Hassan hajjaj photography style

Hassan Hajjaj

Moroccan artist (b. )

Hassan Hajjaj

Born (age&#;63&#;64)

Larache, Morocco

Occupation(s)Contemporary artist, photographer
Known&#;forPortrait photographs
SpouseVanessa L.

Brown (m.

  • )

    Children2

    Hassan Hajjaj (born ), is a Moroccan contemporary artist and photographer who lives and works between London, United Kingdom, and Marrakech, Morocco. He is known for his portrait photographs.

    Early life

    Hajjaj was born in Larache, Morocco in [1]

    Career

    Hajjaj's first feature-length film, Karima: A Day in the Life of a Henna Girl, premiered at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in May The film takes viewers into the world of one Hajjaj's most iconic series, Kesh Angels, depicting the henna girls of Marrakesh.[further explanation needed][citation needed]

    Hassan Hajjaj: My Rock Stars was exhibited at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art in [2] The film was shown at Art Basel in Basel, Switzerland in June , curated by Cairo-based film curator and lecturer Maxa Zoller.[3]

    The exhibition Hassan Hajjaj: La Caravane opened in London's Somerset House on 5 October , his first solo show in the city in seven years.[4]

    Hajjaj paid tribute to fellow Moroccan celebrities in “My Maroc Stars”.[5] The work featured artists, singers and designers such as Hindi Zahra, Dizzy DROS, Yassine Morabite, and many others.[citation needed]

    One of Hajjaj’s most famous works include Kesh Angels (), a photograph of five veiled women from Marrakech, Morocco, as they sit on motorbikes stationed in front of the Theatre Royal.[6] In Hajjaj's photograph, the women are adorned with colorful, heart-shaped sunglasses and striped socks, as the edited graphic pattern of repeating upside-down red food cans lines the border.[6]

    Hajjaj was commissioned by Vogue to shoot a series of photographs of pop singer Billie Eilish for the cover of their March magazine.[7] &#;In Hajjaj’s cover, the singer sports a Gucci jacket and necklace, as she poses against a colorful patterned backdrop, for which the self-taught photographer is known.[7] The magazine issue also included other photos shot by Hajjaj, including one where Eilish wore a blazer made from the flag of Casablanca football club, Wydad AC.[8] Eilish was dressed in Hajjaj’s clothing label Andy Wahloo, and is shown posing in front of a decorative straw rug that is commonly found in North Africa.[9]

    Art practice

    Aside from mixing elements of both Moroccan and pop culture references together in his art, Hajjaj is also known for subverting the Western viewer’s expectations as he deconstructs the “tourist gaze that fetishizes veiled women” and instead situates them in a purposefully jumbled, animated light.[10] By refashioning the Westernized view of Orientalism, Hajjaj states that he wanted to illustrate the multidimensional facets of Moroccan society in his photograph.[11]

    Similarly, Femmes du Maroc, a popular magazine for women in Morocco, held the first fashion event to showcase Moroccan wear in [12] Journalist Aïcha Zaïmi Sakhri has commented on the now-popularized event, Caftan, by stating that its purpose was to show women that the caftan is not just a part of cultural wear, but a garment that could be worn in a fun, fashionable and modern sense.[12] Much like the magazine’s attempts to modernize Moroccan women fashion, Hajjaj’s colorful photograph of the veiled, playful women atop their motorbikes contrasts the audience’s perceptions of Moroccan women to show the “tension between assumption… and reality”.[13]

    Hajjaj's style is easily recognizable and combines “elements of high fashion with trashy pop culture”.[14] &#;He is known to mix luxury brands with obvious fakes and usually frames his photography with repeated motifs consisting of tin cans.[14] Hajjaj's stylings combine camouflage, polka-dot, or animal prints with traditional fabrics from the souk.[15] His photos "bring a sense of play that melds Moroccan heritage with a patchwork hip-hop swagger".[15]

    Recognition and awards

    Hajjaj was the winner of the Sovereign Middle East and African Art Prize[16] and was shortlisted for Victoria & Albert Museum's Jameel Prize in [17] In , Rose Issa Projects published the monograph By Hassan Hajjaj, Photography, fashion, film, design edited by Katia Hadidian, London () exploring his upbringing in Morocco and London, his experiences in fashion and interior design, and his adventures in the music industry influence the vibrant colours, joyful spirit, and visual rhythm of his highly sought-after images.[18]

    In Hassan Hajjaj was published by the Maison Europeenne de la Photographie, Paris.[citation needed]

    Collections

    Hajjaj's work is in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum, New York City; the British Museum, London; the Nasher Museum of Art, Duke University, Durham, NC; the Newark Museum, New Jersey; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; the Farjam Collection, Dubai; Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris; the Kamel Lazaar Foundation, Tunisia; and Virginia Museum of Fine Art, Richmond, VA.[19]

    References

    1. ^"Hassan Hajjaj".

      The Third Line. Art Gallery Dubai. Retrieved 28 July

    2. ^"Film Premiere, Karima: A Day in the Life of a Henna Girl &#; LACMA". Archived from the original on 7 May Retrieved 12 May
    3. ^"Art Basel".

    4. Hassan hajjaj wife
    5. Hassan hajjaj shop
    6. Hassan hajjaj interesting facts
    7. Hassan hajjaj paris photo
    8. Hassan hajjaj poster
    9. Retrieved 28 July

    10. ^"Hassan Hajjaj: La Caravane". 12 July
    11. ^"Hassan Hajjaj dévoile My Maroc Stars". Archived from the original on 10 January Retrieved 13 January
    12. ^ abSawa, Interview by Dale Berning (23 May ).

      "Hassan Hajjaj's best photograph: Kesh Angels, girl biker gang of Morocco".

      Hassan hajjaj moroccan artist andy wahloo soup tins With a history in street fashion, Hajjaj dresses his subjects with expertly blended ensembles of modern streetwear and traditional, intricate Moroccan prints. But to become an international artist, you first have to prove yourself in the West. Art practice [ edit ]. From portrait to portrait, one savours the excesses of a form of Moroccan pop art, tinged with London eccentricity.

      The Guardian. ISSN&#; Retrieved 4 June

    13. ^ ab"Hassan Hajjaj photographs teen star Billie Eilish". Arab News. 4 February Retrieved 13 April
    14. ^ "American singer Billie Eilish lands a Vogue cover lensed by Morocco's Hassan Hajjaj". .

      Retrieved 13 April

    15. ^"Billie Eilish Photographed by Moroccan Artist Hassan Hajjaj".

      This creates a confrontation with art, but on a familiar, emotional level. On the nature and identity of his work Hassan Hajjaj said in an interview with Shannon Ayers Holden: His work reflects also his multicultural inspiration 35 and political reflection. But I think it is far more important that human beings generally have difficulty developing a personal, considered image of things they have not experienced.

      . Retrieved 13 April

    16. ^Mitter, Siddhartha (9 October ). "Hassan Hajjaj Turns Moroccan Clichés Into London Cool". The New York Times.

      Hassan hajjaj prints: Intended to confound Western perceptions of Arab society, Hajjaj uses the language of fashion photography to produce portraits of characters dressed in colourful North African costumes. Benches made from plastic soda crates covered with fabric cushions or recycled canvas, paint cans transformed into stools. Explosive, they feature colourful compositions rich in motifs, logos, symbols, floral designs, etc. His creations partly reflect the change of environment and codes he experienced as a teenager, originally from Morocco and immersed in the underground world of London.

      ISSN&#; Retrieved 4 June

    17. ^"Hassan Hajjaj | artnet". . Retrieved 4 June
    18. ^ ab"Moroccan Lifestyle Media", Moroccan Fashion, Bloomsbury Academic, pp.&#;53–72, , doi/ch, ISBN&#;
    19. ^"An Interview with Hassan Hajjaj".

      . Retrieved 4 June

    20. ^ abKennedy, Tristan (3 March ).

      Hassan hajjaj moroccan artist Hassan Hajjaj builds his gallery of favourite artists and cultural agitators. Hassan Hajjaj shows his home, Morocco as he sees it through his Western eyes, the eyes he has forged by living in London since the age of 13, but also Morocco as he sees it through his childhood memories and the oriental eyes he has always retained. Hajjaj was commissioned by Vogue to shoot a series of photographs of pop singer Billie Eilish for the cover of their March magazine. Alongside his black and white and colour photographs, he also creates furniture, carpets and clothes.

      "Welcome to Hassan Hajjaj's Marrakech". Culture Trip. Retrieved 13 April

    21. ^ abMitter, Siddhartha (9 October ). "Hassan Hajjaj Turns Moroccan Clichés Into London Cool".

      For example, the export of oil painting and mathematical perspective to China was counterbalanced by a counter-transfer of Chinese porcelain art including its themes and motifs to Europe. I also did a series of photos of women with their faces covered, on scooters. Our conception of the African continent is still largely influenced by the images we see on television every day, and which are conveyed by appeals for donations from NGOs. ISSN

      The New York Times. ISSN&#; Retrieved 13 April

    22. ^"Middle East and North Africa Art Prize - Sovereign Art Foundation". Archived from the original on 29 June Retrieved 28 July
    23. ^"Jameel Prize - Victoria and Albert Museum". Retrieved 28 July
    24. ^"ROSE ISSA". Retrieved 28 July
    25. ^"Hassan Hajjaj - Artists - Taymour Grahne".

      Archived from the original on 31 July Retrieved 28 July

    External links