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Muhanna Al-Dura

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Mohanna Durra
Born1938
Died24 January 2021(2021-01-24) (aged 82–83)
Amman, Jordan
NationalityJordanian
EducationGeorge Aleef, Jordan; Academy of Fine Arts, Rome (1958)
Known forPioneer of Jordanian art movement, introduced cubism to Jordanian art community
MovementOrientalist themes; Cubism; abstract art
AwardsAl-Hussein Decoration

Mohanna Durra (Template:Lang-ar), OSJ, (1938 – 24 January 2021)[1] was a Jordanian painter widely regarded as a pioneer of the Jordanian Arts Movement and for being the first to introduce Cubism and abstract art into the Jordanian visual arts community. He was a professor at the Faculty of Fine Art and Design at University of Jordan and served as the President of the Jordan Association of Fine Arts.

Early life

Born in Amman, Jordan in 1938 to a Lebanese father and a Turkish mother,[2] Al-Dura was raised in a striking red hilltop villa in downtown Amman. The house is only a few blocks away from Amman's popular tourist attraction, the Roman amphitheater, and is commonly believed to rest atop an ancient Roman cemetery. As a child, spooky folklore about his neighborhood sparked a fascination with ghouls and "ignited fantasy in what was beyond the observable, physical world."[3]

Education & Career

A notoriously rebellious youth with a penchant for drawing, he was sent by his father to study art with George Allief (also known as George Aleef), a former Russian officer with the Tsarist army. Allief taught him the basics of watercolor, drawing and painting, and the European understanding of perspective. These lessons with Allief marked the young artist's transition from childhood drawing to the disciplined work of a professional artist. According to Dura's memoirs, Allief taught his students to meticulously render a matchbox as an exercise in perspective.[4]

Among Durra’s drawings, there is a portrait for Durra’s first teacher George Allief (also known as George Aleef). Durra shared the story behind this portrait with artmejo: "When I returned home from Rome, George Aleef, who was my teacher before my departure and who had taught me the scholastic method, the classic lessons about art, he was afraid that I had become so modern in throwing colours on the canvas that he came to my studio and he was almost angry! But then he sat on a chair and I painted him while he was talking, and after he saw [the portrait I had done of him] he forgave me and pardoned me and he said to me “in spite of the fact that you betrayed my teaching, you still have something, a gift".[5]

Following the formative years with Allief, the young Muhanna met Dutch painter, William Hallowin, who introduced him to Rembrandt and the Dutch school which sparked an obsession with the power of light. In 1954, he was sent to the Academy of Fine Arts in Rome to become the first Jordanian to receive a formal art education.[6] He claims to have been disillusioned by the academy and committed himself to studying the classics through art in museums and churches. After graduating in 1958, Durra returned to Amman to teach history of art at the Teachers' Training College. In 1964, Durra established the Fine Arts Section at the Department of Culture and Art, Amman, and then established the Jordan Institute of Fine Arts in 1970.[7]

Between 1960 and 1970, Al-Durra returned to Rome, where he experimented with abstraction and cubism. In 1970, he returned to Jordan to receive the Kawkab Decoration from King Hussein.[8] Around that time, Durra established an art studio; the first Jordanian to establish an art studio to teach local students.[9] Among his notable students was the Princess Wijdan Ali who is best known for her attempts to revive the traditions of Islamic art.[10] Another student was Nawal Abdallah, who is one of the leading lights of Jordan's contemporary arts scene.[11]

Work

Durra was best known for his portraits and also for the way he treated shifting masses of colour.[12] He was also acknowledged as the first artist to introduce cubism and abstract art to the Jordanian arts community.[13] Durra was Jordanian artist by nature, and his depiction of the Bedouin and local Jordanian were key subjects in his early years.[14]

Select list of paintings

  • Blue Man Árabe, 1966
  • Cubista Paisaje Urbano, 1966
  • Portrait of Two Women, 1975
  • Composition No. 3, oil on canvas, 75 X 95 cm, 1977 [15]
  • Autumn Dew, 1981
  • Old Salti Woman, 1964[16]

Honours and recognition

Durra served as a diplomat in Italy, Tunisia, Egypt and later Russia, as Ambassador to the Arab League in Moscow.[17]

In 2002 the Postal Authorities of Jordan issued a 200 fils postage stamp in honor of Mohanna Durra displaying one of his paintings.

In November 2006 the Ministry of Culture named an art gallery after Muhanna Durra, and held a national symposium about his art with the participation of prominent Jordanian artists and critics.

Other awards include:[18]

Exhibitions

Durra held numerous solo exhibitions in Rome, Florence, the USSR, various Arab and European capitals, Washington D.C., Plazzo Venezia, the 1988 Venice Biennale Exhibition, and the Fine Arts National Museum of Valletta, Malta. He later held solo exhibitions in Moscow, Saint Petersburg, the Jordan National Gallery of Fine Arts and the Austrian Parliament Central Hall in Vienna.[citation needed] In 2000, "Muhanna Forever: Pioneer of Modern Art in Jordan" was exhibited at the Jordan National Gallery of Fine Arts and in 2006, he had a solo show at Lines Gallery, Amman, Jordan.[19]

Durra's work is represented in various national and international collections, including that of the Vatican, the Imperial Court of Japan, the President of the Philippines, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau of Canada, David Rockefeller, The Jordan National Gallery of Fine Arts, Fannie Mae Bank in Washington, D.C., Bonn City Hall, Washington, D.C. City Hall, the University of San Francisco, Georgetown University, as well as several Jordanian institutes.

Clown section at JNGFA 2001

See also

References

  1. ^ "Muhanna Durra, pioneer of Jordanian artistic movement, dies at 83". Ahram Online. 25 January 2021. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Myhana Al Durra" in Guide to Jordanian Culture, Online: http://www.bourse-des-voyages.com/jordanie/guide-culture-peintres-muhanna-al-durra.php
  3. ^ Zuhur, Sherifa (2001). Colors of enchantment: theater, dance, music and the visual arts of the Middle East. American Univ. in Cairo Press. p. 377. ISBN 9789774246074. Retrieved 30 December 2010.
  4. ^ Mejcher-Atassi, S. and Schwartz, J.P., Archives, Museums and Collecting Practices in the Modern Arab World, Routledge, 2016, p.175
  5. ^ "Mohanna Durra in Retrospect". 7 December 2018.
  6. ^ "Muhanna Durra," in The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture, Vol. 2, Jonathan M. Bloom and Sheila S. Blair (eds), Oxford University Press, 2009, p.39
  7. ^ Mejcher-Atassi, S. and Schwartz, J.P., Archives, Museums and Collecting Practices in the Modern Arab World, Routledge, 2016, pp 175-76
  8. ^ "Muhanna Al Durra," University of Jordan Newsletter, October, 2017, <Online:http://ju.edu.jo/Lists/NewsLetter/Disp_form.aspx?ID=1418&Issue=October%202017&order=10>
  9. ^ Zuhur. S., Colors of Enchantment: Theater, Dance, Music, and the Visual Arts of the Middle East, American University in Cairo Press, 2001, p. 377
  10. ^ Hashem Talham, G., Historical Dictionary of Women in the Middle East and North Africa, Rowman & Littlefield, 2013 p. 24; Zuhur. S., Colors of Enchantment: Theater, Dance, Music, and the Visual Arts of the Middle East, American University in Cairo Press, 2001, pp 377-78
  11. ^ Teller, M., "A Hit List of Jordanian Artists" in Jordan, Rough Guides, 2002, p. 425
  12. ^ Teller, M., Jordan, Rough Guides, 2002, p. 425
  13. ^ "Muhanna Al Durra," University of Jordan Newsletter, October, 2017, <Online:http://ju.edu.jo/Lists/NewsLetter/Disp_form.aspx?ID=1418&Issue=October%202017&order=10>
  14. ^ "Mohanna Durra in Retrospect". 7 December 2018.
  15. ^ Ali, W., Modern Islamic Art: Development and Continuity, University of Florida Press, 1997, p. 99
  16. ^ "Muhanna Durra: I Don't Remember a Day I Wasn't Painting".
  17. ^ Leonov, L., The Library Syndrome, Walter de Gruyter, 1999, p. 201
  18. ^ Rogers, S., "Muhanna Dura" in Mathaf Encyclopedia of Modern Art and the Modern World, http://www.encyclopedia.mathaf.org.qa/en/bios/Pages/Mohanna-Durra.aspx
  19. ^ Mathaf Encyclopedia of Modern Art and the Modern World, [Muhanna Durra -Exhibitions, Online: http://www.encyclopedia.mathaf.org.qa/en/bios/Pages/Mohanna-Durra.aspx

ISBN 5-85729-028-7 by Mohanna Durra, 1998

Further reading

Muhanna Durra, Muhanna Durra [Memoir], Traversa Libra, 1998