Lalla Essaydi: Les Femmes du Maroc
Moroccan born photographer, Lalla Essaydi incorporates layers of Islamic calligraphy applied by hand with henna, in tandem with poses directly inspired by 19th Century Orientalist painting. By appropriating this imagery, the works reflect the "complex female identities" found in Morocco and throughout the Muslim world. Essaydis photographs provide the opportunity for the artist and her subjects to engage in the emerging "culture of Islamic feminism."
During the 19th Century, French painters such as Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, Eugène Delacroix and Jean-Léon Gérôme indulged their audiences with the trend for images of the middle-eastern harem and the eroticisized Arab female body. Utilizing the perspective of an Arab woman living in a Western world, the artist attempts to reexamine Arab female identity.
Set within an unoccupied house, owned by the artists family, a place to which Essaydi was sent as a form of punishment when she disobeyed, Les Femmes du Maroc represents an exploration of the imaginary boundaries and "permissible space" codified by traditional Muslim society. Lalla Essaydi writes, "the presence of men defines public space, the streets, the meeting places. Women are confined to private spaces, the architecture of the homes."
"I am writing. I am writing on me, I am writing on her. The story began to be written the moment the present began." Translated from the original Arabic, Essaydis personal writing subverts traditional Muslim gender stereotypes through the presence of the written word. The sacred Islamic art form of calligraphy, traditionally reserved exclusively for men, is employed by Essaydi as a small act of defiance against a culture in which women are relegated to the private sphere. Crossing a prohibited cultural threshold through the act of writing,
Les Femmes du Maroc enables the artist and her subjects to engage in a simple act of self-expression.
Courtesy of the Edwynn Houk Gallery