Sharif Waked's installation shows a group of identical structures, consisting
of two-meter- tall rectangular pillars. They are clad in black cloth,
resembling burkas, the traditional dress of the Afghan woman, with a rectangular
opening for the monitor screen which stands in place of the of the eyes.
The monitors show as a looped video - a fashion show in the accepted mode;
elegant, glamorous, but self-distorting every time the models reach the
end of the catwalk. The video-fashion show thus mimics the performance
that Palestinians are forced into at the checkpoints. Waked exposes and
transforms stereotypes of East and West and, in the images, displays the
underlying power relationships. Waked plays on notions of covered body
parts contrasted with the nudity of exposure; the segregated body of a
woman comes to contain and symbolize the segregation, behavioral restrictions
and powerlessness of an entire population. He alludes to images of the
veil, the chador, the burka, and intervenes in the discourse of how women
are seen in society, how they are objectified, which determines relations
of power and looking.
In the fashion show seen on the monitors this male gaze is diverted. This
gaze which allowed the woman only complementary exhibitionism and a narcissist
fascination with her own image, is ambiguous and more complex here. It
sends back a picture that confuses the issue, it decodes a stereotype
and transforms it into a political encounter. The dichotomy between what
is seen and what it represents points to a contradiction in value systems,
which is not confined to any particular place, but is universally applicable.
Waked explodes the frame of the fashion show and invests the stereotype
of being looked at with a new sinister significance.
Waked presents us with a performance of exposure, an exposure which is
transformed into a metaphor of political exploitation. The installation
can be seen within the wider context of performance, which has been used
for subversive purposes by surrealist and futurist artists in the past.
Like them Waked borrows the practices of the Cabaret and turns it into
a political manifestation.
These peculiar tall structures not only resemble women in burkas but also
recall Jeremy Bentham's Panopticon. Michel Foucault describes the Panopoticon
as "a perimeter building in the form of a ring. At the centre of
this, a tower, pierced by large windows, opening to the inner surface
of the ring. The outer building is divided into cells each of which transverses
the whole thickness of the building. These cells have two windows, one
opening to the inside, facing the windows of the central tower, the other,
outer one allowing daylight to pass through the whole cell. It was a system
of centralized observation, a system of isolating visibility an observation
point which served as a focus of exercising power." Foucault contends
that in those systems of surveillance the inspecting gaze would eventually
be internalized by the individuals. Here is precisely the point were Waked's
figures become part of his rebellion. This rebellion, this refusal to
yield, might ultimately represent a survival technique - not only for
the surveyed but also for the surveyor who employs the technology.
(Henie Westbrook)
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