Œuvre d'art public
Because there was and there wasn't a city of Baghdad
JC Teron Co. commercial billboards
This work features a photograph Hassan took on her first visit to Baghdad, Iraq, in the late 1970s, when she studied Arabic at the University of Mustansyria. The photo shows the colourfully tiled dome and minaret of the Haidar Khan mosque, and the text evokes Arabia's literary traditions as exemplified in 1001 Nights.
Because… there was and there wasn’t a city of BAGHDAD ---
[Other text on the panel's artwork]
IN CONTROL --- SPONSORED BY: ARTCITE (WINDSOR) ARTIST…JAMELIE HASSAN
(Biased) media coverage of the 1991 Iraq war (Gulf War), reliability of information media, barbarism
Event: In Control, billboard project by artists, organized by ARTCITE, Windsor, ON. Commissioner: Lorenzo Buj.
Date : June 15-August 4, 1991
Event: Outdoor Art Tour, an event organized by the Morris and Helen Belken Art Gallery, University of British Colombia, Vancouver, BC. Work located downtown Vancouver, at the corner of Richards and Pender Streets. Date : 1991 or 1992?
Event: exterior walls of the Morris and Helen Belken Art Gallery, Vancouver, BC
Event: Signals in the Dark: artistic practice in the shadow of war, organized and circulated by the Blackwood Gallery, University of Toronto, Mississauga, 2008 (Curator: Séamus Kealy)
Date: Blackwood Gallery, University of Toronto, Mississauga, January 17 - March 2, 2008, Leonard and Bina Ellen Art Gallery, Concordia University, Montreal, August 29 - October 11, 2008
"Hassan conjures and immediately cancels the fabular city of Thousand and One Nights. The text accompanies, overlays, an image of the Haydar Khanah mosque, built in the nineteenth century, standing on the Eastern Bank of the Tigris, near the Abbasid palace, in a city founded in AD 762 (Christian Calendar, of course). The inscriptions from the Koran running along the top of one wall, the turquoise tiles of the dome, clearly standing out against the celestial blue, as if, in the aftermath of Desert Storm, she must oppose architectural grandeur and reveal truth to a campaign that would use nature as a metaphor for its murderous machinations. Thus bringing us to contemplate a cultural, religious, and no doubt racial gulf in the Western understanding of the 'Orient'." (Reference: Edward Said)
-- Lorenzo Buj, from the catalogue essay to IN CONTROL