Sutton Gallery is pleased to present Nomination for the presidency of the New Egypt,
an installation by Raafat Ishak which continues his engagement with
moments of major social upheaval, responding to the revolutionary wave
of the Arab Spring and the ensuing transition toward political democracy
in Ishak's native Egypt.
At this pivotal moment within the recent
history of the Middle East, as groups and individuals seek to propose
alternative models of governance, Ishak's latest project involves the
establishment of a manifesto for a new political party to contend the
Egyptian elections. Written in cursive Arabic text, the ‘party's'
manifesto sits below an imagined logo, a Scarab beetle, painted in
Ishak's customary style, where distinctive lines enclose curved, square
or rectangular shapes that have been slowly built up in pastel shades on
unprimed MDF.
Placing emphasis on the need for better food
distribution and land cultivation, the proposed manifesto revisits a
highly radical and contentious position within the framework of Egyptian
nationhood: the re-flooding of the Nile River. Here Ishak calls for
positive action and renewal, thereby reflecting his practice at large,
which continually expresses the world as another place or suggests an
imagined future.
The physical configuration of Nomination for the presidency of the New Egypt
recalls a paper scroll resting on a black cube. Notably, the presence
of the black cube has carried great significance throughout Ishak's
oeuvre, with incarnations of Malevich's Black Square 1915
appearing in Ishak's practice as early as 1987. His resonance with this
symbol is not simply due to its significance in modern art and
architecture; it is also equally a reflection on his heritage and the
sacred site of Islamic pilgrimage, the black stone cube of the Kaaba in
Mecca: ‘While this motif resonates with externally generated meanings -
an amalgam of archeological layers and intersecting histories - it also
suggests the limits of abstraction and the meanderings of the
contemporary artist'.i In this way, the black cube is positioned as both
structurally and culturally representative of the circulatory nature of
the personal and political.
12 October 2012 - 10 November 2012
Sutton Gallery