Envisioning Oman: Orientalism in Art

Contenu

Titre
Envisioning Oman: Orientalism in Art
Type
Conférence
Créateur
Hajri, Hilal al-
Date
2023-09-12
Résumé
Edward Said's Orientalism is one of the most ground-breaking treatises in post-colonial studies. Since its publication in 1978, this controversial work has had a growing influence on different fields in humanities and social sciences such as colonial theory, feminism, anthropology, history, geography, travel literature, tourism and art.
In view of this intellectual context, it could be said that fine arts played a clear and direct role in promoting colonialism. This was particularly evident after the French campaign in Egypt in 1798. British, French, and American military campaigns brought a number of artists who took upon themselves to picture the Eastern peoples in general, and the Arabs in particular as different exotic objects to be tamed and "civilized". There was a fertile ground for accepting such ideas as Western creative arts had already depicted the oriental man as a deviant, heathen and bohemian immersed in sex and pleasures, surrounded by maids and slaves. The last image may has come as a result of "Thousand and One Nights", translated by the French orientalist Antoine Galland in the beginning of the eighteenth century, as it had magical effect on most Western artists and writers.
Taking its cues from Orientalist theory of Edward Said, this project deals with oriental themes implied by Western drawings and paintings related to Oman, as a place, people, and culture. From the Portuguese colonization of Oman in 1507 to the late twentieth century, an art discourse on Oman has developed.
The goal of this project is to explore the images of Oman developed within the works of Western artists. In their representations, I locate Oman as a place, a people and a culture. Precisely, I am interested in looking at their attitudes, both positive and negative, to every aspect of life in Oman. I also hope to contribute to the literary criticism of Western discourse on the Middle East with a different perspective. Unlike Edward Said and his advocates, who homogenize Western discourse on the Middle East, in my project I propose that Western fine art on Oman is much more heterogeneous, ambiguous and discontinuous. My project argues that these works are neither homogenously biased nor impartial, but imply a mixture of diverse attitudes, depending on many factors such as the artists' background, motive of visit, time of visit, and kind of people encountered. The gap of knowledge that this project undertakes to fill is that most of the Western drawings and paintings related to Oman have not been studied in any context.
Place
Leibniz
Langue
eng
Titre abrégé
Envisioning Oman

Hajri, Hilal al-, “Envisioning Oman: Orientalism in Art”, 2023-09-12, bibliographie, consulté le 18 septembre 2024, https://ibadica.org/s/bibliographie/item/21213

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