Ala Younis, Plan for Greater Baghdad (2015) and Plan (fem.) for Greater Baghdad (2018), two- and three-dimensional prints, drawings, archival and found materials, and model.
Ala Younis, Plan for Greater Baghdad (2015) and Plan (fem.) for Greater Baghdad (2018), two- and three-dimensional prints, drawings, archival and found materials, and model.
Plan for Greater Baghdad was activated by a set of 35mm slides taken by architect Rifat Chadirji in 1982 of a Gymnasium in Baghdad that was designed by Le Corbusier and named after Saddam Hussein. The project looks at monuments, (by) architects, (for) governments, and the shifts and tensions between ideals and ideologies.
The Saddam Hussein Gymnasium metamorphosed through numerous iterations of plans over twenty-five years before it was inaugurated in 1980. Up until then, the commission for the Gymnasium passed through five military coups; six heads of state; four master plans, each with its own town planner; a Development Board that became a Ministry and then a State Commission; a modern starchitect among a constellation of many others with their associated architects, draftsmen, contractors, agents and lawyers; local architects accompanied by similar structures from their own consulting firms, from government departments, and from parallel commissions; more than one local artist/sculptor; eager competitors; and other monuments that simultaneously appeared and disappeared as a result of these same conglomerations.
Heavily based on archives, found material, and the stories of its protagonists; Plan for Greater Baghdad looks into protecting monuments for posterity, and into performing plans for Baghdad as an expression of power or as a necessity. Missing from the representations and citations contained in established archives, the images that document the performances of design, power, and designing power are pieced together from fragments of other images and from records of gestures retrieved from representations and narratives by local artists.
Produced as a set of motions and signals enacted by characters frozen in the denouements of historical time, the three-dimensional depictions pertaining to the men who appear in the Plan for Greater Baghdad, and the interventions into existing documents culled from various archives, produce a dual-layered timeline that pits developments in the Gymnasium story against those in Baghdad.
Elements
in order of appearance in this project: Le Corbusier. Concrete
structures. Master plans. Iraq’s negotiated oil revenues. Other projects
by modern architects for Baghdad and the region. The archives of others
and Iraqi archives. The interests and fates of Heads of States.
Deputies to Heads of States. Rifat Chadirji, his Iraq Consult, and his
peers. Statues and monuments. The Stadium versus the Gymnasium. Jawad
Salim. The Tigris River and its meanderings through Baghdad. Palm
groves, helicopters, informants, doubles and film productions.
Premiered at:
All the World’s Futures
56th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia
Curated by Okwui Enwezor
Arsenale (corderie #8)
9.5 – 22.11.2015
Project by Ala Younis.
Plan for Greater Baghdad (2015) was produced
with support from The Arab Fund for Arts and Culture (AFAC) and Sharjah
Art Foundation. Additional support: Barakat Travel. Part of research developed during Bellagio Creative
Arts Fellowship (2013) and an Ashkal Alwan residency (2011).
Plan (fem.) for Greater Baghdad (2018) was co-commissioned by Delfina Foundation and Art Jameel.