Tribe 09

Page 132

PROFILE Images - Courtesy of the artist. Interviewer - Emma Warburton, arts writer and researcher.

Randa Mirza: Beirutopia Post-war Beirut is a city for sale Following the end of the Lebanese civil war in 1990,

photos depicting construction sites. To be ‘under

and its surroundings to create the most convincing of

Beirut endeavoured to reclaim itself and restore its

construction’ implies a state of incompletion. A site

illusions. These billboards metaphorically mirror the

reputation as a glamorous, sophisticated and modern

under construction is one that has abandoned its

city of Beirut itself. Like Beirut, they offer a vision for

destination. The city pined after the now elusive

previous identity, but has not yet arrived at its future

the future that will never be truly realised and they

memories of itself as a romantic cultural hub, but still

one. It is, perhaps, in a state of non-existence. For

manipulate the community with promises they can

it embarked on the task to reconstitute its identity

Mirza, Beirut is in a continuous cycle of reinventing its

never fully keep. Essentially, these advertisements

under the fading pretence that it was once praised

identity without ever actualizing it. Therefore the city is

are optical illusions, meant to deceive. But with

‘the Paris of the Middle East.’ Fast-forward to the

in a perpetually dissatisfied—it is under construction,

astute framing and compositional techniques, Mirza

present day, and this sentiment has materialized in a

and therefore unfulfilled. There is a tone to Mirza’s

succeeds in poking holes in the pastiche, and revealing

city-wide campaign for constant urban development

words that suggest these developments are excessive

the dishonesty at the crux of Beirut’s redevelopment

and renewal. Construction sites and billboards populate

—so excessive and so rapid that even locals cannot

narrative.

the landscape, and testify to a capitalist attitude that

keep track of their city’s changing form. This idea of

has rendered Beirut a product, rather than a site with

dissatisfaction links well with materialism and capitalism,

Mirza describes Beirutopia as a series of ‘two-

unique historical and cultural value that should be

both of which operate under the generalized concept

dimensional dioramas.’ That is to say that each photo

preserved and protected.

that more is never enough. There is a sense, too, that

is constituted of a three dimensional front plane (often a

the city-wide construction is not actually serving the

physical object or person that is present in the space as

Randa Mirza’s photographic series Beirutopia (2011 -

people of Beirut. Instead, it serves Capitalism. As Mirza

Mirza photographs it), a two dimensional second plane

ongoing) captures details of Beirut’s urban landscape

describes, when one structure is erected, another is

(the hyper-realistic billboards that create an illusion

to illustrate a progressive ideological shift she has

dismantled, and in this manic process of reinventing

of reality, a virtual reality) and a third, hidden plane

observed in the city, whereby the social and cultural

the city, the needs and expectations of the very people

that is behind the billboard (actual reality, concealed).

values that defined Beirut prior to the Lebanese war

who depend on it are ignored for the allure of profit

These planes also function to metaphorically trace

have been replaced with the values of capitalism

and prestige. The ‘new’ Beirut, as Mirza suggests, is a

time, whereby the front plane is the actual present,

and materialism. The idea for the series came to

foreign place. Perhaps this is because the new Beirut

the second plane is the pretend present (or projected

the artist during a peak in the construction boom.

does not take form with people in mind. Instead it

future), and the third is the disheartened past.

Mirza’s observations of Beirut at that time, and her

serves the purpose of generating profit, and leaves

uncomfortable and alienated response to her native

little room for sentimentality, nostalgia or even modest

Beirutopia portrays the city as a product. It is simply

city, are what compelled her to begin photographing

practicality.

a platform for advertising space—space that can be

the landscape. She states:

bought, leased, or consumed in some form or another. Beirutopia depicts construction sites that Mirza has

The series emphasizes the notion that preserving profit

“Today the city is still a huge construction site. I watched

encountered throughout the city. These sites are

is more important than preserving culture, society and

it changing rapidly… it became unrecognizable to the

photographed just as they are; they are carefully

history. All over the world, the destruction of cultural

people living in it. There were new buildings appearing

framed, but not staged. Promoting these projects are

heritage is being justified by the concept of renewal

but also there were old buildings disappearing. The

large billboards that advertise a forward-thinking vision

and modernity. And what can we do, except mourn

new promise for Beirut did not appeal to me. It was

for the space. They are hyper-realistic, computerized

our losses in disbelief, and tell ourselves that there is

profit oriented.” In essence, Beirutopia is a series of

renderings that simulate the future building, its interior,

a time for everything to disappear..

132 tribe


Articles inside

Eslam Abd El Salam

1min
pages 148-151

Rehaf Batniji

2min
pages 142-147

NEW MEDIA Meriem Bennani By: Emma Warburton

8min
pages 138-141

By: Emma Warburton Randa Mirza By: Emma Warburton

5min
pages 132-137

Myriam Boulos

3min
pages 126-131

Btihal Remli

3min
pages 108-113

Hind Mezaina By: Emma Warburton

5min
pages 118-125

Deborah Benzaquen By: Chama Tahiri

3min
pages 114-117

Alfred Tarazi By: Ari Akkermans

4min
pages 102-107

By: Abeer Mishkhas Farah Al Qasimi

3min
pages 22-27

Zied Ben Romdhane By: Flounder Lee

6min
pages 76-89

Samer Mohdad By: Sabrina DeTurk

10min
pages 64-75

FEATURE Rum Sublime By: Kit Hammonds

7min
pages 52-57

By: Yvonne McGahren Larissa Sansour By: Janet Bellotto

3min
pages 46-51

Jalal Bin Thaneya By: Maha Alsharif

2min
pages 28-33

REVIEW Ithra

5min
pages 16-21

For Your Inconsideration

5min
pages 34-39
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