Decolonising the Page: The Visual Politics and Poetics of Postcolonial Arabic Publications
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Bristol
Department Name: School of Humanities
Abstract
'Decolonising the Page' investigates the significant, yet understudied, political role of graphic design and visual culture during processes of decolonisation and anti-imperialist liberation struggles from the 1950s to the 1980s. Focussed on postcolonial Arabic publications, the study is concerned with how their design, visuality and materiality helped articulate political imaginaries, mobilise cross-border anticolonial solidarities and shape new aesthetic sensibilities. While urgently shedding light on the modern Arab world -- under-represented in the historiography of graphic design and visual culture -- this project also draws comparisons with shared historical conditions of modernity and (post)coloniality in the Global South.
As reproducible and mobile objects of print culture, illustrated books and periodicals were important sites for the decolonisation of knowledge, imagination and affect, and thus crucial for the construction of postcolonial identity, aimed at a growing Arabic readership and broader networks of transnational solidarity. Pivotal to this project is how Arabic publications emerged as platforms for modernist aesthetic experimentation and creative editorial collaborations between visual artists, writers, poets, intellectuals and activists. As media technologies, books and periodicals are products of global modernity's standardising effects on print cultures and visual economies. Nonetheless, publications are also artefacts of particular linguistic conventions and cultures of reading and writing, as well as products of creative labour that lend themselves to translocal creative adaptations. In particular, as artefacts within a rich Islamic heritage of bookmaking, applied arts and calligraphic traditions, Arabic publications presented ideal sites for 'decolonising the page' in and through aesthetic revivals and modernist interpretations of Arab cultural traditions of the book. Central to this decolonising endeavour, amongst Arab artists and further afield across the Global South, is how modernism, as a travelling cultural form, was creatively reconfigured to serve decolonial futures.
The study is focussed on the works of a group of academically trained emerging artists from Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine and Syria who have creatively explored the visuality and materiality of Arabic publications, including Dia al-Azzawi (b. 1939, Baghdad), Kamal Boullata (b. 1942 Jerusalem - 2019 Berlin), Mohieddine Ellabbad (1940-2010 Cairo), Helmi el-Touni (b. 1934 Cairo), Waddah Faris (b. 1940 Aleppo), Seta Manoukian (b. 1945 Beirut) and Mona Saudi (b. 1945 Amman). A number of them understood themselves as activists in Arab decolonisation struggles and strove to revolutionise and democratise art's place within society by hyphenating their art with graphic design and illustration practices for the Arabic press and radical publishing projects. While some artists are now recognised in modern Arab art history, their work in printed publications remains to be documented and examined.
It is the project's central contention that this rich archive enables us to recover a suppressed history and heritage of Arab decolonisation processes; one that takes on board the postcolonial imagination, aesthetic preoccupations and political contestations of Arab artists and designers of this generation. In doing so, 'Decolonising the Page' contributes to understanding histories of decolonisation: its thwarted projects and unfinished legacies resonate in renewed decolonial endeavours and solidarity projects today.
The project will build collaborative research networks and produce academic, creative and digital humanities outputs which advance knowledge in the fields of Art and Design History and Middle East Studies and directly benefit academics, creative practitioners and the living communities for whom this constitutes an important cultural heritage of immediate relevance.
As reproducible and mobile objects of print culture, illustrated books and periodicals were important sites for the decolonisation of knowledge, imagination and affect, and thus crucial for the construction of postcolonial identity, aimed at a growing Arabic readership and broader networks of transnational solidarity. Pivotal to this project is how Arabic publications emerged as platforms for modernist aesthetic experimentation and creative editorial collaborations between visual artists, writers, poets, intellectuals and activists. As media technologies, books and periodicals are products of global modernity's standardising effects on print cultures and visual economies. Nonetheless, publications are also artefacts of particular linguistic conventions and cultures of reading and writing, as well as products of creative labour that lend themselves to translocal creative adaptations. In particular, as artefacts within a rich Islamic heritage of bookmaking, applied arts and calligraphic traditions, Arabic publications presented ideal sites for 'decolonising the page' in and through aesthetic revivals and modernist interpretations of Arab cultural traditions of the book. Central to this decolonising endeavour, amongst Arab artists and further afield across the Global South, is how modernism, as a travelling cultural form, was creatively reconfigured to serve decolonial futures.
The study is focussed on the works of a group of academically trained emerging artists from Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine and Syria who have creatively explored the visuality and materiality of Arabic publications, including Dia al-Azzawi (b. 1939, Baghdad), Kamal Boullata (b. 1942 Jerusalem - 2019 Berlin), Mohieddine Ellabbad (1940-2010 Cairo), Helmi el-Touni (b. 1934 Cairo), Waddah Faris (b. 1940 Aleppo), Seta Manoukian (b. 1945 Beirut) and Mona Saudi (b. 1945 Amman). A number of them understood themselves as activists in Arab decolonisation struggles and strove to revolutionise and democratise art's place within society by hyphenating their art with graphic design and illustration practices for the Arabic press and radical publishing projects. While some artists are now recognised in modern Arab art history, their work in printed publications remains to be documented and examined.
It is the project's central contention that this rich archive enables us to recover a suppressed history and heritage of Arab decolonisation processes; one that takes on board the postcolonial imagination, aesthetic preoccupations and political contestations of Arab artists and designers of this generation. In doing so, 'Decolonising the Page' contributes to understanding histories of decolonisation: its thwarted projects and unfinished legacies resonate in renewed decolonial endeavours and solidarity projects today.
The project will build collaborative research networks and produce academic, creative and digital humanities outputs which advance knowledge in the fields of Art and Design History and Middle East Studies and directly benefit academics, creative practitioners and the living communities for whom this constitutes an important cultural heritage of immediate relevance.
Description | To date, the most significant research findings resulting from 'Decolonising the Page' include: (1) identifying and cataloguing a special collection of Arabic book arts dating from the 1950s to the 1980s; (2) closely studying this collection; (3) curating an exhibition that sheds light on a forgotten golden age of Arabic book arts; and (4) developing digital humanities resources that enable future research in this emerging field. (1) In collaboration with the project's key partners, the archival and bibliographic component of the project involved: (a) identifying around 1,000 Arabic books that hold significant value in the history of both the Arabic printed book and postcolonial art and design in the Arab world; (b) cataloguing this collection into a searchable annotated database; and (c) digital imaging of sample pages and cover art. Notably, the cataloguing system developed for this database records and attributes the work of artists involved in creating these books (e.g., cover art, illustration, calligraphy, design, printing, etc.), which have traditionally been omitted from bibliographic data in library catalogues of modern printed Arabic books. (2) With its focus on postcolonial Arabic book arts during a period of decolonisation, the study pioneers a new interdisciplinary area of enquiry in the history of art and design. It shifts scholarly attention away from classical Islamic art manuscripts and contemporary Arab artists' books, instead foregrounding a forgotten golden age of Arabic book arts that flourished between the 1950s-80s. Artists' engagement with book arts during this period, the study argues, was integral to political struggles and processes of decolonisation in the Arab world. The study illuminates previously neglected archives of art and design practices and proposes new conceptual frameworks and methodological tools for analysing book arts as archives of decolonisation. A comprehensive academic journal article is in progress, with additional focused articles planned for publication in the coming years. (3) Curated as an online bilingual (Arabic & English) platform, 'Decolonizing the Page' is the first major exhibition to present a digitised collection of around 250 Arabic books dating between the 1950s and '80s. It uncovers the overlooked creative labour involved in designing, illustrating, and sometimes co-authoring Arabic books, while centring the aesthetic preoccupations and political imagination of a generation of Arab artists and designers who contributed to their creation. Crucially, the exhibition's primary objective is to highlight a forgotten, yet remarkable, golden era of Arabic book arts, fostering greater appreciation of the visual significance of postcolonial Arabic books and inspiring further research. The online exhibition has been creatively developed in collaboration with leading graphic designers and web developers. It is now close to completion and due to be launched in June 2025. (4) Bilingual digital humanities resources complement the online exhibition by offering further insights into the books on display through a searchable database of book arts, along with related teaching and learning resources. The website provides broad access to rich historical sources in art and design, as well as little-known archives of Arab visual and material culture that hold contemporary relevance. Designed with a non-specialist audience in mind, the website is accessible to anyone interested in the subject matter and can serve as a valuable teaching resource across various courses and academic disciplines. The digital humanities tools will be launched with the online exhibition as part of one comprehensive website in June 2025; the associated teaching resources will continue to grow in the coming years. |
Exploitation Route | I anticipate the archival, academic and curatorial outcomes would inspire future research and support scholarship in a number of fields, including: global history of culture, art and design, bibliographical, literary, cultural, and Middle East/ Arabic studies. These would also inform practitioners including archivists, librarians and curators of similar book collections, as well as inspire contemporary artists, writers and graphic designers. The digital humanities and teaching resources will be especially useful for teachers and students across courses and subjects mentioned above. They will address a growing concern amongst educators, creative practitioners and the general public in decolonising art and design histories and provide the needed resources for doing so. As a specific public mode of research dissemination, the bilingual digital format of the exhibition is carefully tailored to achieve impactful engagement with geographically dispersed Arabic speaking non-academic communities and Middle East students and scholars. It will engage substantially with Arab communities about an important yet hitherto neglected and undocumented cultural heritage. Being accessible online, it will also attract a wider international audience, thus illuminating new perspectives and positive outlooks about Arab culture that challenge racially hostile and Islamophobic perceptions. |
Sectors | Creative Economy Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software) Education Culture Heritage Museums and Collections |
Description | To date, my research has directly informed initiatives undertaken by my partner organisations in the UK and in Lebanon which hold the collections of Arabic books under study. Through our collaboration and conversations, my findings have already impacted their conceptions of and knowledge about Arabic book arts and informed related collecting endeavours, curating and archiving practices. My public engagement activities (included in the outputs) have shaped public understanding of modern Arabic book arts and the struggles for cultural decolonisation which they were embedded in and helped shape. Wider impact is anticipated as key public facing outputs of the research (exhibition & digital historical resources) are due to be launched in June 2025. |
First Year Of Impact | 2023 |
Sector | Creative Economy,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections |
Impact Types | Cultural |
Title | Arabic Book Arts 1940-80s database |
Description | This is an archival database cataloguing and digitally documenting information about 946 illustrated Arabic books published between the 1940s and 1980s. It is the result of several months of archival research in Lebanon (November 2022 - January 2023). The large majority of books (833 entries) in this database are drawn from the uncatalogued private collection of Mr. A. Bou Jawde bookshop/ al-Furat bookshop in Beirut, Lebanon (project partner), the remaining belong to different private collections. During my stay in Lebanon, I have closely examined Mr. Bou Jawde's extensive collection among other libraries and archival collections in the country. Based on this study, I selected the books in need of conservation and digital documentation and accordingly began developing a bespoke cataloguing system that is attentive to book arts (design, illustration, calligraphy, binding, paper etc.), conventionally disregarded in text-centred library cataloguing of Arabic books, while also recording the standard bibliographic entries (Title / Author / Translator / Publisher / Series / Place of Publication / Edition / Printer / Size /Binding / Number of Pages). The cataloguing system was developed into an easily searchable database system that is linked to the digital image documentation of the book arts selected. It was completed as a useable database in May 2023, including 946 book entries, with 21 searchable criteria per book entry, in addition to digital image documentations of relevant book arts aspects and sample pages of each book. |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2023 |
Provided To Others? | No |
Impact | This database is an essential tool for historical research of hitherto undocumented Arabic book arts. It facilitates in-depth bibliographic and visual analysis thanks to the searchable cataloguing criteria (date, publisher, designer etc.) and the accessibility of visual documentations of said book collections. It has been instrumental in my curatorial conceptualising of the exhibition (a key output of the project), developing the themes, organising sections and selection criteria of the books and book arts that will form part of the exhibition. The database will also form the basis for digital humanities web tools that will accompany the online exhibition (currently under development). Once available online, it will be an invaluable research tool supporting further historical study of modern Arabic book arts by other scholars and encouraging requisite attention to hitherto neglected art practices and archives from the Arabic speaking world. |
Title | semi-structured interviews |
Description | This set of data collected consists of semi-structured recorded interviews with artists, authors, publishers who were involved in the publications selected for this research. To date the following have been identified and interviewed: Dia al-Azzawi (UK); Elias Khoury (Lebanon); Elham Bekdash (Lebanon); Ghanem Bibi (Lebanon); Salma Samar Damluji (Lebanon). More will be interviewed as the project progresses. The data collected from these interviews will not be publicly available as it contains discussion on sensitive topics, including political opinions, and cannot be sufficiently anonymised to share. Transcripts and recordings will be stored on the University of Bristol Research Storage Facility for 10 years. |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2023 |
Provided To Others? | No |
Impact | The interviews provide oral testimony from key actors involved in the world book arts and publishing in the Arab world between the 1950s and 1980s. They offer in-depth information, personal accounts of experiences and historical context not available through other archival sources and secondary literature. As primary sources, the interviews support my historical research into the little-known world of postcolonial Arabic book arts and the politics of publishing in the Arab world. They are thus invaluable sources that I have been relying on as I develop the key outputs of the project, including curating an exhibition of postcolonial Arabic book arts and related scholarly writing. Furthermore, the interviews conducted thus far have had a snowball effect where interviewed participants have introduced me to other writers and publishers relevant to this project. |
Description | British Library |
Organisation | The British Library |
Department | Scholarship and Collections |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | My project's focus on Arabic postcolonial publications, examining their overlooked visuality and materiality makes use of the British Library's Arabic collections. It creates new knowledge about these collections, enriching their understanding through scholarly publications and helps make this important intellectual and cultural heritage more widely accessible through various impactful outputs of the project, including the planned online exhibition and digital humanities tools. Through this collaboration, working closely with the curator of the Arabic collections, I offer the Library knowledge and expertise that will support its own custodianship of Arabic publications content and its strategic ambition to expand collecting around contemporary Arabic productions in the creative arts, including visual arts, graphic novels and artists' books. The project raises the profile of these new areas of collecting and will also directly inform the development of the acquisition plans for the Arabic collections. |
Collaborator Contribution | The British Library holds an important collection of Arabic books that is central to this project. The curator of Arabic collections has been supporting my research trips to the British Library, facilitating my access to their collections, and providing in kind advice and expertise. There are also plans for the curator to participate in events related to the project as well as to contribute to the online exhibition. |
Impact | Arabic Book Arts 1940-80s database; Online exhibition and digital humanities tools (under preparation) |
Start Year | 2022 |
Description | Art History Seminar Bristol University |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Postgraduate students |
Results and Impact | In this seminar organised by the Department of History of Art at Bristol University on 7 November 2023, I presented my AHRC-funded research project to postgraduate students and to my colleagues in the School of Humanities. I focussed specifically on my curatorial work-in-progress in preparing an exhibition that is the primary outcome of the project. This sparked interest in decolonial approaches to art historical and curatorial practices, as well as to how digital humanities tools could be harnessed to support curating online exhibitions and to enhance learning experiences. I was later asked to develop a new related lecture/topic on a core unit in the department's undergraduate teaching and two postgraduate students wrote to me requesting further resources and individual tutorials. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
URL | https://www.bristol.ac.uk/arthistory/events/research-seminars/ |
Description | Decolonising Modernism: Arab Anticolonial Politics in Graphic Design |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | I was invited to give a public lecture on 28 November 2022, by the Department of Architecture and Design at the American University of Beirut (AUB), Lebanon, where I was hosted as a visiting scholar during my extended research travel to Lebanon (November 2022 to January 2023). Being a visiting scholar gave me access to the special collections and archival holdings at AUB which were central to my project. In this lecture, I presented my research project in a way that speaks to an audience of students, creative practitioners in graphic design and architecture, academics and non-academics based in Lebanon. The talk and the interactions that followed were significant in many ways. Firstly, it is one of my project's primary objectives to engage with creative practitioners and broader publics in the Arab world to whom this research project is immediately relevant in terms of cultural heritage and art/design historical knowledge. Present in the audience was the project's non-academic partner in Lebanon; my talk helped them gain further insight into the project and appreciate their role in it, thereby strengthening their confidence about the prospects of the project and our collaboration. Second, presenting my project in this context prompted further conversations and networks with other researchers in Lebanon during the length of my stay and encouraged collaborations with academics at AUB, all of which will directly benefit key outputs of the project. This talk thus assisted my efforts in building networks with scholars and creative practitioners in Lebanon, which formed an important objective of my extended research travel to in Lebanon. Third, members of the press were also attending my talk and, as a result, I was later interviewed for the local English-language newspaper (L'Orient Today) for a special feature covering my research (see output below). |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
URL | https://beiruturbanlab.com/en/Details/887 |
Description | Presentation at Study Day (the Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology at the University of Oxford) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | I was invited by the Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology at the University of Oxford to present my new research on the artist books of British-based Iraqi artist Dia al-Azzawi. My presentation formed part of the study day, "Intersections: Art and Poetry in Modern and Contemporary Arab Culture", bringing together various national and international experts, which took place on 4 May 2023 in conjunction with the exhibition "Dia al-Azzawi: Painting Poetry" at the Ashmolean. My presentation addressed some of the forgotten earlier printed book arts made by Azzawi (1960s-70s) arguing for a shift in curatorial and scholarly attention beyond his contemporary artist book-objects. This was my first public presentation of initial research findings following an extensive period of archival research and data collection in Lebanon. My presentation sparked wide interest in the project's archival findings, hitherto unknown to those present, including art historians, curators, archivists/ librarians, postgraduate students and various scholars in Arabic literature and the Modern Middle East. Equally important was the debate sparked by my argument as to what counts as an artist book in Azzawi's oeuvre. This was followed by conversations with curators and archivists from the Ashmolean, the British Museum and the British Library (all hold important collections of Azzawi's work) as well as with the director and archivist of Azzawi's studio in London. My initial research findings as presented in this study day, as well as the conversations it prompted, had an impact on how to identify and catalogue modern Arabic book arts, challenging what has been omitted from Azzawi's recently published catalogue raisonné and widening the scope of modern Arabic book arts that require collection and conservation. Both the British Library and Azzawi's studio are partners in my project, it was thus encouraging to see how my research at this early stage of the project was already bearing fruit by impacting conceptions and archival practices of Arabic book arts. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
URL | https://www.ox.ac.uk/event/intersections-art-and-poetry-modern-and-contemporary-arab-culture |
Description | interviewed by L'Orient Today (Lebanon's English language newspaper) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Following a public talk I gave at the American University of Beirut (see output above), I was interviewed by Farah-Sylvana Kanaan for the English language newspaper L'Orient Today for a feature article she wrote about my research, which was published on 7 December 2022. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
URL | https://today.lorientlejour.com/article/1320745/a-peoples-history-of-1960s-beirut-zeina-maasri-illum... |