Rachel Gadsden’s Public Art

Rachel Gadsden al riwaq gallery bahrain

Sometimes the most extraordinary things come from a little push.

“Do you want to go?  Do you?  Okay, let’s do it.  I’ll get dressed and leave in five minutes.”

This was the conversation my friend and I had to go through to motivate ourselves to attend artist, Rachel Gadsden’s live painting exhibit.

3×3 meter canvases hung on the wall outside the Al Riwaq Gallery.  I found an empty seat next to my friend, artist Lena Dajani and settled in to watch the show.

Rachel Gadsden, dressed head to toe in black with pink trainers, started sketching a couple of figures using charcoal. She turned to the audience,

“I need some help to create this work.  Who would like to join me?”

I admired her courage.  First, painting in front of a group must be a bit like speech making; one of the top ten things people dislike doing.  Secondly, she did not know how much effort it took to motivate the self-conscious, mostly young, female audience, wearing hijab to trade their phones for a paint brush.

I grabbed a tissue from the passing waitress and got busy munching the chicken avocado sandwish.  I encouraged my young, thirteen-year old friend to get up and paint.  She suddenly discovered the chocolate cake and busied her hands.

A young man, wearing a backpack, was walking by.  Hearing Rachel, he looked at the staring, waiting crowd and volunteered.  Given a palette of paint, he began swirling color around the canvas.  After a few minutes, he turned to us and asked, “Who would like to go next?”

Eventually a couple of European ladies got up and painted. As I watched the combination of grey-blue, orange, red and teal cover the canvas, I wondered how the artist would pull it all together.

Two of the four canvases completed, Rachel started on the third canvas.  The young girls around me would not go up.  Finally, I could not wait any longer.  I grabbed a paint brush and started painting curves and circles.   As I painted, Rachel Gadsden explained to the audience how honored she felt when Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall had been at the opening of her exhibit “This Breathing World” at Katara Cultural Village for the Arts and Disability Festival in Doha.

Rachel Gadsden Painting in Adliya

I barely heard her.  It was so FUN painting without fear, free from any worry what the end result would look like.  I let the color move itself across the canvas.  I could have continued longer, but felt obliged to share the joy and sat down.

Rachel asked, “Can someone come up and write some words in Arabic.  I would love to have my experience being here in the Middle East as part of the painting.”

I told the girls around me, “See I went up.  Now you have to go.”

“I do not know what word to write,” they claimed.

“Peace, love, happiness, breath,” I suggested.  “Ocean, sun.”

We continued back and forth.  I could not convince them to go up by themselves.  Finally I said, “You help me to write moon in Arabic.”

“Which moon do you want to write?” the young woman,wearing square glasses, asked me. “Hilal is the small crescent moon.  It is masculine.  Or the full moon, that is feminine.”

“The feminine,” I said.

Together we went up to the canvas.  She said, “I will move your hand and you can write it.”

I held the charcoal and she guided me through moon.  As soon as the word was done, she left me to color it in.  By the time I relinquished the palette, the paintings were nearly complete.

Returning to my chair, I encouraged my young friend to add a word before the session ended.  She began consulting the Bahraini girls.  Purses were opened, pens were located, and finally a scratch paper was torn from the memo pad.  Thanking the young women, she rushed to the canvas and wrote her word across the bottom.

“What did you write?” asked Rachel.

Rachel Gadsden final painting with courage in adliya_edited-1

“Courage” she smiled, her braces showing.

That’s what Art does.  It gives us courage to engage our neighbors, linking us together despite the differences in culture and abilities.  And it only takes the vision of one person, someone like Rachel Gadsden, to motivate us to find shared beauty within the multi-colored mess of our world.

About Rachel Gadsden

Contemporary artist, Rachel Gadsden, is the Director of Unlimited Global Alchemy

Her exhibit This Breathing World is about experiencing disabling conditions and fighting for life in the face of social taboos.   It includes drawings, paintings and films, and is underpinned by themes of fragility and resilience, a shared and positive sense of survival in the face of chronic health conditions, and the politics and mythologies surrounding disability.

Unlimited Global Alchemy was one of the thirteen commissions awarded during the second round for Unlimited is the ground-breaking programme that celebrates arts and culture by disabled and deaf artists.  Funded by the Olympic Lottery Distributor, 820,000 pounds was granted to artists for the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad.  Unlimited Global Alchemy is one of three commissions in round two who created in collaboration with international partners and with funding contributed by the British Council.   Unlimited is delivered in partnership between London 2012, Arts Council England, the Scottish Arts Council, Arts Council of Wales, Arts Council of Northern Ireland and the British Council.

You can see her photos, which are much better than mine, on her tumblr account and learn more about her on her website.

About the British Council

The British Council sponsors artists who come to Bahrain and offers free classes to anyone who wants to sign up.  Meant to help encourage art within the local community, my experience is I show up and usually there is an open seat.  I take one and suddenly meet the most extraordinary people.

Rachel Gadsden’s visit is being sponsored by the British Council and the Al Riwaq Gallery.

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Karibu Tanzania Exhibit Opens March 2 at World Beat in Bahrain

Lena W Dajani Karibu Tanzania Bahrain 2013

Lena Dajani Karibu Tanzania Spring of Culture 2013

A Taste of Africa In Bahrain

Lena W Dajani Karibu Tanzania Bahrain 2013

During the Spring of Culture, Lena W Dajani, an artist and my friend, is having her first solo exhibit at World Beat Fitness starting March 2, 2013.

 Karibu Tanzania is Swahili for “Welcome to Tanzania”.

The beauty of Tanzania’s vibrant landscapes and people are the subject of Lena’s first solo exhibit.  Between 2008 –2010, Lena and her family lived in Dar Es Salam.  She immediately fell in love with the city, its idyllic setting on the Indian Ocean and tropical landscape.  From Dar Es Salaam, the family explored the shores of Zanzibar, sailed the Indian Ocean, and took numerous safari trips to the country’s national parks.  Traveling through the Ngorongoro Crater, Manyara, Serengeti, Amani, Saadani, Bongoyo, Mbudya and Ruaha reserves, she captured the family adventures.  This exhibit was created from her thousands of photos.

Lena was a member of Artist Seana Mallen’s Awali Arts.  Under Seana’s artistic guidance, her painting developed from a hobby to a commitment to create unique artwork drawing from her global experiences.  A busy mother, she currently works with watercolor and acrylic painting that allows her to quickly and effectively re-create and capture her impressions.

Private collectors in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Tanzania have purchased Lena’s paintings.  She created a line of greeting cards and has presented her art work in several local exhibitions.

  • Bahrain International Garden Show (2007 & 2008) with the Awali Arts
  • Desert Designs, Al Khobar, Saudi Arabia (2007)
  • Art House Open Studios, Bahrain (2008)
  • BAPCO’s 2012 First Annual Art competition, Bahrain (2012)

Karibu Tanzania will continue through March at World Beat.  However, if you can, on the opening day, stop by to meet and chat with Lena.  Her conversations range from Islamic art, Edward Tingatinga’s paintings, African safaris, Bali artists, high-tea in London, camping trips in Oman, Middle East politics, recipes from Gourmet magazine or family tennis tournaments in the south of France.  Her passport may say American, but she is a true Global Citizen and her art is inspired by global culture.

You can LIKE Lena on FACEBOOK.

Lena Dajani Karibu Tanzania Spring of Culture 2013

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