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Shareef Sarhan

Palestinian artist, photographer, designer (born 1976) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Shareef Sarhan (born 1976) is a Palestinian photographer, multidisciplinary visual artist, and designer. He is a founding member of Shababeek for Contemporary Art (Windows From Gaza); and has published two books, Gaza War (2007), and Gaza Lives (2012).

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Early life

Shareef Sarhan was born on 25 November 1976, in Gaza City, Palestine.[1][2][3][4]

Sarhan was enrolled in the Darat al Funun (English: Dara Academy of Jordanian Arts) summer academy that was hosted from 1999 to 2003, with Marwan Kassab-Bachi (1934–2016) serving as the director.[3][5] He graduated in 2001 from the International Correspondence School (ICS) of Scranton, Pennsylvania, US.[3]

Career

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The Lighthouse of Gaza (2016) by Sarhan

Sarhan began photography work in 1998, and mostly worked as a freelance photographer for international organizations.[6] He has taken photographs of closed off areas within Palestine, and of the ongoing conflict.[7]

Some of his notable visual artwork include The Lighthouse of Gaza [ar] (2016), a public sculpture and installation; Clutter re-Making (2018), a sculptural installation; and Soldiers and the Concrete Base, multimedia (2019–2021).

In the summer of 2014, and during the course of the 51 days of Israeli offensive against Gaza, Sarhan created a series of 51 photographs related to the event.[8] Sarhan started visiting factories and workshops in Gaza in 2017 to collected discarded materials such as aluminum.[6] He would take the discarded materials and created art in the form of Arabic letters in bright colors.[6]

Sarhan is one of the founding member of Shababeek for Contemporary Art (Windows From Gaza), located on the Gaza Strip.[6][5][9] Shababeek grew to some 250 members in 2019.[9] The Shababeek for Contemporary Art building was located across from the Al-Shifa Hospital, and in April 2024 during the ongoing Gaza war, the building was destroyed by Israel.[9] It was the last contemporary artist space in Gaza at the time.[9]

Sarhan won the Bronze Award (2010) at the Festival of Arab Photographers Europe in Berlin, Germany.[4][3] He is a member of the Palestinian Artists Association.[6]

Sarhan was featured in a Deutsche Welle (DW) documentary titled, Preserving Gaza's Photographic History (2020), directed by Tania Krämer.[7]

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See also

References

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