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Lawless Lines, 2010, multi-media installation, research by Nicola Perugini, video by Amina Bech, comics by Samir Harb, in collaboration with UNESCO Battir Landscape Office and Al Quds-Bard Honors College, Co-produced by Sharjah Art Foundation, Installation view, photo by Alfredo Rubio
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Lawless Lines, 2010, multi-media installation, research by Nicola Perugini, video by Amina Bech, comics by Samir Harb, in collaboration with UNESCO Battir Landscape Office and Al Quds-Bard Honors College, Co-produced by Sharjah Art Foundation, Installation view, photo by Alfredo Rubio
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Lawless Lines, 2010, multi-media installation, research by Nicola Perugini, video by Amina Bech, comics by Samir Harb, in collaboration with UNESCO Battir Landscape Office and Al Quds-Bard Honors College, Co-produced by Sharjah Art Foundation, Installation view, photo by Plamen Galabov
Lawless Lines, 2010, multi-media installation, research by Nicola Perugini, video by Amina Bech, comics by Samir Harb, in collaboration with UNESCO Battir Landscape Office and Al Quds-Bard Honors College, Co-produced by Sharjah Art Foundation, Installation view, photo by Alfredo Rubio
Project Description
The Oslo Process defined three types of territories within the West Bank: Area A
under Palestinian control, area B under Israeli military control and Palestinian
civilian control, and area C under full Israeli control. When the process collapsed
and the temporary organization of occupied territories solidified into a permanent
splintered geography of multiple separations and prohibitions, a fourth territory
suddenly emerged. It dwells in between all the other boundaries and spans, the width
of the line that separates each zone. Less than a millimeter thick when marking
a map to the scale of 1:20,000, in reality, it measures 5.5 metres. The installation
explores the thickness of this line, and follows it along edges of villages and towns,
across fields, orchards, roads, gardens, kindergartens, fences, terraces, homes,
public buildings, a football stadium, a mosque and finally a large recently built
castle. Within this line is a zone undefined by law, a legal limbo that pulls in like a
vortex all different forces, institutions, organizations and characters that operate
within and around it. In the thickness of the line might become an extraterritorial
territory, perhaps “all that remains” from Palestine, a thin but powerful space for
potential political transformations.
Political spaces in Palestine operate through legal blanks. Investigating the clash of
geopolitical lines onto the domestic space of a house, operating between architecture,
cartography and legal practice, this installation brings up a legal case that calls for
an anarchic regime of political autonomy to inhabit this line. From these small tears
in the territorial system, the entire system of divisions might be finally torn down.
Research: Nicola Perugini, Video: Amina Bech, Comics: Samir Harb. Co-produced by Sharjah Art Foundation, in collaboration with UNESCO, Battir Landscape Office and Al Quds-Bard Honors College
2011
