00:16 minutes
For his first NFT release artist Walid Raad made a series of animated birthday cakes, titled Festival of Gratitude , for some of the world’s most toxic and larger-than-life leaders. The series of looping three-dimensional animated videos are only seconds long—a timespan familiar to gif and online meme culture—and feature global dictators, strongmen and strongwomen, kings and queens, princes and princesses, emirs, sheikhs and sheikhas, sultans, shahs, emperors and empresses, popes, ayatollahs, presidents, prime ministers, CEOs, and GOATs. The subject of cakes has a specific personal meaning for Raad, whose first job as an adolescent was photographing pastries at a bakery in Beirut. It’s unclear if the cake is implicitly celebrating the passing of Gaddafi, reminding us of his long reign, or performing the gaudy fanfare befitting a dictator. For this particular work, Festival of Gratitude: Muammar Gaddafi , the artist features Muammar Muhammad Abu Minyar al-Gaddafi, the Libyan military officer, revolutionary, and finally a brutal dictator of Libya from 1969 to 2011. This NFT was minted during what would’ve been Gaddafi’s 80th year, if he hadn’t been apprehended and killed by Misrata fighters while fleeing Sirte, Gaddafi’s hometown, on October 20, 2011. The series Festival of Gratitude was produced by Artwrld.
Walid Raad is a Lebanese artist whose work investigates the way historical events of physical and psychological violence affect bodies, minds, culture, and memory. Spanning across photography, video, installation and performance, Raad’s practice critically addresses biases of representation and story-telling in historical discourses and narratives, especially in a Middle-Eastern context. His works have been concerned with historical omissions and unaddressed narratives in relation to the political and socio-economic realities that structure contemporary Lebanon and the other countries from the region. In 1989, he notably founded the Atlas Group to research and document the recent history of Lebanon, with the emphasised aim to shed light on and confront alternative narratives to the coverage and documentation of the 1975 and 1990 Lebanese wars.
Tarantism is the name of disease which appeared in southern Italy, resulting from the bite of a spider called Tarantula...
His untitled paintings express his concern regarding perception in abstract form...
For The Reverse Sessions , the artist reversed the order in which instruments are usually created, taking the sounds of a collection of ethnic musical instruments from The Dahlem Museum as the starting point...
Pasajes I is the first in a series of Sebastián Díaz Morales’s four videos Pasajes , which focuses on a solitary man walking through Buenos Aires...
“Other photographers used to send me negatives of cross-eyed people, asking me to retouch them...
Haris Epaminonda’s work questions the manipulation and the flow of images as well as their power of fascination...
Created from extracts of kitsch movies or Greek soap operas from the 1960s, these videos are like audiovisual ‘postcards’ reflecting a nostalgic and melancholic approach...
“People often asked if they could pose with the Kodak advertisement where a full scale woman is featured with a camera offering Kodak rolls...
“When you position your hand on someone’s shoulder, your shoulders become straight and horizontal...
Adnan’s paintings are simple images with bold contrasting colors and rich textures...
Haris Epaminonda’s work questions the manipulation and the flow of images as well as their power of fascination...
“The two men were relatives and both were in the Lebanese Army.” Hashem El Madani...
“In the 1980s I started using coloured paper backdrops, one of which was yellow...
“While taking the picture it was challenging to make the boys sit properly without moving...
In Suspension a young man is hanging in the air, falling, or perhaps drifting through time and space...