Aatifi Explained

Aatifi (born 1965) is a contemporary Afghan-German painter, printmaker and calligrapher. He was born in Kandahar, Afghanistan. He lives and works in Bielefeld, Germany. His works contain abstracted Arabian calligraphy and modern European influences.

Biography

After graduating as a master calligrapher early, he moved to Kabul in 1982. There he finished High School, opened a workshop shortly after and built a school for drawing and calligraphy. He then entered the Kabul University's Fine Arts Faculty in 1989 to become a painter. In the same year, he was awarded the Prize for Calligraphy and Composition by the Afghan Ministry of Culture and was awarded a second time the year after.[1] In 1991, he was awarded first place by the artists group Hakim Naser Khesraw Balkhi. In 1992, he finished his studies in Kabul. Moving to Germany in 1995, Aatifi became a member of the Sächsischer Künstlerbund and worked as a stipendiary at Moritzburg Castle in 1997. He then got recognized by painter and professor who offered him classes in 1997/98 at Dresden Academy of Fine Arts. In the late 1990s Aatifi moved to Bielefeld where he set up his studio to work and to create art to the present day.

Solo Exhibition at Museum für Islamische Kunst in the Pergamon Museum Berlin (2015)

Invited by director Stefan Weber Aatifi curated an exhibition in the Museum für Islamische Kunst in the Pergamon Museum Berlin in 2015 titled 'Aatifi - News from Afghanistan'. Specialised in preserving and presenting ancient Islamic art, Weber's decision to implement contemporary paintings on a large scale in the museum for the first time was based on Aatifi's approach towards calligraphy. 'Aatifi comes from a living tradition, which also distinguishes him from a number of contemporary artists [... ]. The strengths of the tradition - i.e. the foundations of classical aesthetics in calligraphy - are not always known, nor is the freedom of distancing oneself from these understood. That's why poor imitations of cultural archetypes are produced. Not so with Aatifi. Aatifi pulls off the balancing act [... ].[2] '

Work and techniques

Aatifis works can be described as a form of highly stylized appropriation of written language. Coming from the tradition of classic Arabian calligraphy however, he tried to reduce the evidence of perceivable language even further to the point of him using the bare shapes of his source material for the intricacy of the composition. Using acrylics, chalk, ink, charcoal, and metal to establish a wide range of intercepted and connected spaces. In his figurative and abstract works Aatifi also turns to printmaking in various techniques, which he first got in contact with when living in Dresden. His colour palette is a representation of his experiences in Afghanistan and Germany, but is also based on his travels around the world.[3] In 2016, Aatifi has included works in collage technique to his oeuvre.

Works in museums and private collections

Exhibitions

Awards and stipends

Bibliography

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bauer, Martine. Aatifi. News from Afghanistan.. 2015. Kerber Verlag. 9783735601148. Bielefeld. 124. 917371834. English.
  2. Stefan Weber: Strangeness-Familiarity and Dynamism – Aesthetics and Cultural Background in Aatifi's Works In: Martina Bauer (ed.): Aatifi – News from Afghanistan. Catalogue, Kerber Verlag, Bielefeld/Berlin 2015,, p. 15.
  3. Janina Strathmeier: On the Origin of Explosive Colourfulness: The Balance between Tradition and Modernity in Art, In: Martina Bauer (ed.): Aatifi – News from Afghanistan. Catalogue, Kerber Verlag, Bielefeld/Berlin 2015,, p. 74.