – digitale downloads zijn altijd belastingvrij.

color_icon
Garantie op kleurgetrouwheid

Met behulp van professionele hulpmiddelen en kleurbeheer zorgen wij ervoor dat uw digitale afbeelding de originele kleuren zo nauwkeurig mogelijk weergeeft.

return_icon
60 dagen tevredenheidsgarantie

Als u niet tevreden bent met uw digitale afbeelding, passen wij deze aan of storten wij 100% terug binnen 60 dagen – zonder vragen gesteld.

guarantee_icon
100% Geld-terug-garantie

Niet tevreden? Ontvang binnen 60 dagen na ontvangst van uw digitale bestand uw volledige aankoopbedrag terug – zonder vragen te stellen.

discount_icon
Korting bij grote bestellingen

Koop 3 afbeeldingen, bespaar 10% - Koop 5, bespaar 15% - Koop 10+, bespaar 20%. Ideaal voor creatieve projecten, galerieën en bureaus.

Beschrijving verzamelobject

Born into a Palestinian family in Beirut, Mona Hatoum makes use of her past experiences and feelings concerning loss, displacement, disorientation, and estrangement as a source for her production. Shaped through the many years the artist has spent deeply excavating the complexities and contradictions that are nurtured by the present state of the world, these works open up layers of paradoxical meaning by bringing together various formal and visual elements in unexpected ways, starting from the artist’s own body and expanding toward other borders that we call home or country.Previously exhibited as part of “You Are Still Here” (2012), curated by Emre Baykal, “3-D Cities” is an installation of maps showing the cities of Baghdad, Kabul and Beirut on three table tops connected by wooden trestles. The concentric circles Hatoum cuts into the map resemble craters, producing elevations and depressions in the map’s surface. These three-dimensional forms seem to indicate sites of seismic disruption, bombed-out areas, or construction sites out of which new architectural structures rise. The positive and negative cuts Hatoum delicately engraves on the maps of these war-torn cities are reminders of the ways in which destruction and reconstruction are intertwined.

Kunstenaarsbiografie

A Life Shaped by Displacement: The Art of Mona Hatoum

Mona Hatoum’s artistic journey is inextricably linked to the profound experiences of displacement, identity formation, and a constant negotiation of belonging—themes deeply rooted in her personal history. Born in Beirut, Lebanon, in 1952, to Palestinian refugee parents, her early life was shaped by the realities of living on the periphery of society, navigating a politically volatile landscape where her family’s status as refugees meant existing perpetually outside established boundaries. This foundational experience—a sense of rootlessness and an awareness of being ‘othered’—would become a central driving force behind her creative vision, imbuing her work with a poignant exploration of what it means to be unmoored from a homeland and constantly striving to find one's place in the world. Initially pursuing graphic design at Beirut College for Women (now Lebanese American University), Hatoum’s trajectory shifted dramatically following the outbreak of the Lebanese Civil War in 1975, forcing her into exile in London. This pivotal moment wasn’t merely a geographical relocation; it represented a profound psychological and emotional upheaval, prompting her to confront not only the trauma of displacement but also the complex process of constructing an identity within a radically new cultural context. It was this experience that ultimately propelled her towards a career as one of contemporary art's most compelling and politically charged voices.

From Performance to Sculpture: A Shifting Landscape of Expression

Hatoum’s artistic development began with a strong focus on performance and video art in the late 1970s and early 1980s. These early works were intensely personal and deeply intertwined with her Palestinian heritage, directly confronting audiences with visceral statements about the realities of conflict and political instability in Lebanon. She utilized her own body as a medium to convey vulnerability, resistance, and a sense of profound loss—a strategy that resonated powerfully with viewers grappling with similar experiences of displacement and trauma. A particularly striking example from this period is *The Negotiating Table* (1983), a stark and unsettling image of the artist lying prone on a table covered in simulated blood and gauze. This work, far from being a simple depiction of suffering, was designed to embody the helplessness felt by civilians caught in the crossfire of war—a powerful act of embodied resistance against indifference and complacency. However, by the mid-1990s, Hatoum embarked on a significant transformation in her artistic practice, moving away from the immediacy of performance and video towards sculpture and installation art. This shift allowed her to explore broader themes beyond direct political protest, delving into concepts such as nomadism, exile, and the unsettling potential inherent within seemingly ordinary domestic objects. She began to meticulously transform familiar household items—furniture, kitchen utensils, bedding—into disorienting and potentially threatening forms, challenging conventional notions of comfort, security, and belonging.

Deconstructing Domesticity: Unsettling the Familiar

A defining characteristic of Mona Hatoum’s mature work is her remarkable ability to subvert the seemingly innocuous realm of domestic space. Her installations frequently employ objects associated with home—chairs, tables, lamps, even everyday kitchen utensils—and manipulate them in ways that evoke a sense of unease and anxiety. *Home* (1999), for instance, features a collection of kitchen appliances wired with electricity, creating a palpable feeling of danger and highlighting the precariousness of security within the home. This work isn’t simply about the physical space of domesticity; it explores the psychological weight associated with it—the longing for stability, the vulnerability inherent in intimacy, and the potential for disruption even within the most familiar environments. Similarly, her large-scale installations often play with scale and proportion, transforming ordinary objects into monumental forms that overwhelm and disorient the viewer, forcing a reevaluation of our relationship to the things around us and prompting questions about power dynamics, control, and the hidden anxieties embedded within everyday life. The juxtaposition of soft, organic textures with hard, industrial components is also a recurring motif—a deliberate strategy designed to create visual tension that mirrors the complex emotional landscape she explores.

Themes of Identity and Recognition

At the heart of Mona Hatoum’s artistic practice lies an enduring exploration of identity and displacement. Her own experiences as a refugee profoundly inform her investigation of borders—both physical and psychological—boundaries, and the persistent longing for home. She doesn't offer easy answers or simplistic resolutions; instead, she presents open-ended works that invite multiple interpretations and encourage viewers to confront their own emotional responses. The human body and its relationship to space are also central concerns in her art. Hatoum’s installations often engage with our sense of scale and proportion, creating environments that feel both inviting and claustrophobic, familiar and alienating. This interplay between the body and space explores how physical surroundings shape our perceptions, emotions, and ultimately, our understanding of ourselves. Throughout her career, Mona Hatoum has received widespread critical acclaim and numerous prestigious awards, including the Rolf Schock Prize in Visual Arts (2008), the Joan Miró Prize (2011) and the Praemium Imperiale (2019). Her work is held in major museum collections worldwide, including MoMA, Tate Modern, and the Centre Pompidou.

A Lasting Legacy

Mona Hatoum’s contribution to contemporary art extends far beyond her individual artworks; she has fundamentally shaped discussions surrounding identity, displacement, and globalization. Her ability to evoke powerful emotional responses through seemingly simple forms—a chair, a table, a cage—solidifies her position as an important voice in international art. She refuses to offer easy answers or simplistic narratives, instead prompting critical reflection on issues of power, belonging, and the human condition. By consistently pushing boundaries and exploring the intersection of art, politics, and personal experience, Mona Hatoum remains an artist whose work continues to resonate deeply with audiences worldwide, leaving a lasting legacy that challenges us to confront uncomfortable truths about our world and ourselves.
Mona Hatoum

Mona Hatoum

1952 - , Libanon

Belangrijkste feiten

  • Artistic Movement Or Style: Installatiekunst, Sculptuur
  • Date Of Birth: 1952
  • Full Name: Mona Hatoum
  • Nationality: Briton-Palestijnse
  • Notable Artworks:
    • Witness
    • Prayer Mat
    • 3-D Cities
  • Place Of Birth: Beirut, Libanon