When a bomb falls on a building or a town, it exposes all its guts,” said Mohamad Hafez. His elaborate models of annihilated streetscapes and ruined buildings replicate the devastation of the war in Syria, where Hafez was born. In October 2016, I entered his studio in the Westville neighborhood of New Haven during the annual City-Wide Open Studios event. The walls were covered with his sculptural structures, intricate pieces depicting exposed rebar and protruding electrical wiring. Hafez—by day an architect at Pickard Chilton, a firm specializing in skyscrapers—explained that the disintegration of a slab of concrete is very different from that of a wood floor. His profession has equipped him with the material knowledge to show the ravages of war with startling accuracy. On my second visit to Hafez’s studio in April 2017, the walls were empty because the artist had recently mounted a solo show at the Lanoue Gallery in Boston. What remained were the pieces that Hafez uses t
Mohamad Hafez’s Complex Models of Syrian Devastation
15 сентября 201915 сен 2019
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