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Research & Commentary Results

تصفية حسب
210 Results
The 6,000-year saga of the Citadel of Erbil
Main photo by Corbis News./Anthony Asael/Art In all of Us via Getty
  • التحليل
  • The 6,000-year saga of the Citadel of Erbil

    The history of Erbil’s citadel reads like a cinematic epic worthy of Cecil B. DeMille

    Possibly one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited human settlements, the citadel is built on a series of archaeological layers crowned by Ottoman-era houses. It may have been the site of a temple to Ishtar, was an important center of Nestorian Christianity, and survived both the 13th-century Mongol invasion and an 18th-century siege by Nader Shah. It was home to the Medians and the Assyrians (who called it Arbela), Muslims and Jews, and has housed Sufi shrines and displaced squatters. Its mound-like form has been shaped by successive generations of inhabitants and invaders who simply built on top of the rubble of their predecessors.

    February 18, 2020

    Speaking Across Mountains: Sharing Kurdish Culture Through Music
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • Podcast
  • Speaking Across Mountains: Sharing Kurdish Culture Through Music

    This week’s episode features an interview and Q&A with Lukman Ahmad, a Syrian-Kurdish musician and artist. Last week, Lukman performed Kurdish instrumental music on the saz during an open house at the MEI Art Gallery, and we are pleased to be able to share a recording of a couple of the songs that he performed.

    February 13, 2020

    Truth is stranger than science fiction: Palestine +100
    Political and social mural paintings and graffiti on the Israeli West Bank barrier in Bethlehem.
  • التحليل
  • Truth is stranger than science fiction: Palestine +100

    As the world increasingly resembles a dystopian film from the 1970s and television news blurs ominously with scenes from Soylent Green, a recent collection of Palestinian science fiction proves both prescient and eerily contemporary.

    February 6, 2020

    Safeguarding and celebrating Egypt’s traditional crafts
  • التحليل
  • Safeguarding and celebrating Egypt’s traditional crafts

    Accomplished craftspeople are a dying breed in Cairo, but Jameel House of Traditional Arts and Atelier Cairo are working to change that by training a new generation of artisans in traditional media like ceramics, wood, brass, glass, and gypsum work (stucco), helping to replenish the stock of skilled Egyptian craftspeople and keeping rare and beautiful art forms alive.

    January 14, 2020

    Perpetual Identities: Interview with Katya Traboulsi
  • Podcast
  • Perpetual Identities: Interview with Katya Traboulsi

    Lebanese artist Katya Traboulsi joins guest host Lyne Sneige to discuss her art exhibition, Perpetual Identities, which consists of 22 hand-crafted replicas of bombshells used in the Lebanese civil war, each adorned with designs and iconography associated with the artistic traditions of 22 featured countries. 

    November 7, 2019

    Saudi Arabia's hidden gem: Al-Ula
  • التحليل
  • Saudi Arabia's hidden gem: Al-Ula

    Saudi Arabia’s archeological treasures have long been hidden in plain sight, known mainly to the people living in their proximity and a handful of scholars. But five recent UNESCO World Heritage Site designations have highlighted the universal value of the country’s material legacy.

    October 3, 2019

    Iraq’s ancient city of Babylon gets long-overdue international recognition
    A picture taken on June 29, 2019 shows the Babel's Lion at the ancient archaeological site of Babylon, south of the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
  • التحليل
  • Iraq’s ancient city of Babylon gets long-overdue international recognition

    Babylon has seen it all. From its peak as the Neo-Babylonian capital under King Nebuchadnezzar through its heavy-handed 1987 reconstruction by Saddam Hussein to its post-invasion demise when American and Polish troops ran roughshod over its ruins and ISIS threatened its very existence, the ancient city has witnessed empires come and go.

    September 18, 2019

    Arabicity: Bringing the art of the Middle East to Washington
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • Podcast
  • Arabicity: Bringing the art of the Middle East to Washington

    Renowned curator Rose Issa joins MEI Arts & Culture director Lyne Sneige to discuss Arabicity | Ourouba, the inaugural exhibit of contemporary Middle Eastern art that premiered September 14 at the new MEI Art Gallery, and why an understanding of the region’s arts and culture are important to the policy discourse in Washington.

    September 18, 2019

    Messages for Peace: Iranian Artist Imprisoned for Music Releases New Album
  • التحليل
  • Messages for Peace: Iranian Artist Imprisoned for Music Releases New Album

    Revolutionary Guards came to Mehdi Rajabian’s door on October 5, 2013. His crime? Running a music production company — Barg Music — that the Iranian government deemed offensive to Islam and the regime. Barg Music worked with restricted artists in Iran, particularly women, who have been legally forbidden from performing solo since the Iranian Revolution.

    August 7, 2019

    Landscape, loss, and Palestinian identity: Intimate Terrains
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Landscape, loss, and Palestinian identity: Intimate Terrains

    Part survey show, part historical document, the latest exhibition at the Palestinian Museum just outside of Ramallah, “Intimate Terrains: Representations of a Disappearing Landscape,” covers work from the 1930s until today. The show explores how representations of landscape evolved over time via a selection of iconic, rarely seen works, and special commissions by artists from Palestine and its diaspora, encompassing painting, photography, installation, video and film, natural media, sculpture, and even an “intervention” in the museum’s gardens.

    June 26, 2019

    This Is Civilization
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • Video
  • This Is Civilization

    In 2014, a professor and former U.S. diplomat approached The Middle East Institute (MEI) with a remarkable offer: he would donate to MEI’s Oman Library nearly 20,000 meticulously annotated Kodachrome slides of photographs he had taken throughout the Middle East over half a century.

    May 20, 2019

    Addressing the scourge of antiquities looting
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • Podcast
  • Addressing the scourge of antiquities looting

    Larry Schwartz, former deputy assistant secretary in the State Department’s Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, and Domenic DiGiovanni, vice president of Red Arch, join host Alistair Taylor to discuss the illegal theft and smuggling of cultural artifacts from the Middle East, and what regional governments and international partners can do to help preserve the region’s cultural heritage.

    May 3, 2019

    A tale fit for the silver screen: The rebirth of the Basrah Museum
    Basrah Museum display
  • التحليل
  • A tale fit for the silver screen: The rebirth of the Basrah Museum

    The story of the Basrah Museum, which opened three new galleries on March 19th after languishing for 28 years, is nothing less than cinematic. Read it here.

    March 29, 2019

    Uncovering a lost Sudanese masterpiece
    Funeral and the Crescent, Ibrahim El Salahi
  • التحليل
  • Uncovering a lost Sudanese masterpiece

    The works of Sudanese artist Ibrahim El Salahi were long overlooked by the international arts community. Today, his extraordinary works are recognized globally as defining works of African modernism and are housed in some the world’s most prestigious galleries, including they Tate Modern and the MoMA – all thanks to the tireless work of fellow Sudanese scholar Salah Hassan.

    March 12, 2019