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Farouk Kaspaules

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Farouk Kaspaules is an Iraqi-born Canadian artist of Assyrian origin,[1] noted for his engravings and silk-screen photography.

Life and career

Born in Baghdad, Kaspaules left Iraq in the mid-1970s for political reasons.[2] After a brief stay in the United States, he chose Canada as his country of exile and settled in Ottawa.[3] He received his art education at the University of Ottawa, graduating in 1989 with Bachelor degrees in Fine Arts and Art History.[4]

He has contributed to the arts community in Canada through his active involvement in artist-run centres and community organizations.

He mixes traditional Arabic iconography with modern symbols to produce works that reflect themes of exile, cultural displacement and related social issues.[5]

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Work

Kaspaules works in oils and mixed media.[6] He also executes engravings and silk-screen photography.[7]

During his first European exhibition in London, England, in 1993, he established links with other exiled artists from the Middle East, specifically from Iraq. These encounters led to a turning point in his artistic production, which became more politically explicit.

In 2001, Kaspaules's installation …and at night we leave our dreams on window sill, memory of a place (2000) was included in the major exhibition The Lands within Me: Expressions by Canadian Artists of Arab Origin, which opened at the Canadian Museum of History soon after the September 11 attacks.[8]

In 2016, Kaspaule exhibited works in There’s Room: Ottawa Artists Respond to the Refugee Crisis, held at Gallery 101.[9]

Kaspaules has participated in some 20 solo and collective exhibitions in Canada, England, Hungary, France, Chile and Brazil.[10]

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Solo exhibitions

  • 1993- A Personal Memory, Kufa Gallery, London, England[11]
  • 1995 - Non Sequitur
  • 2000 - The Lands Within Me – Memory of a Place
  • 2003 - State of Things
  • 2003 - The 9th International Cairo Biennale, Cairo, Egypt
  • 2004 - Crossing Borders
  • 2005 - Traces
  • 2006 - Iconoclast
  • 2007 - Be/Longing Ottawa Art Gallery, Ottawa, Canada[12]
  • 2008 - Inhabitants, Centre d'exposition L'Imagier, Aylmer, Quebec[13]

See also

References

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