Hend al-Mansour
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Hend Al-Mansour (born 1956) is a Saudi Arabian-American visual artist.
Biography
Hend Al-Mansour was born in Hofuf, Saudi Arabia in 1956. She obtained a degree of medicine from Cairo University in 1981. She practiced medicine in Saudi Arabia at Hofuf and Riyadh until 1997 when she immigrated to the United States. During her medical career she obtained degrees in internal medicine and cardiology. In the year 2000 she shifted careers from medicine to art. She obtained a master of fine art from Minneapolis College of Art and Design MCAD, 2002. Al-Mansour now is an installation artist, silkscreen printer and a public speaker. Her work is about women in the Islamic world. She creates spaces representing private lives of women out of silk-screened fabrics. She has shown in Minnesota and other states in the United States as well as in Saudi Arabia. She is married to Dr. David Penchansky, a theology professor and writer, and they live in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Theme, media and style
Al-Mansour's work explores religious and social belief systems of the Arab communities, especially those dealing with women, sexuality and understanding the other. She uses Arabic calligraphy, images of Arab people, Islamic ornamentation and architecture. She investigates the status of contemporary Arab art and cultivates its independence from Western art and its distinction from other Middle Eastern and Islamic identities.
Al-Mansour's work is often portraiture of Muslim women as architectural spaces made out of silk screened, dyed or hennaed fabrics. Her images are stylized figures and faces intertwined with Islamic ornamentation in a repetitive style. She uses large sheets of silk, wool, canvas, or other fabric. Her installations resemble shrines, tents or mosques in which the viewer walks in. Her installations include archways, domes, sand, cushions, rugs, bowls or geometric sculptures and distinctive Middle Eastern perfumes and scents that reflect aspects of her subjects' personalities and cultures.
Al-Mansour creates portraits of Muslim women and in the exhibition, How to Be a Feminist Artist, at the Catherine G. Murphy Gallery, St. Catherine University, her self-portraiture examines the role of Muslim women in modern society. She includes traditional Islamic elements like passages from the Quran and vivid Arabic textile patterns and designs to express gender disparity towards women.[1][2]
Selected works
- The Great Mother of Islam 2014, at Cathering G Murphy gallery
- How to Be a Feminist Artist 2014, at Catherine G Murphy gallery
- Continuity and Change (group show) 2007, at [1]
- Fatimah in America (solo show) 2007, at [2]
- Arousat Al-Moulid (design and choriography) 2007, in collaboration with Jawaahir Dance Company
- Prizm of longing (group show) 2006, at the The Phipps Center for the Arts
- Fatimah in America (3 women show) 2005, at the Sacred Art Festival in the University of St. Thomas
- Peac in the house (theater installation) 2004, commissioned by Voices of Sepharad
- The three faces of Mary (solo show) 2004, Wisdom Ways of the College of St. Catherine.
- Sheherazade Risking the Passage (Muslim women show) 2003, at Mira Gallery sponsored by WARM.
- Arab Eye (group show) 2002, at Babylon art Gallery.
- Heightened Awareness (2 women show) 2001, at Catherine G Murphy gallery
References
- ^ Tundel, Nikki (February 5, 2014). "Hend Al-Mansour creates art to question women's roles". MPR News.
- ^ Rolenc, Sharon (January 13, 2014). "Exhibition: How to Be a Feminist Artist opens Feb. 3". St. Catherine University.
External links
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (March 2015) |
- Hend's home page
- Thinking about Fatimah in America
- Prescription for art: Women's Press
- The personalities behind the photos: The Gustavian weekly
- Hend Al-Mansour creates art to question women's roles
- Hend Al-Mansour on MN Original
- Intermedia Arts Bio
- Twin Cities Saudi woman bridges gap between Islamic and Western worlds through art
- Orphaned articles from February 2009
- 1956 births
- Living people
- American installation artists
- American people of Saudi Arabian descent
- American women installation artists
- Arab artists
- Cairo University alumni
- Minneapolis College of Art and Design alumni
- People from Eastern Province, Saudi Arabia
- Saudi Arabian medical doctors
- Saudi Arabian women medical doctors