Tag Archives: Arab Spring street art

Upcoming Lecture: American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE) – Ancient Egyptian Iconography in the Egypt Arab Spring Street Art

Dear Friends, Family and Fellow Travelers

I’m tremendously excited to announce that I will be speaking that the American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE)’s Northwest Chapter on December 3rd at the University of Washington. I will be lecturing on the use of ancient Egyptian iconography in the Arab Spring street art. Speaking at the very prestigious American Research Center in Egypt is a dream com true, though not quite how I expected.

ARCE image_2

Started in 1948, the American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE) is a nonprofit organization which supports research on all aspects of Egyptian history and culture, encourages broader knowledge about Egypt among the general public, and strengthens American-Egyptian cultural relations. ARCE funds many of the top archaeology research and conservation projects in Egypt. Its work is critical in both learning about Ancient Egyptian culture, but also in preserving the antiquities. ARCE is one of the most prestigious organizations in the archaeology field – not just in Egyptology. You can thank them for the fact that you can still walk the halls of Karnak. get up close and personal with the New Kingdom Pharaohs in the Valley of the Kings, that we know that slaves (and aliens ) did NOT build the pyramids, any many other of the major archaeological finds and also that the sites are preserved enough for us to visit them.

I attended my very first ARCE lecture as an archaeology student at the University of Washington. I was studying Egyptology; it was exciting to be able to listen to presentations by top Egyptologists. I attended as many ARCE lectures as I could, listening to research by greats such as Dr. Mark Lehner, Dr. Kent Weeks, Gay Robbins, Dr. Salima Ikram, and many others. I attended my first ARCE conference shortly after graduating university when the annual ARCE conference was held in Seattle. Attending presentations by Dr. Mark Lehner (We can thank him for pretty much everything we known about the workers who built the Great Pyramid.) and Dr. Gunter Dreyer (His work at Abydos and Umm el-Qa’ab is legendary. Without Dr. Dreyer we’d know very little about the earliest, most powerful Pharaohs.) were two big bucket list items I was able to check off at this conference. I thought that someday I might speak at ARCE through archaeological research and study. Then life took me down another path — to climbing, running a magazine, traveling and photography. Life has a funny way of coming full circle in the most unexpected ways.

Dug up this old phot from the 2008 ARCE conference. Making new archaeology friends at the ARCE conference.

Dug up this old photo from the 2008 ARCE conference. Making new archaeology friends and sharing a love for Egyptology. Photo: Genevieve Hathaway.

Seeing the legendary Dr. Gunter Dreyer speak. We can thank him for knowing so much about the first dynasty pharaohs.

Seeing the legendary Dr. Gunter Dreyer speak. We can thank him for knowing so much about the first dynasty pharaohs. Photo: Genevieve Hathaway

 

Aerial view of Medinet Habu, Ramses III's Mortuary Temple. One of the many places where ARCE funds research and conservation. Photo: Genevieve Hathaway.

Aerial view of Medinet Habu, Ramses III’s Mortuary Temple. One of the many places where ARCE funds research and conservation. Photo: Genevieve Hathaway.

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Posted in Arab Spring, Egypt, Public Speaking Also tagged , , , , , |

War on Walls Exhibit is NOW OPEN

I’m excited to announce that my exhibit War on Walls: Egypt’s Arab Spring Street Art is now open to the public! On Sunday we held the opening reception for the exhibit and it was a smashing success with a huge guest attendance!

Details on Exhibit:

St. Mark’s Cathedral Nave
Capitol Hill, Seattle
January 11 – February 15, 2015
Daily 7am-7pm; free to public

To purchase one of the limited edition fine art prints from the exhibit contact genevieve@geneveivehathaway.coom (note they are going fast so purchase yours before they are sold out).

My exhibit War on Walls is now open to the public. Stop by St. Mark's Cathedral to look at this groundbreaking photography project.

My exhibit War on Walls is now open to the public. Stop by St. Mark’s Cathedral to look at this groundbreaking photography project. Photo courtesy of Truc Allen Media.

War on Walls has been a 3 year long journey to photograph the Arab Spring street art, publish the project as a book and now hold it as an exhibit. During that time, I also had a number of public speaking engagements on the topic at conferences and universities. From Cairo, to Melbourne, to Seattle, to Brown University to Oregon State University, this project spanned three continents, three countries, and two hemispheres. (Who knows what’s next, maybe a traveling exhibit??? And exhibit in Europe. If you have connections or ideas drop me an email, I’d love to hear from you!)

For me this journey began back in 2003 when I was studying Egyptology at the American University in Cairo. At that time, the AUC campus was located on Tahrir Square. I studied Egypt’s most famous pharaohs and ancient piles of rubble on the street where the largest massacres and protests of Egypt’s revolution took place. Though today AUC’s campus is outside of Cairo at the town of Heliopolis, the former AUC campus on Tahrir Square and Mohammed Mahmoud street is still used as admin buildings, bookshops and libraries. Most of the images shown from Egypt’s revolution and these street art images in this exhibit took place in front of the buildingswhere I studied in 2003. Behind the image of Mubarak and Tantawi’s faces merged together, that is where I had a Cultural Geography Class. The image of the two bulls fighting that looks reminiscent of Guernica, behind that wall was the building where I would use the computer lab. (They had a fleet of dot matrix printers, so old I had never seen one but knew the perforated edges that you tear off. ) This personal connection to the streets and buildings where Egypt’s revolution took place made the Arab Spring and this project to photograph its street art even more personal.

Fastforward to 2012.  When I began this project in early 2012, I was working in Cairo, living in a hotel room facing onto Tahrir Square. The regime had toppled, former President Hosni Mubarak had been forced to resign a year earlier and presidential elections had been scheduled for June 2012, just a few months away. Tahrir Square teamed with individual protestors, formal political groups and random citizens, giving voice to every type of civil complaint – from politics and police to taxes, utility expenses, and traffic congestion.

Street art was a defining feature of the Egyptian revolution: raising awareness of political and economic issues, pressuring the regime and governing bodies for change, injecting dark humor into turbulent times, and providing a visual memory of important events and individuals.

Living on Tahrir Square, I observed the wall art grow and change to reflect current events and the demands for social, political and economic change. I was inspired by the artists’ dedication to creating these complex, culturally significant expressions of Egypt’s Arab Spring. For me, photography is a powerful tool to change perspectives and share untold stories. In creating these photographs, I intend to show a different side to Egypt’s Arab Spring revolution – the ability of art to change individual’s perspectives and impact larger social movements.

I hope you enjoy the exhibit! Email me at genevieve@genevievehathaway.com with thoughts or questions or post them in the comments.

Thank you to St. Mark’s Visual Arts Ministry, MidEast Ministry and also the Seattle Office of Arts and Culture for their support of this exhibit.

Posted in Arab Spring, Egypt, Exhibition, Media, Photos, Prints, Public Speaking Also tagged , , , , , |