Paintings by Houmam el Sayed on view at Agial Art Gallery
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Paintings by Houmam el Sayed on view at Agial Art Gallery
Noah, 2015. Oil on canvas, 150 x 150 cm.

by Marie Tomb



BEIRUT.- All too often, the cycle of violence seems unstoppable, and it looks like oppression is as pervasive as it is able to resist challenges. In Houmam el Sayed’s paintings, it is neither a man, nor an ideology, but a nameless and faceless structure whose countless metamorphoses reemerge anywhere they find detractors to silence and citizens to abuse. In fact, we never see live oppression in El Sayed’s works: instead, his characters propose a version of what one might be reduced to when the pressure of religion, the state, and ideology is too much to bear.

When freedoms of speech and movement are a thing of the past, the effects of brutal injustice manifest themselves physically. El Sayed’s men end up looking like children stunted in their growth and pushed to the ground. They’ve turned disproportionate: they carry their burden not on their diminutive shoulders, but inside their huge distorted heads – some kind of powerful external pressure might have flattened them from above, and ironed them out in front. In the process, their foreheads turned slanted, rendering one of their eyes bigger than the other.

Perhaps these men are half-blind to the circumstances surrounding them, whether they choose to ignore them, or avoid facing them fully. In either case, they are missing half of the picture, but one wonders what there is to miss when the picture is so bleak.

The men’s bodies prevent any kind of meaningful physical movement, stranded in the semi-void of a civilization in jeopardy. These beret-clad workers no longer produce anything; they cannot find the energy to move objects, carry their pets, or even walk. Yet, however isolated they stand, they do share their predicaments with others just like them, but just cannot reach out to them.

It’s effectively impossible to run away from this barren land, especially with only absurd tools at one’s disposal. One of the men found a precarious boat, but might have forgotten the sea was made of rocks. He looks at us with a mixture of fear and resignation – what’s next, then, for someone too big for his boat and for what he’s been reduced too? Another seaman, made delusional by desperation, fancies himself the captain of a ship that’s far gone. And when one man flies, it cannot be away from his city: he’s really been turned into a human bomb, projected haphazardly, and ready to explode back where he came from.

The men’s eerie features and paralysis might just be the external symptoms of their considerable psychological damage: their blue eyes suffice to translate the depth of their anguish. Actually, the glassy-eyed characters look like they’ve given up. Despite their lifelessness, though, they do retain dignity, and, sometimes, display faints signs of improbable resistance. (The quite literal keffiyeh, for one.) There is somewhere a paradoxical call for change – their own disoriented, horrified, and resigned condition, El Sayed’s mistreated figures could suggest, is no solution. So they call out viewers to think of a way out.










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