Showing posts with label Festival Fringe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Festival Fringe. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 04, 2016

Fes Festival Fringe: Lalla Fes - A Story in Music


LALLA FES -  by Kay d'Astorg - A Story to Music, narrated by Patty Hannock, with oud music from Hamza El Fasiki


During just one hour, Patty Hannock, an Anglo-American actor based in Paris, will relate the life of “Lalla Fes” and her children from the 8th century until the present time.

Written by Kay d’Astorg - an English writer living in Paris and Fes - the text is accompanied by the talented oud player, Hamza El Fasiki.

As the story unfolds we discover the different dynasties who ruled the Kingdom of Morocco, from the 8th to the 21st century, and their political, social and spiritual impact on “Lalla Fes”.

A wonderful and magical introduction to the Medina, its history and its architecture.

ALIF RIAD - SATURDAY/SAMEDI  - 7 MAY AT 18 30
RIAD FES - WEDNEDAY/MERCREDI - 11 MAY AT 18 30
PALAIS FARAJ - SUNDAY/DIMANCHE  - 15 MAY AT 17 50
This event is free to the public and lasts for 50 minutes.

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Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Fez The Sacred ~ Omar Chennafi Exhibition


A wonderful effect of the music festival is the plethora of fringe events it creates, especially in the field of art. Another day, another exhibition opening and this time it was local photographer Omar Chennafi's work on display in the Jnan Sbil gardens.

Entitled Fez the Sacred, the work explores a Fassi's perspective on how his city has changed in a spiritual sense.

"I'm talking about the sacred and how Fes and Fassis have lost their connection with the spaces around them," Chennafi explained. "The connection between the space and people, both of these together create the sacred. I'm trying to translate the invisible through photography."


Sponsored by the American Language Centre and ALIF, the exhibition has an original setting. With black and white photographs attached to a row of palm trees, the uniform placement creates a perfect natural gallery space, allowing passers by to chance upon images while strolling through the gardens. Also beautifully placed are a selection of larger coloured photographs on canvases, mounted on easels and set amongst foliage. Particularly striking was an image of a man's feet, dyed bright fuchsia, positioned behind a spray of pink bougainvillaea, the colours perfectly in harmony.


Another inspiring effect of this exhibition is the breaking down of barriers between the general public and art galleries. By placing art outside, in a non-threatening and non-traditional space it is making art accessible to those who would not normally encounter it. This is typical of Chennafi's work, and harks back to his project Invisible Fes, where he turned medina doors into artworks and displayed images on the streets.

Chennafi is truly a photographer of the people, capturing their beauty and delivering it back to them.


Text and photographs: Vanessa Bonnin

Fez the Sacred is only on display for a further two days (until Wednesday June 18th).

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Monday, June 16, 2014

BEYOND TRADITION: Exploring the ART in Artisan at Fes Festival Fringe




BEYOND TRADITION is the result of Australian textile/installation artist Kim Simon’s Artist in Residence with Culture Vultures


The exhibition is an exploration of familiar components in final pieces that are out of context and go beyond tradition.

“For example, the idea of the mint is to take something from Morocco that is really common and every day and use these raw materials but expand them,” Simon said.

Kim has been in Morocco making with Artisans for the past six weeks; singing, laughing, eating and sharing skills, possibilities and wisdoms.

“I have come to care very much about the people who made them with me,” Simon said.
“I’d eat lunch with them and then we’d throw chunks of wool on the floor and sleep side by side. I have been loved and cared for.”

Her design practice is playful, sitting with raw materials, paraphernalia and exploring; her process for making totally consuming. Kim’s designs are simple and elegant and evoke a sense of wonder and discovery.


For centuries Moroccan Artisans have devoted their hours, weeks, years and lifetimes to perfect the skills and art in the repetition of their making. Kim’s art is also about repetition and to illustrate the amount of work that goes into each piece, she has labeled them thus: Tapestry – 192,000 knots; 8580 Red Leather Knots; 6703 Red Buttons and so forth.

“It’s repetitive work but it’s also quite meditative. And working with products like the local leather is wonderful, it’s alive – there are 16 skins in the leather piece.”

Her pieces also acknowledge the names of those who helped make them, for instance the tapestry has a section where it is knotted, in darija “made by Nadia, Latifa and Kim”.

Rarely straying from traditional styles or personally acknowledged, Kim is humbled by and grateful to all Moroccan Artisans who have been open to straying beyond their tradition and who have contributed to the making of these pieces.

“I sat for two and a half weeks with the ladies who helped to make the tapestry and it was interesting because they are so traditional and I had to persuade them to explore outside the boundaries,” Kim said.

“Initially they were always saying no, you couldn’t do it like that, for instance I wanted the weave of the tapestry to be red but they refused saying it had to be white.
“But in the end they loved it.”

Simon’s said that the Artisans most open to straying beyond tradition were the metalworkers of Seffarine Square.



“They trusted me as an artist and were the only ones open to trying something new. I love this piece as the metal still has the marks of the beats on it, showing what they do, it hasn’t been smoothed out.”

So what will Simon take away from her experience here?

“The beauty of the Moroccan people. Here, people are making everywhere and I’m a maker so I feel at home here. I’ll go home inspired and energized. Enlivened.”

Barry Glick at Kim's opening

Kim wishes to thank the following people for their support, collaboration and assistance during her Culture Vultures Artist in Residence: Jessica, Fatima Zhara, Ahmed, Halil, Brahim, Aziz, Nadia, Latifa, Nissrine, Hafida, Khadija, Amina, Rizlane, Wafa, Amina, Mustapha, Hamid, Mohammed, Maryam, Soukaina, Fatima, Fatima Zhara, Dounia, Naima and Fatiha.

BEYOND TRADITION is on display at the Culture Vulture's pOp uP gallery space on Talaa Kbira, a couple of doors down from Barcelona Cafe, until the end of the Festival.

Kim’s contact details: fibrered.com.au
In collaboration with: culturevulturesfez.org


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Wednesday, June 11, 2014

More Fes Festival Fringe Activities


The Fes Festival of World Sacred Music is more than just concerts. There are a large number of other activities that visitors to Fez can take part in.

Photography Exhibition

From June 13 to 21 the Stitched Shut exhibition features a collection of photographs from 127 Gallery in Marrakech, exhibited at the house of Ute Schrader. Stitched Shut can be viewed from 10 am to 2 pm daily, or by appointment. 

The exhibition includes works from Iranian artist, based in London, Afsoon; French-Belgian artist Diana Lui and Denis Dailleux, who was born in France and lives in Egypt.

Where: 1 Derb Touil, Fes Medina-Blida
Info: Natalie on 06 61 33 99 53 or Ute 06 55 35 75 41
www.ute-com.com / www.galerie127.com


From the Moroccan Icons series by Afsoon

Drum Making Workshops

On Saturday the 14th and Sunday the 15th between 10 am and 1pm there are Drum Making Workshops.

Music is a cornerstone of Moroccan life and can be heard from homes, celebrations, young street musicians and gnawa troops throughout the day.


The setting for this bohemian adventure is a Fondouk in the middle of the Medina. You will be introduced to a specialist drum-maker who will help you to choose an unfinished earthenware tom-tom drum and then take you to the leather worker to choose your hide, whether it be camel, goat or fish. You can decide by testing out some finished drums for the varying sounds they make. You are then taught by the artisanal expert how to work the hide onto the drum by yourself and the skill of different stringing techniques to secure it tightly to create the drum’s tones.

The workshop is finished off with a drumming session with a professional local drummer.

This is a great chance to create Moroccan rhythms and the beats of ancient times on your very own instrument.

The activity is offered by Plan-it-Fez and the Sacred Music Festival Price is 450dh per person. Booking essential. To take part meet at the Batha Post Office at 10am.

Tasting Trails

Souk Tasting Trails – 10am-12.30pm (Saturday 14th to Thursday the 20th)

Winding your way through the alleys and souks with a Fez food expert. You will visit three different food souks allowing the chance to try traditional Moroccan street food including dried meats, milawi, harsha,briwats, spicy sardines, spicy potato cakes, soups, olives and more.


At the honey souk we’re you’ll be able to taste an array of delicious wild honeys, discuss their flavours and health-giving properties and find out why honey is so important in Moroccan cooking andIslamic culture. You will also get to investigate traditional cooking methods by visiting a furnatchi where the water for the communal bath house ‘hammam’ is also heated, and a 400 year old ‘furan’ or communal oven and bakery.

Discover the world of spices and their uses and the secrets of the male-oriented domain of the tea den under the guidance of a culinary leader and story-teller.

Sacred Music Festival Price is 450dh per person. Booking essential. Meet at Batha Post Office
10am.
Tour Roman Ruins

13-21st June -- Half Day Tour to Volubilis and Moulay Idriss - 9am-2.30pm.

Spend time exploring the ancient Roman city of Volubilis. With its well preserved mosaics,
palaces, baths and soaring arches it is considered one of Morocco’s most important
archeological sites.


After Volubilis move on to Moulay Idriss, one of Morocco’s most venerated Muslim sites. It is
said that for Moroccan’s who can’t afford the trip to Mecca, then to travel five times in one’s
life to Moulay Idriss is of equal merit. The scenic village has lovely souks to explore and a
number of panoramic views of Volubilis.

Includes transport, guided tour at Volubilis and lunch at a nearby local farm. Sacred Music
Festival Price is 450dh per person. Booking essential. Pick-up Parking at Batha Post Office 9am.

Culture Vultures activities

For the 5th year Culture Vultures contributes to the rich program of activities in, around and under the Sacred Music Festival. Culture Vultures, an arts and culture organisation born in Fez in 2009, is very much in its element during the festival period. This year C.V. brings art to the street, the park and the main stage; flash mobbing, pOp uP exhibiting and endowing the main stage arena with projections on to its walls.

Culture Vultures - Events include Kim Simon. Beyond Tradition



Kim is an Australian artist who responds to a six week artist residency with Culture Vultures with ‘Honouring the ART in ARTisan' - an installation created in partnership with carpet knitters, weavers, button makers, copper beaters and leather workers.

Culture Vultures pOp uP Gallery. Talla Kbira. 13th – 21st June. 4 – 8 p.m.
This year’s pOp uP venture is a little further down the T’alla, a few spaces after Barcelona Cafe. Meet Kim at the space on Sunday 15th, from 4 p.m.

'Sing Upchoir from Melbourne Australia with Stuart Davis.
Flash Mobs. Performances around Fez. Can’t say where, can’t say when.

Sing up - from Australia

Exposé Artisanal Thursday the 19th of June. Bab el Makina . 8.45 p.m.
Video Montage. A presentation of the rich results of citizen reporters joining forces with the artisanship of Fez to celebrate who are and what goes into the handsome crafts of Morocco. Composed by Asil Visuals.


Fes Festival Photo Competition

During the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music, The View from Fez invites you to submit photographs of the festival. We will publish the best and our judges will award a prize to the photograph that best captures the spirit of the Fes Festival. 

Photographs can be of performers, visitors, or simply photographs of Fez. 

The prize will be a dinner for two at a well known Fez restaurant

Photos should be emailed to theviewfromfez@gmail.com. They should be around 1 meg. Please submit a caption, your contact details and your country of origin.  Good luck! 

More Festival Fringe events to follow.

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Friday, June 14, 2013

On the Fes Festival Fringe Today...


Opening of Le Muzoo: a traveling museum conceived by Sinéangulo at Palais Mokri (not "Dar Mokri").  Sinéangulo's adventure is composed of fresco, tent, clothes, collected stones…

from a series "Jnan Sbil (Freedom Garden)", 2013, Megumi Matsubara © Yassin Houari
         In the middle of the desert,
        I laid myself on the ground of sand.
        I was small - much smaller than I imagined myself could ever be.


        I thought, my footprint would make absolutely no difference, let alone my   teardrop.
        Just at that moment, a drop of tear touched the sand.
        It quickly became solid.
        Carefully, I touched it. It was still solid.
        I put it on my hand.
        When the tear vaporized, the sand remained.
        It was much more than I imagined a drop of tear could ever weigh.


                                ~  A footprint on a desert, Megumi Matsubara, June 2013


Vernissage: 6pm Fri 14th June 2013
Location: Palais Mokri, Ziat, Fes
Exhibition period: until the 15th of June 2013 open everyday 11am - 4pm entrance free
Location: Palais Mokri, Ziat, Fes
Artists: Aroa Escobero, Salima Abdel Wahab, Youssef el Yedidi, Aziz Amrani, Charlie Case, and Megumi Matsubara
Organised by: Michel d'Yve & Juliette Emsens

Fes Festival Fringe program
Fes Festival Medina Map
Fes Festival Food! 
Fes Festival Site

The View from Fez is an official media partner of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

Exploring the Fringe at the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music


The health of any good festival can often be judged by the depth of the fringe. A festival fringe is a sign of a healthy interaction between local and visiting artists. Vanessa Bonnin explores the Fes Festival Fringe and finds it in remarkably good form

Jessica Stephens "My mission is arts for all!"

The Queen of the Festival Fringe scene must surely be Jessica Stephens, Sefrou based artist and cultural coordinator of Culture Vultures. Each year her contribution gets bigger and it’s all for a good cause, bringing art and culture to the streets for everyone to experience.

One week into the Sacred Music Festival and its time to touch base with Stephens and find out how the variety of projects Culture Vultures is involved in have been progressing. We find her manning the pop up art space alZahra on the Talaa Kbira.

“There have been so many highlights!” Stephens said. “Flash mobbing in Seffarine Square with Gershom, the Timbre Flaws Choir singing on the doorstep of the pop up – there were 24 of them and with their kids too, one of them sang with a baby strapped to his chest! The flash mob with Amacita – a group of mixed nationality students from the American high school in Fes – was great too, a few of the Moroccan students hadn’t ever been to the Medina and there they were singing in Seffarine Square.

“The mix of audiences for it is what excites me and the deeper into the Medina we go, the further away from the main festival sites, the more it’s appreciated – we’re giving something to the people of the Medina.”


Another project that Stephens coordinated is the Street Carpet, taking place on construction site a fence in Batha and being made by Colleen Cassar.

“The reactions from Moroccan people in the street to Colleen’s street carpet have been amazing, I’ve had to hold back the tears a few times. People are thanking her for bringing art on to the streets.”

This is the essence of what Stephens does – break down the barriers that make art and culture elitist and only open to a select section of society, by making it accessible in a non-threatening environment.

“The pop up is so much more than a shop or a gallery, it’s about sharing – it’s become a platform, a springboard for artist’s projects, performances, garden walks. It’s not about business it’s about cracking open arts and culture for all people across the spectrum. There’s no other space where you get visitors as diverse as a high-class Parisian, a gnawa mallum and a tanner! My mission is arts for all!”

The Street Carpet concept was the brainchild of Colleen Cassar, who was inspired by a similar idea she saw online, but done in cross-stitch.

“When I looked at the construction site fence the mesh didn’t lend itself to cross-stitch. So I thought a boucherite rug would be more appropriate, given that we wanted to work with recycled fabrics and do something Moroccan,” Cassar said.

The project has become a real community effort, with old djellabas, women’s clothing and fabric off cuts being donated for materials, students stopping to help on their way to an exam and people stopping by every day to witness the progress.

“We’ve had a lot of community interest, congratulations and blessings. Children passing saying God bless, people tooting horns and giving us the thumbs up. Some people discuss with me that they’re really very touched that I would choose to build something using a Moroccan technique,” Cassar revealed.

“People ask me, why did you choose here? To me it’s obvious. It’s about beautifying the site and putting art actively on the street.”

As well as bringing art to the streets her project has educational aspects too, opening up discussions about recycling and teaching children to be resourceful in their general and creative lives.

“I have been surprised at people’s delight and their compliments and well wishes, their desire for this kind of art to continue. What the artwork has done, because it’s public, is to include the community. When we’re finished it will be ephemeral art, it will sit there, get rained on, change colour and eventually fall away, but it will be there as a reminder and hopefully as a piece of inspiration for people.”

A more traditional art exhibition, also coordinated by Jessica Stephens has been on display at Dar Tazi during the festival.

Work by Jessica Stephens, Margaret Lanzanetta, Mohammed Charkaouni and Yassine Khaled
Fine art by Omar Belghiti 

Including works by Omar Belghiti, Brahim Lotfi, Alessandro Ferrando, Margaret Lanzanetta, Mohammed Charkaouni and Yassine Khaled, the art works display a diverse range of styles and techniques.

Mohammed Charkaoui is a Fassi artist whose father is an Imam, he has been practicing for many years and now teaches calligraphy. Yassine Khalid is a young contemporary artist from Sefrou with a smart mind and big ambitions. He trained in Tetouan and, for now, lives and works in Sefrou.

"I believe Yassine will go far," Stephens said."Watch this space."

An interesting concept is the one by Fes-based Spaniard Ferrando, whose two mixed media artworks were created to cherish the memory of Ibn Battuta, a Moroccan scholar and traveller, nicknamed the Marco Polo of Islam.

Alessandro Ferrando

One of the pieces involves a complex network of string, representing the imaginary itinerary that Ibn Battuta covered during his lifetime, in an endless symphony of overlapping lines creating an infinite web. The second piece is a tribute to the first trip to Mecca by the famous explorer, who is represented in the piece by a spherical body – the most perfect kind of shape.

Dror Sinai 
Nadia Fennane at Dar Roumana
Another recent fringe event – not coordinated by Stephens this time, but similar in the concept of giving back to the community, was a benefit concert held at Dar Roumana.

With music by Dror Sinai and belly dancing by Nadia Fennane, the well-attended concert raised over 1000dh, plus donations of books, pens and art supplies for the Centre for Protection of Girls in Fes.

Australian choir Timbre Flaws sang at the ALIF Riad
In another part of the Medina, at the ALIF Riad, the cunningly named Australian choir Timbre Flaws had a hit on their hands when they presented their music to a largely Moroccan crowd of around 60 people. The audience included English language students from the American Language Center, which was hosting the event. The 25 strong community choir, from Sydney, sang a variety of gospel and popular songs from around the world.

Choir director Stuart Davis, left, with Australian choir Timbre Flaws

At some points the crowd was encouraged to join in, which they did with enthusiasm. English student Dounia Bennis wrote in her review: "Timber Flaws should have made the concert longer; they shouldn't have sung just few songs because it was a real joy for ears and pleasure for eyes. Moreover, they insist on playing in a perfect harmony, it was so impressive! I’m sure that it must have taken years of hard work and a big effort in order to succeed such performances."

Text Vanessa Bonnin
Photographs: Vanessa Bonnin, Suzanna Clarke

Fes Festival Fringe program
Fes Festival Medina Map
Fes Festival Food! 
Fes Festival Site

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Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Festival Fringe: Six Designers Exhibit in Fez


There’s a lovely sense of whimsy about this tiny exhibition at the Jardin des Biehn, writes Stephanie Clifford-Smith. Six artists from Morocco and Europe are represented with pieces ranging from jewellery to textiles, clothes and accessories.

Jewellery by Lilou Jouve
The whimsy lies in the way the pieces are displayed as much as their designs and is perhaps most apparent in the jewellery of Lilou Jouve, (Fez, Aix en Provence) immediately to the right of the entrance. Bracelets and rings feature knitted silk beads on rubber tubing while necklaces alternate those same coloured beads with glass and ceramic ones. Bracelets are displayed on aged wooden mannequin arms or suspended from the ceiling on invisible fishing line, appearing to float.

Bags by Catherine Gaillard
Catherine Gaillard (Fes, Paris) focuses on statement totes in metallic animal skin finishes. Tie belts/necklaces with soft, strokable leather tassels in muted turquoise and teal hang from a dowel like horsetails in repose.

An artist whose name suggests a single minded determination to be listed first in the phone book, AAA Alfred (Fez, Berlin), works in supple punched suede stitched in geometric patterns. Some pieces are functional – bags, wallets – while others such as flat sheets of worked leather are either objects in their own right or await some higher purpose.

A cluster of calico dressmaker’s dummies is the perfect, plain foil for Michel Biehn’s (Fez)
quirky necklaces. They’re all long, asymmetrical assemblies of mixed media beads and tassles of varying ages and finishes, many parts appearing repurposed.


Works in leather by Alfred Berlin

What appear to be straightforward garments by Moi Anaan (Bangkok) all sharing a sunburst feature on their silky fabrics warrant closer inspection. These ostensibly simple shapes all have unusual dart placements adding interest.

Dress designed by Moi Anan
Nina Gilbert (Fez) may be a local but this sunny corner of the exhibition seems heavily influenced by the south of France or maybe the women's costumes of the Rif Mountains. There’s a striped theme running through her collection which includes espadrilles, kilims and outsized cushions. The predominantly fluoro palette really amps up the wattage.



Three photos above: textiles by Nina Galbert

Text: Stephanie Clifford-Smith
Photos: Suzanna Clarke

Fez Fabrik exhibition at Gallery Jardin des Biehn, 13, Akbat Sbaa, Douh 30100, Fez Médina until June 16. 

Fes Festival Fringe program
Fes Festival Medina Map
Fes Festival Food! 
Fes Festival Site

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Friday, June 15, 2012

Exhibition inspired by Fez

Tonight at 7pm a special exhibition opens at the gallery at the French Institute in Fez. Iranian artist Sara Dolatabadi has spent the last month in Fez as an artist-in-residence and has created an unusual installation inspired by her time here.

Cache Cache Rouge (Hide & seek, red) consists of more than 20 works on paper, drawn and painted, hidden behind black silk embroidery thread. Some of the works suggest scenes Dolatabadi has glimpsed in Fez, such as a figure in a doorway, or a black cat. Each contains a flash of red.

"I wanted to show something, but I realised I could not show it directly...sometimes we have things that we hide, such as pain," she says. The red, signifying blood, is echoed in the long strands of the same colour hung at one end of the installation.



Now based in Paris, Dolatabadi grew up in Tehran in a creative family - her father was a writer and her uncle a painter - and began to draw at a young age. "When I was seven I drew a profile of my father...It was beautiful - he still has it."

She studied graphic design from the age of 15 and began to do figurative painting. Six years ago she moved to Tokyo and started to create installations.

"Colour is very important for me," Dolatabadi says. "It signifies something very special."

Since 2005, she has had exhibitions in New York, Tokyo and Tehran. Her most recent one, Blue Jewels, focused on homelessness in Tokyo, and was inspired by the cheap blue plastic tarpaulins that are used to cover makeshift shelters where the displaced live.

Another project in 2009, No Man's Land, saw more than 70 artists including Dolatabadi, take over the old French Embassy in Tokyo and create an intriguing series of installations reflecting its history.

"I chose to work with the Faraday cage, where diplomatic communications took place," she says. "This mysterious space was isolated from the rest of the world, a bit like the private thoughts of each person, a territory that is inaccessible by others."

For Cache Cache Rouge, her work created largely in Fez at the French Institute building in Dar Batha, Dolatabadi has used elements of what she has seen during her stay, such as the thread of the string-winders spin in the streets of Fez.

Next Tuesday she is planning an installation in the garden at Dar Batha, "with clothes and silk thread hanging from the trees", she says.  "I wanted to do something crazy for the garden. It is beautiful and I feel so relaxed here."

Sara Dolatabadi's Cache Cache Rouge is on show until July 27 at the French Institute Gallery, 12, Rue Serghini, Ville Nouvelle, Fes. 
http://www.institutfrancaisfes.com/
http://sara-dolatabadi.com/


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Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Fès Festival Fringe - Gallery talk


Textile collector Michel Biehn
On Wednesday June 13 at 6pm at Galerie du Jardin des Biehn, textile collector Michel Biehn and artist Margaret Lanzetta will discuss the works and the connections between them in their joint exhibition, Seven Types of Terrain.

As a Festival fringe event, the theme of a dialogue between two types of media - textiles and paintings, is an appropriate one. While Lanzetta's paintings play with elements of patterns, the colourful embroidered and woven pieces from Biehn's collection show us something of the origins and development of those patterns in the Islamic world.

"I started to collect textiles about 30 years ago," says Michel Biehn. "I was at a dinner party with an historian who was preparing an exhibition on Kashmiri shawls. Suddenly doors opened up, and I realised there were all these stories (behind them) about trade, wars, and wealth. So I began to collect more."

Biehn says in those days textiles were not as valued as they are now, because they were seen as being part of the female realm.

His growing passion for collecting and dealing in textiles took him all over the planet, to Asia and the Middle East, until he had accumulated thousands of pieces. Then his house in Provence was filled with them.

"Textiles started in the East; in China around 3000 BC, with silk, indigo, block prints and weaving techniques. They spread across the Middle East to Europe, through Florence and Venice."

These days Biehn focuses on clothing. "I've sold all the pieces that could be used in a home and kept the costumes - the tunics, hats and veils. They speak of the people who wore them."

Of Seven Types of Terrain, Biehn says he is delighted with how well the show has come up.

"The pieces work very well together," he says. "Most of the textiles are Islamic. It is almost a rule that you have to allow mistakes (when they are being made), because perfection is only from God."

Seven Types of Terrain is on until June 18 at Galerie du Jardin des Biehn, 13 Akbat Sbaa, Douh, Fes Medina. Hear Michel Biehn and Margaret Lanzetta talk about the dialogue between their works tomorrow night (Wednesday) from 6pm.



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Sunday, June 10, 2012

Fès Festival Fringe - In Transit


Moroccan Bling wrist cuff with photo by Jess Stephens

Running parallel to the Sacred Music Festival are many other cultural events that are worth seeking out between concerts. Jess Stephens of Culture Vultures has reprised her successful pop-up shop scheme from last year, but this year is taking it to a whole new level. Vanessa Bonnin reports for The View from Fez.

In Transit is the name of her new temporary venture, and it has morphed into a gallery with an exhibition of works created by artists from all over the globe, as far away as New York and as local as Fes. The diverse range of work comes together under the influence of Morocco, either culturally, aesthetically or in its rich resource of materials.

“It’s developed into a pop-up arts centre that’s trying to make as much cultural noise as possible,” Jess Stephens told The View From Fez. “Which means inviting musicians to come and play, there’ll be artist talks, henna sessions, even a magician. It’s much more than a static gallery or shop.” “The visual arts are a fringe aspect of the festival, but they enhance the programme,” she added.

“Of course the festival organizers focus is the music, so it’s up to the individual artists to push the local, cultural side. This location creates a dialogue with medina people as it’s on the street, rather than standard galleries, which can be a bit elitist and removed from the average person. “

Jess Stephens
On display are works by:Noureddine Daifallah – calligrapher from MarrakechMargaret Lanzanetta – painter from New York, based in Fes
David Packer – sculptor and photographer from England, based in Fes
Nourredine Chater – artist from Marrakech
Jess Stephens – artist from England, based in SefrouPlus the latest jewellery and accessories collection from Jess Stephens' label 'Moroccan Bling'.
“This latest collection is influenced by rag rugs and shihkat dancers from the Middle Atlas Mountains and principally uses cloth and leather,” Stephens explained. “Every piece is hand-made and one-of-a-kind.”

In Transit runs until June 18th and is open from 10am until 8pm. Much of the “cultural noise” will take place between the end of the afternoon concerts at Batha Museum and the beginning of the evening shows at Bab Al Makina.

Jess Stephens shows her wares to Kristal Passy and Francine Demeulenaere
Moroccan Bling necklace with works by Margaret Lanzanetta and Noureddine Daifallah

To find the pop up gallery head down Talla K’bira, past Madrassa Bounaniya, under the tunnel after half a dozen shop units on your left you will find a small space with much inspiration.


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