The Women's Work Issue Women's Work. Pen and Brush. 2019 | Page 24
pen + brush x of note
daring the viewer to question if she is
anything but in charge and control of their
experience and subsequent perception of
her.
Equally arresting is Justice , where once
more, the female protagonist, this time
with her face clearly seen, gazes directly
at the viewer. On her shoulder is a scale of
epic proportions, as if she is questioning
the historic injustices of women, but also
history, and the realities of the present
that impact everyone living in Alshaibi’s
homelands—broken governments, the lack
of the most basic human resources such as
Sama Alshaibi, Justice, from the project Carry Over,
2018. Gumoil on cotton rag, 20.5 x 13.75 inches
colonialism, a succession of dictators
and foreign government interventionist
disasters, and most recently, a rise in
religious extremism. Some of these strong,
mythical women are referenced in Alshaibi’s
Carry Over —the great Scheherazade and
Nefertiti amongst them. These easily
recognizable women to any moderately
and formally educated global audience
are masterfully interwoven in the artist’s
portrayal of everyday ‘women’s work.’ In the
more assertive, unnerving, yet inherently
enchanting gumoils, there is an embrace,
yet contradiction to all that we think we
know about women through visual culture
transmitted over centuries—from odalisque
paintings, to early photography, and more
recently, photojournalism and 21st century
digital media outlets. Our senses are quickly
bombarded with the familiar, reinforcing
20
21
water, and shaky policies on human rights
and women’s rights.
Over the past few years, Alshaibi has
masterfully moved towards embracing
a sense of mysticism and a welcoming
softness to her charged, artist-as-activist
works, beginning with Silsila (2009 -
2017) and its corresponding video, Wasl
(2017). Alshaibi’s ingenuity, shown here in
Women’s Work, to play with the comfortable
and familiar and reworked with a clear
message, is the culmination of the direction
her practice has been moving towards.
Mabrook.
Sama Alshaibi, Smoke, from the project Carry Over,
2018. Gumoil on cotton rag, 20.5 x 13.75 inches
what we think we know about the women
from this region, their place, and their
history.
The true genius of these visually soft works—
soft not in context nor content— but in
the very medium of print that Alshaibi has
chosen to share them in, alluding to the
aged, antique, and historic, is that it takes
a deeper concentration to read the sheer
activist stance embedded within these
unabashed, softly beautiful pieces. In Smoke ,
the woman is entrapped within a mashrabiya
box—a recurring motif in architecture from
North Africa and West Asia, romanticized as
much as the headscarf and hijab and more
specifically, the women hidden behind
these barriers. Confidently looking behind
the mashrabiya-screened box, the female
protagonist, almost jauntily puffs away,
Women’s Work
Sama Alshaibi, video still from Wasl (Union), from project Silsila, 2017, video with sound, 9:38 minutes, ed. of
3, music composed Grey Filastine, featuring Brent Arnold (cello) and Abdel Hak (violin). Courtesy of the artist
and Ayyam Gallery.