Iraqi Artist as Human Target

The statistics which the FLATFILEgalleries published several days ago in Chicago support the Iraqi's view. Of 80,000,000 visits to the site, only 60,000 ended with a shot. Wafaa Bilal admits that he was hardly capable of such a positive outlook during the 30 days of the performance. He spent most of the time in a state of anxiety, afraid of the hatred of the anonymous attackers. "At times I even lost my sense of reality."
In situations like this the artist really feared for his life. Of course he knew that the impact of a paintball is anything but deadly. That, says Bilal, is the crucial difference from the omnipresent deadly threat to which the people in Iraq are subjected.
Victory of humanity
In another respect as well, Bilal's art action sheds light on reality. For most people in the USA, the war in the Middle East is a media event which physically affects neither them nor their loved ones. To underline this remoteness in "Domestic Tension", the artist does not use sound in his installation. In this way his work reflects an attempt to get closer to the experience of the war, while at the same time emphasizing one's distance from it.
The gunners who aimed at Wafaa Bilal heard neither the shot nor the impact – an eerie scenario whose nuanced approach clearly distinguished it from computer war games.
Wafaa Bilal hopes to use artistic means to contribute to the victory of humanity. His work is a plea to end the insane war in Iraq, as he says in his concluding statement. He believes that hopes for peace are not unfounded: "By now 60% of Americans are already for withdrawing the troops."
Ariana Mirza
© Qantara.de 2007
Translated from the German by Isabel Cole
Qantara.de
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