Taysir Batniji: Home Away from Home
By (Author) Taysir Batniji
Aperture
Aperture
7th November 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
Photographs: collections
Photography and photographs
Places and peoples: general and pictorial works
779.2092
Winner of Abraaj Group Art Prize 2012 (United Arab Emirates)
Paperback
194
Width 222mm, Height 272mm
770g
Palestinian French artist Taysir Batniji is the third recipient of Immersion, a French American Photography Commission, a program launched by the Fondation dentreprise Herms in alliance with Aperture Foundation. In Home Away from Home, Batniji brings together photographs, selections from family archives, videos, drawings, and writings to explore the sense of dislocation and the different ideas of "home" experienced by various members of his family who immigrated to the United States from the Middle East. As Batniji explains, "The state of 'between-ness'cultural as well as geographicis an issue that has preoccupied me since I first arrived in France in 1995. Exile, displacement, and mobility are themes that have driven my work for many years."
The work Batniji has created, during visits to Florida and California, strives to connect to and understand his "American cousins" through their daily lives, the objects that surround them, and the homes they have made. The resulting photographs and portraits, interviews, and sketches from memory of the family homestead in Gaza question what it means to share a history, even among relative strangersand what happens to a sense of the past and of belonging when opting for new identities and new homes.
Copublished by Aperture and Fondation dentreprise Herms
Taysir Batniji (born in Gaza, Palestine, 1966) trained as a painter at An-Najah National University, Nablus, prior to continuing his studies in France at the cole Nationale Suprieure dArt de Bourges, and the cole Suprieure dArt et de Design Marseille-Mditerrane. His work incorporates drawing, video, photography, and installation, and has been shown widely in Europe and the Middle East, including at the Venice Biennale; Jeu de Paume, Paris; Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin; Kunsthalle Wien; and Witte de With, Rotterdam.