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HUDA LUTFI HUDA LUTFI

HUDA LUTFI, Egypt (1948)

Bio

Born in Cairo, Egypt, in 1948, Huda Lutfi is both a cultural historian and a visual artist. A self-proclaimed Sufi, the artist grew up with an intrinsic interest in the ancient history of her...

Written by MARIA LUNDERSKOV

Born in Cairo, Egypt, in 1948, Huda Lutfi is both a cultural historian and a visual artist. A self-proclaimed Sufi, the artist grew up with an intrinsic interest in the ancient history of her country, and spent a lot of her time scavenging for items she attributed meaning to in the old streets and markets of Cairo. In 1983, Lutfi earned a PhD in Arab Muslim Cultural History from McGill University, Montréal1. She became a self-taught artist, who draws upon her academic background to mix historical icons from ancient cultures (Pharaonic, Coptic, Arab, etc.) with contemporary pop icons2. Lutfi experiments with gender roles within a historically patriarchal framework, challenging societal norms through her diverse mediums, including painting, collage, and installation 3. Nonetheless, she refuses to be limited under one theme, but rather an overarching mission of reflecting on human restriction, be it physical, mental, or societal.

Upon returning to Egypt in 1983, Lutfi explored her cultural belonging through her art. She started teaching at the American University in Cairo (AUC), where she held courses on Sufism and gender dynamics4. In digging into Egyptian culture, Lutfi also addressed the impact of contemporary social movements and political events in the country, like the American invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the Arab Spring in 2011. In the early 90s, Lutfi slowly transitioned from her teaching career to focus on becoming a visual artist. During the beginning of the decade, she went to the US to undergo invasive surgery, as well as teach Middle Eastern history and a course about Arab legal documents at Harvard University (1991-92)5.

Prompted by her recuperation from surgery that left her temporarily immobile, Lutfi started exploring collage as a medium. Inspired by her own physical condition, her work became an exploratory research of the human body and physical restriction. Lutfi’s first piece, Woman Cut in Half, 1991, is a mixed media collage featuring a complex array of layered images and textures. The piece is structured into a vertical format with a predominant use of rectangular and square shapes that frame each disparate black and white image, suggesting the multiplicity and fragmentation of historical narratives. The central figure is that of a woman whose body has been cut in half, serving as a commentary on Lutfi’s personal experience of feeling physically detached post-operation. As seen in the pasted images of Woman Cut in Half, Lutfi often photocopied, combined, and painted on images of goddesses (and sometimes gods) of ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt, Crete, and India. This process allowed her to reflect and learn about art in a more free and playful way than she would have during her formal studies6.

As part of her earlier graduate studies, Lutfi researched the presence of women in historical Arabic literature. The absence of accounts by female writers made her inquire: “where am ‘I’ in these narratives?”. Her observation instigated her to fight for the recognition of women in social life and cultural production. Lutfi reflected this feminine presence and energy through the female figures she depicted in her art. In the collage Hand Tied, 1997, Lutfi presents a repetition of a naked female figure, reminiscent of a Coptic doll, with arms and legs tied back, and a pin skewered in the belly button. A carved bone Coptic doll was historically used as a tool to rid negative energy by pricking pins into it. In Lutfi’s work, the doll came to signify the artist’s state of suffering and helplessness7 experienced through personal family difficulties.

Lutfi’s art highlights the femininity of the female figure, but she also uses the female figure to create a powerful and inspirational archetype. By juxtaposing ancient and modern elements that apparently do not have anything in common, she reframes well-known images and gives them additional meaning. This cultural hybridity is observable in the installation Duchamps Jaconde, 2003, in which Lutfi juxtaposes Duchamp´s Mona Lisa and a Pharaonic statue in order to contest the binary discourses on cultural and gender boundaries8. Furthermore, one of the most represented icons in Lutfi´s art is the Egyptian singer Umm Kulthum. By juxtaposing her with universal images such as Buddha, as in the artwork The teacher, 20089, and the statue of Liberty in Stepping on nails, 200810, Lutfi presents Umm Kulthum as a universal feminine icon, rather than solely Egyptian or Arab11. By placing Umm Kulthum in contexts that tend to present cultural restrictions imposed on women, like those connected to teaching or politics, Lutfi gives her a place in societal discourses12. Through these significant images, Lutfi valorizes the feminine figure and presence.

In an attempt to render women visible, Lutfi addresses the discourse of restrictions imposed on women and the struggle in making their emotions and sexuality recognized13. Many of the female figures in Lutfi´s early work are framed within the artwork. The surrounding border (frame) serves as a visual depiction of oppression14 that women feel under patriarchal conventions. According to Lutfi, these limiting conventions incapacitate the feminine potential15. In Woman in Frame, 199716, a semi-naked female figure is surrounded by a tight composition of squares and rectangles, leaving her without any space to move. The terracotta color that prevails on the image resemble bricks, while the decorative elements above the woman´s head recall a roman temple, all working as if the woman were entombed within an architectural structure. The image posits the question whether the woman will break out of the frame and free herself, or accept her condition as an inevitable reality[xvii]. The theme of restriction of women´s expression remains central in Lutfi´s work as she experiments with different ways to translate the idea. This can be seen through the two feminine legs glued to a cubical structure in House bound, 2008, as well as pictures of women confined in the limited space of a bottle in The perfume garden, 2008[xviii].

In the 2000s, Lutfi’s art shifted focus from the collective female experience to the feminine city of Cairo. In order to create a visual representation of the city in 2001, Lutfi took on the role of an urban archaeologist by collecting discarded objects that she found on the street, or in markets and shops. Among the large variety of objects that she collected, dolls were most ubiquitous. Choosing bricolage, an artistic technique involving creation from a diverse range of found items, the images that eventually emerged were a mixture of fantasy and documentation. Being inspired by the fact that most of the dolls she collected belonged to women, and that the name of the city in Arabic, al-Qahira, is in the feminine form, she pictured her imagined city as a feminine entity[xix].

This research of the city lasted for many years, and allowed her to intertwine the cultural significance that the found objects carried together with socio-political problematics that the artist experienced in person. In the period of 2001-2003, which was characterized with remarkable violent events like 9/11 and the US invasion of Iraq, many of the representations of Cairo everyday life expressed an anti-violence stand. The row of headless Barbie dolls, with raised arms stacked in a wooden box, with “No to War” written in English across their silver spray painted chests, in her artwork No to War, 2003[xx], is a reference to the demonstrations held in Cairo against the US military policy[xxi]. By using a female figure to make a political statement, Lutfi states the presence of the female voice.

In 2006, Lutfi used the medium of the doll to comment on the effects of globalization on local productions. She drew inspiration from the observation that the tradition of hand-made doll making had been replaced with plastic dolls, mass produced in China or Korea. Lutfi revisited some of the doll-making traditions that were prevalent in Egypt – the stuffed doll, paper mâché doll, metal doll, sugar doll, etc. – in order to integrate them in her work[xxii]. In Mashrabiyya dolls, 2003, Lutfi combines the feminine tradition of cutting out paper dolls for the purpose of healing with another artistic tradition, the mashrabiyya, a wooden perforated screen used in traditional architecture to protect women from the male gaze but still allow them to see outside. Lutfi´s installation creates a reversal in this gendered spatial construction, in that the female figure is no longer found behind the screen, but rather constitutes the screen itself, where the feminine becomes a visual filter[xxiii]. Here, by adopting innovative ways of representation, Lutfi aimed to revitalize the feminine practice of doll making.

Even though Lutfi´s art is focused on the figure of the woman, she does take up to discussion the power and physical strength attributed to the male figure. One of the few male dolls that she found in her search through the streets of Cairo, was a miniature of a police officer with no arms. By placing the doll on the front seat of an old-fashioned miniature-carriage, in Police officer, 2003, she evokes a note of irony[xxiv]. Both the miniature size, and the dated mode of transportation Lutfi places the officer in, ironically contrast the inflated image government officials have had throughout history. Through the years, men in uniform have become a recurrent symbol in Lufti’s art. They have been used to critique institutional power, which, in most societies, is exercised by men. Amidst the tumultuous events that constituted the Arab Spring (2011-2012), Lutfi produced Marching on Crutches, 2012, currently part of the Ramzi and Saeda Dalloul Art Foundation. The diptych mixed media piece is made up of two horizontal panels with a combination of acrylic and photomontage. The artwork presents a series of soldiers, seemingly in motion, marching back and forth over a mirrored carpet of crutches. The men in uniform, with helmets and weapons, can be seen as a critique of the oppressive power exercised on the protesters, while the crutches possibly carry the meaning of the fragility of power. In this panoramic piece, as in many others produced during the Arab uprising, Lutfi puts to question the role of gender, culture, and class within, and in opposition to, patriarchal structures of state and society[xxv].

Huda Lutfi's dual identity as a historian and visual artist converges in a powerful exploration of gender, culture, and societal norms. Through her innovative blend of historical and contemporary imagery, she challenges patriarchal norms and explores the complexities of gender dynamics in Egyptian society as well as universally. Lutfi's use of collage and found objects not only reflects her personal experiences, but also serves as a powerful commentary on global issues, such as war, globalization, and political unrest. By reclaiming well-known female symbols and creating new narratives, she not only renders women visible but also inspires a reimagining of feminine identity in an insistently dichotomous world. Today, Lutfi continues to live and work in Cairo. She has stepped aside from charged political climates, choosing to focus on, “the quieter world of the intimate”26.


Edited by Elsie Labban


References:

Aware. “Huda Lutfi.” Accessed 17 February, 2024. www.awarewomenartists.com

Badran, Margot. “Dis/playing power and the politics of patriarchy in revolutionary Egypt: the creative activism of Huda Lutfi.” Postcolonial Studies, 17:1, 47-62

Gypsum. “Huda Lutfi: Bio.” Accessed 15 February, 2024. www.gypsumgallery.com

Dietrich, Linnea S. “Huda Lutfi: A Contemporary Artist in Egypt.” Woman's Art Journal, Vol. 21, No. 2 (Autumn, 2000 - Winter, 2001): 12-15

Mehrez, Samia. Huda Lutfi. Cairo: American Press, 2012.

Lutfi, Huda, Samia Mehrez, James Stone. “Women, History, Memory.” Journal of Comparative Poetics, No. 19, Gender and Knowledge: Contribution of Gender Perspectives to Intellectual Formations, (1999): 223-244


Notes:

1 “Huda Lutfi: Bio,” Gypsum, accessed 15 February, 2024, www.gypsumgallery.com
2 Huda Lutfi, Samia Mehrez, James Stone, “Women, History, Memory,” Journal of Comparative Poetics, No. 19, Gender and Knowledge: Contribution of Gender Perspectives to Intellectual Formations, (1999): 223-244
3 “Huda Lutfi: Bio,” Gypsum, accessed 15 February, 2024, www.gypsumgallery.com
4 “Huda Lutfi,” Aware, accessed 17 February, 2024, www.awarewomenartists.com
5 Linnea S. Dietrich, “Huda Lutfi: A Contemporary Artist in Egypt,” Woman's Art Journal, Vol. 21, No. 2 (Autumn, 2000 - Winter, 2001): 12-15
6 Huda Lutfi, Samia Mehrez, James Stone, “Women, History, Memory,” Journal of Comparative Poetics, No. 19, Gender and Knowledge: Contribution of Gender Perspectives to Intellectual Formations, (1999): 223-244
7 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012), 48-49
8 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012), 25
9 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012),152
10 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012),166
11 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012),151
12 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012),151
13 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012), 51
14 Huda Lutfi, Samia Mehrez, James Stone, “Women, History, Memory,” Journal of Comparative Poetics, No. 19, Gender and Knowledge: Contribution of Gender Perspectives to Intellectual Formations, (1999): 223-244
15 Mai Serhan, “Huda Lutfi: The artist and the historical moment,” Jadaliyya, October 18, 2012 www.jadaliyya.com
16 Huda Lutfi, Samia Mehrez, James Stone, “Women, History, Memory,” Journal of Comparative Poetics, No. 19, Gender and Knowledge: Contribution of Gender Perspectives to Intellectual Formations, (1999): 223-244
17 Huda Lutfi, Samia Mehrez, James Stone, “Women, History, Memory,” Journal of Comparative Poetics, No. 19, Gender and Knowledge: Contribution of Gender Perspectives to Intellectual Formations, (1999): 223-244
18 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012), 32
19 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012),54-57
20 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012),135
21 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012),56-57
22 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012),130-131
23 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012),30
24 Samia Mehrez, Huda Lutfi (Cairo: American Press, 2012), 61
25 Margot Badran, “Dis/playing power and the politics of patriarchy in revolutionary Egypt: the creative activism of Huda Lutfi,” Postcolonial Studies, 17:1, 47-62
26 Artist Spotlight with Huda Lutfi, Sept. 2020. ArteEast: The Global Platform for Middle East Art. www.arteeast.org 

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SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2021/

Healing Devices, Dallas Museum of Arts,Texas, United States of America

Our Black Thread, Gypsum Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

2019

When Dreams Call for Silence,Tahrir Culltural Centre, The American University in Cairo, Egypt

2018

Still, The Thirdline Gallery, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

2017

Dawn Portraits, Gypsum Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

2016

Magnetic Bodies: Imaging the Urban, The Thirdline Gallery, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

2015

Magnetic Bodies, Townhouse West, Cairo, Egypt

2014

Traces, The Art Center, Cleveland, Ohio, United States of America

2013

Cut and Paste, Townhouse Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

2011

Huda Lutfi: Twenty Years of Art, Tache Art, Cairo, Egypt

2010

Making a Man out of Him, Townhouse Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

2008

Zan'it al-Sittat, The Third Line, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

2006

From Egypt with Love, The Third Line, Dubai, UAE
Arayis, Townhouse Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

2005

Beyond the Surfaces of Things, Falaki Gallery, the American University in Cairo, Egypt

Retrospective of Recent Works, al-Riwaq Gallery of Contemporary Art, Bahrain

2004

Making Faces, La Bodega Karim Francis Gallery, Zamalek, Egypt
Femmes Plurielles, The French Cultural Center in Alexandria, Egypt
Calligraphic Abstractions, La Bodega-Karim Francis Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

2003

Found in Cairo, Townhouse Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

2002

Dawn Portraits, Fortis Circustheater Gallery, The Hague, Holland
Retrospective, La Bodega-Karim Francis Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

2001

Paintings by a Contemporary Egyptian Artist, The Muscarelle Museum of Art, Virginia, United States of America

2000

The New in the Old, Townhouse Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

1997

Huda Lutfi: Recent Works, Xenios Gallery, Frankfurt, Germany


Conjuring the Past, Mashrabia Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

1996

Magic and the Image, Terra Viva Gallery, Uzes, France


Woman and Memory, Ewart Gallery, The American University in Cairo, Egypt

SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2021

Reflections: contemporary art of the Middle East and North Africa, The British Museum, London, United Kingdom

2020

There is Fiction in The Space Between, The Third Line Art Gallery, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

2019

Occupational Hazards, Apexarts, New York, United States of America

Reimagined Narratives, Art d'Égypte, Cairo, Egypt

2018

Feedback: Art, Africa and the 80’s, Iwalewahaus Museum, Beyruth Unversity, Germany

2017

Tell me the story of all these things, Villa Vassilieff, Paris, France

Dawn Portraits, Gypsum Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

2016

The Turn, Art Practices in Post-Spring Societies, Kunstraum Niederoesterreich, Vienna, Austria

Kitsch ou pas kitsch, institut des Cultures d’Islam, Paris,France

2015

Fotofest: View from inside: Contemporary Arab Photography, Emirates Palace, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

Futuropolis, Saad Zaghloul Cultural Center, Cairo, Egypt

2014

Alexandria Biennial for Mediterranean Countries, Alexandria, Egypt
Fotofest Biennial, Houston, Texas, USA

2013

Hommage to Moustapha Hasnaoui, Frederic Moison Gallery, Paris, France
Terms and Conditions, Singapore Art Museum, Singapore
De Colline en Colline, Sidi Bou Said & Takrouna, Tunisia

2012

I Am Not There, Townhouse Gallery, Cairo, Egypt
Long Live Free Art, Art Talks, Cairo, Egypt        

2010

My World Images, Festival for Contemporary Art, Copenhagen, Denmark
Dakart Biennale, Dakkar, Senegal

2009

Icons Reloaded, Elysee Arts Gallery, Liege, Belgium

2008

Umm Kulthum, The Fourth Pyramid, The Arab World Institute, Paris, France
Trilogy, The Palace of the Arts, Marseille, France

2007

Contemporary Egyptian Art, The Museum of Modern Art, Bonn, Germany
Contact Zone, The National Museum of Art, Bamako, Mali
What is Happening Now? The Palace of the Arts, Cairo, Egypt
Occidentalism, Karim Francis Gallery (Pension Swiss), Cairo, Egypt
Out of Place, Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Beirut, Lebanon

2005

Recent Works by Egyptian Artists, Mashrabia Gallery, Cairo, Egypt
Imagining the Book, Library of Alexandria Biennial, Egypt

2004

Ramadan Lights, Goethe Cultural Institute and Mashrabia Gallery, Cairo, Egypt
Hybridity, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt

2003

Body, New Falaky Gallery, The American University in Cairo, Egypt

2002

Imagining the Book, Library of Alexandria, Alexandria, Egypt
Collage, Atelier du Caire, Cairo, Egypt

2001

Cairo Modern Art in Holland, Fortis Circustheater Gallery, The Hague, Holland

1999

Mixed Media Works, Townhouse Gallery, Cairo, Egypt

1998

Four Women Artists, Townhouse Gallery, Cairo, Egypt
Women Artists of the Mediterranean and Black Sea, Salonika, Greece

1997

Biennial for Women Artists of the Mediterranean, Marseille and Arles, France

Community Art

2017

Izbit Khayrallah workshops (2 months): Worked with school children on different recycling workshops in the neighbourhood of Izbit Khayrallah, known for its trading in recycled materials. Along with 2 other artists we constructed a local theatre for the community.

2014

Creative Fusion Cleveland residency, USA (3 months): Worked with children from didfferent schools focusing on mixed mediums, painting, fabric, wire, found objects.

2012

Townhouse Multiple Truths workshop (9 months): Worked in a group workshop collecting social media data. Developed an archival project collecting information for a dictionary of the Egyptian revolutionary vernacular. The workshop resulted in a publication entitled: Pocket Dictionary of the Revolution, containing short texts of important political terms accompanied by caricatures by artist Andeel.

2010

Copenhagen Norrebro residency (3 months): Worked with school children in the district of Norrebro, making sculpture using mixed media materials. Worked on the Shelf of Memory installation for Norrebro, asking residents of this district to donate objects to build this shelf of memories. I also made use of the archives of the city to imagine the historical memories of Norrebro. Worked on a documentary film interviewing people on the street, Shall I come to live in Norrebro?

2008

Painting workshop with Sudanese Refugee children at the Townhouse (4 months). I curated an exhibition for the children’s works at the Townhouse. The sale of works went to the benefit of the children and their families.

2003-5

Worked with homeless children at a Cairene drop-in center (3 years): The Egyptian Societal Safety. Different workshops were organized for object making, jewellery, carpentry, but primarily painting. Several exhibitions showing the works were held at different places in Cairo: The British Council, The French Cultural Centre, and The Townhouse Gallery.   

Residencies and Awards

2014

Grand Prize, The Alexandria Biennial for Mediterranean Countries, Alexandria, Egypt
Artist Residency, Creative Fusion International Artists in Residence, Cleveland, Ohio, USA

2013

Artist Residency, Association pour l’art Contemporain, Tunisia

2010

Artist Residency, Kunsthalle Nikolaj, Copenhagen, Denmark

2009

Arab Fund for Arts and Culture Artist Award (AFAC), Beirut, Lebanon

1999

Ford Foundation Artist Award, USA

1996

Second prize at the Biennial for Women Artists of the Mediterranean in Marseille, France

SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY

2019

Sara elKamel, Huda Lutfi Creates a Captivating World of Silence, Madamasr.
Soha Elsirgany, Navigating Silence: Huda Lutfi talks about her latest exhibition in Cairo. Al-Ahram Online.

2018

Anna Seaman, Huda Lutfi: Still, Folio.

2017

Mia Jankovicz, Huda Lutfi’s Dawn Portraits, Flashart Review, March/April 2017.
Soha el-Sirgany, Reading into Egyptian Artist Meditative Dawn Portraits, Ahram online, 19 January.
Sara Sharp, The Artistic Force in the Work of Huda Lutfi and Amal Kenawy, The Third Text.

2016

Kevin Jones, Review Art Asia Pacific, 99, July-August review.
Karim Sultan, Imaging the Urban, Canvas, May-June. 

2015

Soha el-Sirgany, Townhouse West: Corporate meets contemporary art, Ahramonline, 31 May 2015.
Mai el-Wakil, Challenging History, Canvas Magazine.
Surti Singh, Historical realities of Concept Pop: Debating art in Egypt, Jadaliyya, 17 December.
Caroline Rooney, Egypt’s revolution, our revolution: revolutionary women and the transnational avant-garde, Journal for Cultural Studies.

2014

Margot Badran, Dis/playing power and the politics of patriarchy in revolutionary Egypt: the creative activism of Huda Lutfi, Postcolonial Studies, 11 June 2014.
Bernard Monasterolo, Quatre artistes raconte la revolution egyptiane, le Monde International, 11 February.        
View from Inside: Contemporary Arab Video, Photography and Mixed Media Art, Islamic Arts Magazine, 31 January.

2013

Laura Gribbon, Cut and Paste: Impressions of Power and Resistance, Mada Masr, 17 December.
Sara Farag, Cut and Paste: Artist Huda Lutfi Reflects on Revolutionary Struggle, Al-Ahram Online, 8 December.
Terms and Conditions Catalogue, Singapore Art Museum, Singapore.

2012

Daniella Rose King, “I Am Not There,” Frieze 19 April.
Mai Serhan, “The Artist and the Historical Moment,” Jadaliyya, October 18.
Margot Badran, “The Art of Revolution in Egypt, Brushes with Women,” in J. Brodsky, F. Olin, The Fertile Crescent: Gender, Art and Society, Rudgers University, New York, 2012.
Christian Viveros-Faune, “The Importance of Being Active,” The Art Newspaper, 15 June.         
Huda Lutfi: A 20 Years Retrospective Catalogue, The Thirdline Gallery, Dubai. 
Ania Szremski, Cairo in Context: Female Problems, Art21 Magazine.

2011

Huda Lutfi “The Last Word,” Featured essay, Canvas, March-April.
Badrawi, Cherine & Elzayadi, Taya, “Putting Egyptian Contemporary Art on the Global Map
One Step at a Time,” The Daily News, Egypt, January.
Yasmine el-Rashidi, Transmutations: Borrowing from the Past to Speak of the Present, Rawi Magazine.

2009

Lina Attalah “Breaking News,” Contemporary Practices, March.
Jeffrey Iverson, “Golden Gates: Middle Eastern Art, Time Magazine, October.
Lucien De Guise, Open Season, Islamic Contemporary Asian Art 7.
Mai El-Wakil, “From Scrapheap to Avant Garde,” Al-Masry Al-Youm Online, 6 December.

2008

Kinsey Katchka, “The Art of Urban Introspection,” ISIM Review, Autumn.
Gemmy Tully, “Re-Imagining the Tomb: A Dialogue between Ancient and Modern Egyptian Art,” Contemporary Practices, December.
Collaborative Authorship, “The Practice of Huda Lutfi: Umm Kulthum, Icon of Resistance of a Nation,” Contemporary Practices, December.
Ed Lake, “Diva Inspiration, The National, November.
Jane Plunket, “Progression in a Bottle, 7 DAYS, November 18.

2007

Samia Mehrez, “Found in Cairo: Between Representation and Literalism in the Visual Field,” Egypts Culture Wars, Routelage, New York.
Kinsey Katchka, “A Sufi Matrix: Between Dakkar and Cairo, Sufi Arts, Rituals and Performance in Africa Conference, University of Kansas, February 22-25th.

2006

Marianne Brouwer, “Silence is Silver: Contemporary Cairo,” Metropolism, October/November.
From Egypt with Love, Canvas Guide, November-December.
Hynam Kendall, “From Egypt with Love, Inside Out, December.

2005 

Lilian Karnouk, Modern Egyptian Art 1910-2003, New Edition, The American University in Cairo Press, Cairo.
Seth Thompson, “Cairo's Avant Garde,” The Journal for Media Arts and Cultural Criticism.

2004

Wejdan Al-Mannai, “Arab Women Artists,” Jamini Magazine.

2003

Negar Azimi, Found in Cairo Catalogue.

2002

Cairo Modern Art in Holland, Fortis Circustheater Foundation, The Hague.

2002

Francesca Sullivan, “A Canvas Stripped of Clothing: The Human Face in Multicultural Iconography,” Egypts Insight Magazine, January.

2001

Richard Woffenden, “Time and Space,” Cairo Times, April.
S. Mehrez & J. Stone, “Meditations on Painting and History: An Interview with Huda Lutfi,” in S. Zuhur, ed. Colors of Enchantment: Theatre, Dance, Music and the Visual Arts of the Middle East, The American University in Cairo Press, Cairo/New York.
Huda Lutfi, Art Essay, Feminist Studies.
James Stone, Huda Lutfi: In her Own Words, Arts and the Islamic World, (Special Report on Egypt: The Arts in View).
Linnea Dietrich, “Huda Lutfi: A contemporary Artist in Egypt,” Womans Art Journal.

1999

S. Mehrez & J. Stone, “Huda Lutfi: Women, History and Memory,” Alif, Journal of Comparative Poetics.

COLLECTIONS

Al-Ahram Beverages Company, Egypt
Dubai Properties, Dubai, UAE
Fortis Circustheater Foundation, The Hague, Holland
Indianapolis Museum, Indianapolis, USA
Jean-Jacques et Michele de Fleurs, Paris, France
Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Amman, Jordan
Muscarelle Museum, University of Virginia, USA
The American University in Cairo, Egypt
The British Museum, London, UK
The Law Court of Bahrain
The World Bank, Egypt
Barjeel Art Foundation, Sharjah, UAE
Ramzi and Saeda Dalloul Art Foundation, Beirut, Lebanon

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