SENSIBLE EXPRESSION BY ALFRED BASBOUS
Last updated on Thu 25 October, 2018
SENSIBLE EXPRESSION BY ALFRED BASBOUS
October 25 - November 20, 2018
Mark Hachem Gallery - Beirut
Mark Hachem Gallery is delighted to present an exhibition of relief and sculpture by artist Alfred Basbous (1924 – 2006). A major pioneer of Modernist sculpture in the Middle East, Basbous drew on the influence of Jean Arp, Constantin Brâncuși and Henry Moore to create stone and bronze sculptures of often monumental proportions. The exhibition brings together a series of sculptures from the 1960's to the 2000's, which demonstrate Basbous’ exploration of the relationship between form and material. A selection of Basbous’ preparatory drawings which reveal his approach to relief and sculpture are also exhibited.
Basbous was born in Rachana, 55km from Beirut and was a key contributor towards the development of Modernism in the Middle East during the second part of the twentieth century. During this period, he sought to express form in its purest, most unadulterated conception. He developed a sculptural language, experimenting with figurative and abstracted elements of the human figure, in particular the female body, in combination with organic lines. This exhibition features predominantly abstract works in bronze, marble and wood. Key to the exhibition are a selection of Basbous’ original drawings and three dimensional mold and maquet which offer insight into the creative process he employed. Although the drawings were never preparatory drawings for his sculptures, they demonstrate the artists’ deeper understanding of sculptural form.
At the start of his artistic career, Basbous took inspiration from elements in Greek mythology and ancient Phoenician sculpture. In 1961 Basbous received a scholarship from the French government to become a pupil at L'École Nationale des Beaux-Arts in Paris. This period was to have a lasting influence on his work.
Having lived and studied in France in his early years, he returned to his hometown of Rachana near Beirut. In 1994, Basbous opened a sculpture park which was designated a UNESCO site in 1997. The open-air gallery and the rolling, dipping character of the Rachana landscape was hugely influential to Basbous’ creative output. He held annual sculpture symposiums until 2004, whereby he invited sculptors from around the world to create site-specific work thus creating a center for sculpture.
Mark Hachem will exhibit 40 selected sculptures and ten drawings from the 1960s to the 2000s.
Curated by Mark Hachem