The eight Sudanese artists accompany their paintings and sculptures with descriptions of their personal experiences before and after the coup. Several were detained and they all suffered from the restrictions imposed by the regime on the teaching and expression of visual arts. They left Sudan at various times, for Egypt and then other countries. They view their contributions to the exhibit in Cairo and to this volume as a way to expose the violations of human rights in Sudan and also to promote peace and justice in their country, retrieve the rights of minority peoples, and restore artists' freedom to express their creativity and realize their innate talents.
Quotes from the book:
Izz el Din Hamza Elkheir Abd el Rahman:
"Through...[art] exhibitions, I tried to say no to the killings, torture, slavery, starvation, famine, war... to say yes to peace and unity."
Mohamed El Rayah Ibrahim Kodi:
"In the Sudan people are tortured because their beliefs and views differ from the views of the state.... [In the art exhibit] my message to my fellow countrymen was that we all should contribute to peace making."
Asaad Sami Komi:
"I believe that works of art...are among the most powerful weapons for combating these regimes and the most powerful in preserving cultures, raising the consciousness and cultural level of those who are culturally oppressed, and assuring the dissemination of these cultures as widely as possible."
Product details
- Publisher : Red Sea Pr (May 1, 2004)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 113 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1569022097
- ISBN-13 : 978-1569022092
- Item Weight : 9.1 ounces
- Dimensions : 6.75 x 0.25 x 9.25 inches