The Way We See It: Poetic-Visual Reciprocity in Egyptian Street Art Since 2011
Date
2022Metadata
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This article traces the manifestations of the newly adapted artistic form of “calligraffiti,”
or the synthetic braiding of poetry and graffiti on what became known as the “walls of
protest” in post-2011 Egypt. This new mode of writing/drawing answers to the immediacy
of an unprecedented revolutionary moment in Egypt and rewrites Egyptian
history in peculiar artistic instantaneity. The image-text discursive dynamics of this
hybrid form of expression enhance our understanding of the 2011 Egyptian uprising,
enabling us to explore the potential of revolutionary impulse for stretching new artistic
forms. This article therefore engages calligraffiti as a means to expand the scope
of the literary, and specifically the poetic, to involve the visual dimension as coupled
with the conceptual (linguistic). In this border- and genre-crossing artistic mode,
Arabic poetry and graffiti meld as a revolutionary form of self-expression that defies
local and international hegemonic, patriarchal regimes. Calligraffiti serves not only as
a means of registering a revolutionary moment in Egypt or of celebrating the epiphany
of the uprising, but more importantly it stands as a cultural and literary tool developed
and used by Egyptian artists to represent the revolutionary artistic self and galvanize
dissent during a highly contested moment in Egypt’s history. The article thus traces the
ways that the calligraffiti of Egyptian artists like Bahiyyah Shihāb (Bahia Shehab) and
ʿUmar Fatḥī (Omar Fathy), ʿAmmār Abū Bakr (Ammar Abo Bakr), Ganzīr (Ganzeer),
Al-Mushīr ( El-Moshir) and ʿAlāʾ ʿAwaḍ (Alaa Awad), are enmeshed with the poetic
lines of Amal Dunqul, Pablo Neruda, and Yāsir al-Manawahlī (Yasser el-Manawahly)
on the artistic canvas of muralled Egyptian revolution.
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- English Literature & Linguistics [103 items ]