Ramses Wissa Wassef: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Addbot (talk | contribs)
m Bot: Migrating 3 interwiki links, now provided by Wikidata on d:q3418644
Line 130: Line 130:
*[http://ramses-wissa-wassef-tapestries.myshopify.com] The Art Centre's official North American website for tapestries.
*[http://ramses-wissa-wassef-tapestries.myshopify.com] The Art Centre's official North American website for tapestries.
*[http://www.wissa-wassef-arts.com] The Art Centre's international website shipping tapestries directly from Egypt.
*[http://www.wissa-wassef-arts.com] The Art Centre's international website shipping tapestries directly from Egypt.




{{Authority control|VIAF=49405450}}
{{Authority control|VIAF=49405450}}
Line 151: Line 149:
[[Category:Coptic Christians from Egypt]]
[[Category:Coptic Christians from Egypt]]
[[Category:People from Cairo]]
[[Category:People from Cairo]]

[[ar:رمسيس ويصا واصف]]
[[fr:Ramsès Wissa Wassef]]
[[arz:رمسيس ويصا واصف]]

Revision as of 21:29, 1 March 2013

Ramses Wissa Wassef (1911–1974) was an Egyptian architect and professor of art and architecture at the College of Fine Arts in Cairo and founder of the Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre.[1]

Biography

Ramses Wissa Wassef was born in Cairo. His father was a lawyer, a leader of Egypt's nationalist movement and an art patron who promoted the development of the arts in Egypt. After high school, Wassef wanted to become a sculptor but changed his mind and studied architecture in France at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts de Paris. His thesis project "A Potter's House in Old Cairo" received the first prize in 1935. He had a passion for beauty in form and believed "one cannot separate beauty from utility, the form from the material, the work from its function, man from his creative art "[2]

After Wassef's death, his family donated his original architecture drawings to the Rare Books and Special Collections Library at the American University in Cairo.

Architectural and design career

At the beginning of his career in 1935, Wassef was struck by the beauty of the medieval towns and the old quarters of Cairo. He felt that ancient craftsmen had managed to derive from their traditional heritage an infinite variety of expression and created effects distinguished by local character. He developed an architectural style that bore the stamp of his own strong personality and responded to the challenge of the times without breaking away from the past. Impressed as he was by the beauty of the Nubian houses in the villages around Aswan, which still preserved the domes and vaults, inherited form the earliest Pharaonic dynasties, he resolved to maintain their presence in his own architectural work for reasons of aesthetics, climate and economics. He made use of traditional craftsmen such as stonecutters, traditional carpenters, glass blowers and potters who had inherited the techniques and traditions of the Egyptian vernacular heritage. Wassef taught architecture and art at the Department of Architecture, College of Fine Arts, Cairo, which he also chaired.

Designs

Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre, Harrania, Egypt

Wedding in the Village by Basima Mohamed, 2007, created at the Art Centre. In the collection of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis

In 1951, Wissa Wassef founded the Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre near the Giza Pyramids to teach young Egyptian villagers how to create art and tapestries. He believed that children are endowed with creative power and potential.[3] Wissa Wassef attempted to prove that art is innate in everyone and can flourish in spite of the deadening influence of mass production [4] The Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 1983.

The Art Centre has operated continuously for more than 60 years. No patterns are utilized as the artists create the tapestries directly from their imaginations onto the looms. Artists such as Ali Selim and Karima Ali, who began as children in the 1960s & 70s, continue to weave masterworks upto 10 feet in width. The Art Centre is open to the public with a museum of early works and the store to sell new works. Tours are available by contacting the Art Centre in advance.

Exhibitions

The tapestries have been internationally recognized since the late 1950s. Many exhibitions have been held in Europe and the Smithsonian Institution organized a traveling exhibit in the USA in 1975-76. The most recent exhibition was at the Coningsby Gallery in London, UK, during November 2012. A simple paperback catalog was published for the 2006 for an exhibition at the School of Oriental and African Studies in the University of London to mark the center's 50th anniversary.[5] "Egyptian Landscapes" is a book of photographs that highlights the work of the center.

1954 Organized by the group Amities Francaises,Cairo, Alexandria and Ismallia Egypt 1954 Egyptian Art Exhibition,Italy 1956 the Near East College Association, New York, USA 1958 Gewerbemuseum, Zurich & Basel, Switzerland 1959 Bilddteppiche, Krefeild, Germany 1960 Museum of Modern Art, Stockholm, Sweden 1961 Kunstindustrimusset, Germany 1961 National Museum of Modern Art, Stockholm, Gothenburg, Malmo, Sweden 1962 Fodor Museum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands 1963 Museum Am ost Wall Dortmund, Munich, Germany 1964 Stedelijk Museum, Groninger Museum Voor Stad en Lande, The Netherlands 1964 Neue Sammlung Munchen, Munich, Germany 1965 Musee D’ Arts Decoratifs, Rosenthal Studio-Haus-Delvaux, Paris, France 1966 Museum of Modern Art, Skovde Konsthall Skovde, Stockholm, Lunds, Sweden 1966 Congress Mondial, Prague, Czechoslovakia 1967 Musee D’Arts Decoratifs, Lausanne, Switzerland 1967 Museum of Modern Art, Stockholm, Sweden 1969 Royal College of Art, London, England 1971 Gallery Brand Strupp, Oslo, Norway 1972 Ideal Home Exhibition, London, England 1973 Gallery La Demeure, Paris, France 1974 Al Palazzo Dellarejario, Milan, Italy 1975 New York Natural History Museum, New York City, USA 1975 Textile Museum, Washington, DC, USA 1975 Gallery La Demeure, Paris, France 1977 Italian Culture Centre, Cairo, Egypt 1978 Touring exhibition, Berlin, Essen, Stuttgart, Germany 1978 Gallery La Demeure, Paris, France 1979 Roemer - und Pelizaeus - Museum, Hildesheim, Germany 1979 Anneberg Gallery, San Francisco, USA 1979 Modern Art Museum, Stockholm, Sweden 1981 University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA 1981 Egyptian Art Academy, Rome, Italy 1985 The Barbican Centre, London, UK 1985 Polytechnic Gallery, Newcastle, UK 1986 ArtSpace, Aberdeen, UK 1986 City of Edinburgh Art Centre, Edinburgh, UK 1986 Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea, Wales, UK 1990 First Tapestry Triennale, Tournai, Belgium 1991 Musee Jean Lurcat, Angers, France 1993 Institut Du Monde Arabe, Paris, France 1995 Culture Centre, Ha, Norway 1995 Lebanese/ Egyptian Businessmen’s Association, Beirut, Lebanon 1999 Egyptian Culture week, Tones, Tunisia 2000 United Nations, Geneva, Switzerland 2001 Conservatoire et Jardin Botanique, Geneva, Switzerland 2003 Green Art Gallery, Dubai, UAE 2004 Frankfurt Book Fair, Frankfurt, Germany 2006 Brunei Gallery, SOAS, University of London, London UK 2009 Nature in Art Trust, Gloucestershire, UK 2012 Children's Museum, Take Me There: Egypt!, Indianapolis, USA 2012 The Coningsby Gallery, London, UK

Publications

In 1961, renown photographer Werner Forman discovered the Art Centre by accident while shooting in Egypt. Forman and later his archive staff have been a primary international ambassador for the tapestries. He published two books available online for used book sellers.

"Tapestries from Egypt" by Ramses Wissa Wassef and Werner Forman, 1961, Hamlin Publishing Group
"Woven by Hand" by Ramses Wissa Wassef and Werner Forman, 1972, Hamlin Publishing Group

Other Publications
"Egyptian Tapestries from the Workshop of Ramses Wissa Wassef: An Experiment in Creativity" by Ceres Wissa Wassef, 1975, Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service
"Das Land am Nil" by Arne Eggebrecht, Eva Eggebrecht, Wilfried Seipel, 1979, Roemer- und Pelizaeus-Museum, Hildesheim
"Egyptian Landscapes, 1985" by Yoanna Wissa Wassef and Hilary Weir, 1985, Ramses Wissa Wassef (UK) Exhibition Foundation
"Egyptian Landscapes, 2006" by Suzanne Wissa Wassef, Yoanna Wissa Wassef and Hillary Weir, 2006, Ramses Wissa Wassef (UK) Exhibition Trust

Awards

  • Egyptian National Award For The Arts - 1961, for his stained-glass window designs for The Egyptian National Assembly building, Cairo
  • The Aga-Khan Architectural Award - 1983, for his achievements and particularly for the art center at Harrania, Giza

See also

References

  • MIMAR 35: Architecture in Development by Taylor, Brian Brace, 1990
  • Architecture in Continuity by Cantacuzino, Sherban, 1985
  • MIMAR 5: Architecture in Development by Noweir, Sawsan, 1985
  • Egyptian Landscapes Fifty Years of Tapestry Weaving at the Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre, Cairo, Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Center, 2006

External links

Architecture

  • [1] The Ramses Wissa Wassef Architectural Drawings digital collection documents the career of one of Egypt's most prominent 20th century architects. The collection is part of an ongoing effort to digitize and describe more than 800 architectural plans and drawings related to over 60 villas, schools, churches, banks, and apartment buildings designed by Wissa Wassef between 1935 and 1972.
  • [2], ArchNet, a digital library that features works by and about Ramses Wissa Wassef
  • [3] The complete Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre project brief for the Aga Khan Development Network Award in 1983. Very comprehensive.

Tapestries

  • [4] The primary website of the Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre
  • [5], Egyptian Landscapes: Fifty Years of Tapestry Weaving at the Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre, Cairo, 2006.
  • [6] 50th Anniversary Celebration (2007) Interview with Lady Hilary Weir, Barbara Heller trustees of Ramses Wissa Wassef Trust in London and Suzanne Wissa Wassef and Architect Ikram Nosshi who run the Art Center in Cairo
  • [7] Tapestry collector Marla Mallett's website with detail description of the weaving at the Art Centre.
  • [8] Facebook webpage with weekly updates as of December 2012.
  • [9] Pinterest site with many images of Wissa Wassef Tapestries.

Websites Selling Tapestries

  • [10] The Art Centre's official North American website for tapestries.
  • [11] The Art Centre's international website shipping tapestries directly from Egypt.

Template:Persondata