London (CNN) -- To Iraqi artist Hanaa' Malallah her shoes are
weapons of mass destruction that appear in many of her works.
Her inspiration is an incident in 2008,
when Iraqi journalist Muntadhar al-Zaidi threw his shoes at former president
George W. Bush, five years after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
The invasion was aimed at rooting out Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass
destruction, but U.S. inspectors eventually conceded that he did not have any.
Malallah's exhibition, "Iraq -- How, Where, For Whom?" held
jointly with the British duo kennardphillipps, opens in London on Friday April
20.
Her shoes appear in a photograph labeled I.W.M.D (Iraq's Weapon's of
Mass Destruction). They are also embroidered on an American flag, on an Iraqi
flag, and the originals are in a glass display case.
"They are my shoes," said Malallah. "I bought them after
I arrived in Britain and I used them for three years."
She added: "Shoes are our way of resistance. It's all we have. My
resistance is through art."
Malallah, formerly a university art lecturer in Baghdad, says she left
Iraq in late 2006 after two of her colleagues were killed and she received
threats from militias. She now lives in Britain.
"They started to kill a lot of academics," she said. "I
was a woman without a headscarf, teaching in the university and I received
threats, so I had to leave.
"Two months after I left, a group of militias entered my home and
stole everything. My sister called to say my flat had gone.
"I don't have anyone left there now and I think I would lose my
life just like that if I went back. It's hard. There are no words to describe
it, so I use my art to explain."
Malallah said her art reflects three decades of living with war in Iraq,
from the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s through the first Gulf War in 1991 and
subsequent sanctions, to the U.S.-led invasion of 2003 and the chaos that
followed.
Much of her work uses what she describes as the "ruins
technique," using burnt fabric to depict destruction, often on abstract
canvases.
She said she experienced the war by "tasting" it, as there was
no electricity or media to provide information.
Describing life in Baghdad since 1991, Malallah said: "Baghdad was
heavily bombed in the First Gulf War. It was hell out of the world. I saw
destruction every day and I lived with death every day.
"There was a shortage of food, water and electricity, but you have
to survive. Many managed to survive and a lot didn't. Three of my students were
killed working in the artistic area.
"I speak to my colleagues by phone and there are still big problems
and people dying every day for lots of reasons."
She added: "I hated Saddam Hussein, but we were better off than
now. At least there was a government. If we want to remove a dictator, we have
to do it by ourselves."
Malallah's work is shown alongside that of the British duo
kennardphillipps, Peter Kennard and Cat Phillipps, who started collaborating in
late 2002 in opposition to the proposed invasion of Iraq.
"We were going on all the anti-war demos, but it was evident the
invasion was going to happen anyway and we wanted to find another way to
protest against it," said Phillipps.
They create work from media images of the war, such as photo montages
and collages from newspaper clippings.
Their most famous work, a photomontage called "Photo Op," is a
digitally altered image that shows a smiling Tony Blair, the British prime
minister at the time of the invasion, in front of an explosion.
Another, called "Presidential Seal," shows the American
president's empty podium, with the microphones pointing to a backdrop of
newspaper clippings and photos which have been smashed with a hammer, creating
an impression of debris and chaos.
Malallah hopes the exhibition will eventually be shown in Iraq. She said
most professional artists had fled the country, leaving a dearth of new talent.
"It's a very bad situation for artists in Iraq at the moment,"
said Malallah. "They have no contact with the outside world.
"There are a lot of good artists who have left the country and it
has really affected those who are left."
"Iraq -- How, Where, For Whom?" opens at The
Mosaic Rooms, in London, on Friday April 20 and runs until June 8, 2012.
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