Ismail Fatah Al Turk Explained

Ismail Fatah Al Turk
Birth Date:1934
Birth Place:Basra, Iraq
Death Date:21 July 2004
Death Place:Baghdad, Iraq
Nationality:Iraqi
Education:Baghdad Institute of Fine Arts
Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma
Known For:Sculpture
Notable Works:Al-Shaheed Monument
Spouse:Lisa Fattah (artist)

Ismail Fatah Al-Turk ("Ismail Fatah") (1934 or 1938–2004) was an Iraqi painter and sculptor born in Basra, Iraq, noted for his abstract art, monumental sculpture, and public works and as part of the Baghdad Modern Art Group, which fostered a sense of national identity.[1] His monument, al-Shaheed Monument is the most iconic public monument in Baghdad.

Life and career

Al-Turk was born in Basra in 1934.[2] He graduated from the Baghdad Institute of Fine Arts in 1956 with a Bachelor of Painting and in 1958 with a Bachelor of Sculpture.[3] [1] and received a master's degree in fine art from the Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma in 1962.[4] While in Rome, he also studied ceramics at San Giacomo.[5]

He was very active in Baghdad's arts culture, joining a number of art groups including the Baghdad Modern Art Group (1957) and the al-Zawiya group, both groups were concerned with using art to reassert a sense of national identity by integrating Iraq's artistic heritage with international trends.[6]

Fatah taught sculpture at the Baghdad Institute of Fine Arts and ceramics at the Academy of Fine Arts at the University of Baghdad.[7] In 1986, he was the Chairman of the Iraqi Association of Plastic Arts.[8]

Fatah executed a number of murals and sculptures for public display in Baghdad. Many of these pay homage to notable Iraqi poets, both current and historical; including bronze statues of Maaruf al-Risafi, an Iraqi nationalist poet active in the 1940s; the Abbasid poet Abu Nuwas and the Abbasid painter al-Wasiti. He held six exhibitions for sculpture and five exhibitions for paintings in Rome, Baghdad and Beirut. He was the winner of first prize for Arab artists in Italy.

The most well-known of his sculptures is the turquoise blue split dome of the Al-Shaheed Monument (Martyrs' Monument), in Palestine Street, Baghdad,[9] and constructed between 1981 and 1983.[1] Shaheed consists of a circular platform floating on top of an underground museum, and over which stands a split dome, 40 meters in height, clad in blue tile. He carried through all the design stages, along with a group of Iraqi architects, known as the Baghdad Architecture Group.[7] The completed monument cost half a million dollars ($US). At its center are a twisted metal flag pole and a spring of water to symbolize the blood of the fallen.[10] Its aim was to commemorate the Iraqi dead as a result of the Iran-Iraq war.[11]

On the subject of the design for Shaheed, Al-Turk made the following comments:

While living and working in United Arab Emirates, Fatah contracted cancer. He returned to Baghdad where he died 21 July 2004.[12]

Work

Fatah's most well-known work is al-Shaheed Monument (also known as the Martyrs Monument) built as a tribute to those who fell in battle defending Iraq during the Second Qadisiya (Iran-Iraq war).[13] The Art in America magazine rated Shaheed as the most beautiful design in the Middle East.[10] However, he also produced paintings in oil such as Ashtar, a mixed media work on paper now in the Jordanian National Gallery of Fine Arts.[14]

List of notable public works

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Chilvers, Ian . A Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Art . 227– . Glaves-Smith, John . 2009 . 978-0199239658.
  2. el-Tablawy, T., "Ismail Fattah al-Turk, 69, Iraqi Abstract Artist," [Obituary], Boston Globe, 23 July 2004, Online:
  3. Bahrani, Z. and Shabout, N.M., Modernism and Iraq, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery and Columbia University, 2009, p. 93
  4. Book: Eigner, Saeb . Art of the Middle East . 2010 . 978-1-8589-4500-2.
  5. Bahrani, Z. and Shabout, N.M., Modernism and Iraq, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery and Columbia University, 2009, p.93
  6. Sabrah,S.A. and Ali, M.," Iraqi Artwork Red List: A Partial List of the Artworks Missing from the National Museum of Modern Art, Baghdad, Iraq, 2010, pp 7-9; Bloom, J., and Blair, S.S. (eds), Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture, Vol. 1, Oxford University Press, 2009, p. 72
  7. Bloom, J. and Blair, S.S. (eds), Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture, Vol. 1, Oxford University Press, 2009, p. 72
  8. Baram, A., Culture, History and Ideology in the Formation of Ba'thist Iraq,1968-89, Springer, 1991, pp 70-71
  9. Ur, London, England, Iraqi Cultural Centre, 1981, p. 33; Baghdad Writers Group, Baghdad and Beyond, [Illustrated edition], Middle East Editorial Associates, 1985, p. 43
  10. Janabi, A., "Leading Iraqi Artist Dies," [Obituary], Aljazeera, 22 July 2004, Online:
  11. Al-Khalil, S. and Makiya, K., The Monument: Art, Vulgarity, and Responsibility in Iraq, University of California Press, 1991, p. 23 and p. 25
  12. el-Tablawy, T., "Ismail Fatah al-Turk, 69, Iraqi Abstract Artist," [Obituary], Boston Globe, 23 July 2004, Online:
  13. Baghdad Writers Group, Baghdad and Beyond, [Illustrated edition], Middle East Editorial Associates, 1985, p. 43
  14. Ali, W., Modern Islamic Art: Development and Continuity, University of Florida Press, 1997, p. 138
  15. Bloom, J. and Blair, S.S. (eds), Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture, Vol. 1, Oxford University Press, 2009, p. 141
  16. Ilkkaracan, P., Deconstructing Sexuality in the Middle East: Challenges and Discourses, Ashgate Publishing, 2012, p. 146n
  17. Bahrani, Z. and Shabout, N.M., Modernism and Iraq, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery and Columbia University, 2009, p.93; Baram, A., Culture, History and Ideology in the Formation of Ba'thist Iraq,1968-89, Springer, 1991, p. 77
  18. Exell, K., Modernity and the Museum in the Arabian Peninsula, Routledge, 2016, p. 198