Profiles of Contemporary Jewish Moroccan Artists

Profiles of Contemporary Jewish Moroccan Artists

Marc Eliany ? All Rights Reserved

Introduction

From an historical perspective, much artistic merit is found in Morocco?s material culture in the work of common artisans and craftsmen.?

Western modern artists found artistic redemption in it and Moroccan Jews made a significant contribution to it in creation and diffusion (Eliany, 2002).

Given the strongly grounded traditional patterns of artistic creation in Morocco, artists had to deviate from them to break ground into modern and

contemporary art forms. But until the early 50?s, religious and traditional constraints remained potent and only sustained exposure to external cultures,

i.e., French, Israeli or North American, made contemporary artistic expressions legitimate (Eliany, 2002).

There are certainly many more artists to represent Moroccan Jewish artistic creation and in due time, more will be written about them.

Meanwhile, the three selected here, Elbaz and BenHaim on one side and Eliany on the other, certainly typify their breakthrough into contemporary art,

forgetting not their Moroccan Jewish roots.

The French influence

Around the turn of the century, Jews in Morocco became exposed to French education and French culture.

Young people went to French schools in Morocco and the brightest among them continued their studies in Europe and mostly in France.

Some, like Andre Elbaz and Maxime BenHaim, studied art in France. And their exposure to French art centers made its mark in their work.

Andre Elbaz

Leading among contemporary Jewish artists in Morocco is Andre Elbaz, born in El Jadida (Mazagan), in 1934.

He studied art and theatre in Rabat (1950-55) as well as in Paris (1957-61) and taught art in Casablanca (1962-63) (see detailed CV).

Elbaz? work depicts Jewish themes in the abstract expressionist tradition: i.e., figures in synagogue settings, tragic events such as the Holocaust

(exhibited at Yad Vashem in 1985) and the Inquisition in 1992. He worked in Morocco, Canada and France.

His most recent work vacillates between expressionistic portrayals of Jerusalem and powerful conceptual abstract work in which

he yearns to eradicate interfaith destructiveness (see sample below).

? Andre Elbaz in his studio
Andre Elbaz, The Prayer,
Acrylics on paper
Andre Elbaz, Untitled, 1987,
Reconstituted tinted paper
?

Andre Elbaz, Untitled, 1987,

Reconstituted tinted paper

Maxime Ben Haim

Maxime Ben Haim born in Meknes in 1941, studied art in Paris in the mid sixties.

He worked in Morocco, France and Canada, living in Montreal since 1979.

Ben Haim elevates the Moroccan Jewish quarter (Melah) as well as ancestral figures from common existence

to archetypal transcendence in a somewhat expressionistic/realistic style.

Ben Haim?s work is firmly grounded in Jewish roots and yet it transcends cultural boundaries,

bridging across collective memories binding Jews and Arabs across many generations

(see detailed CV as well as samples of his work attached).

Ben Haim,
Self Portrait,
Acrylics on paper
Ben Haim,
Femme de Memoire,
1988 Acrylics on paper
Ben Haim,
Ombre sur la maison,
1988, Acrylics on paper

The Israeli/North American influence

Immigration to Israel and North America exposed Jewish artists of Moroccan origin to new influences.
Pinhas Cohen Gan arrived to Israel at a very young age; nevertheless his perception of Israel has been strongly determined
by his Moroccan roots and his art education in New York.
Similarly, Marc Eliany who lived in Israel for some fifteen years, certainly absorbed Israeli influences too.
He, however, arrived to Israel at a more mature age and was able to look at Israel from a critical point of view.
Furthermore, his artistic world of concepts was shaped by a wider and universal exposure to art in
North America, Europe as well as Asia and Africa.

Pinhas Cohen Gan born in Meknes in 1942 in Meknes, immigrated to Israel in 1949,

graduating from Bezalel Art Academy (1970), the Hebrew University (1973) and Columbia University in 1977.

He was awarded the Israel Prize in 2008 for his contribution to art in Israel.

Pinhas Cohen Gan is well known as a conceptual abstract painter in Israel.

Cohen Gan juxtaposed the individual and his environment, confronting men to ?scientific? realities,

a metaphor for the alienation of newcomers from Arab countries in a ?Westernized? Israel (Fuhrer 1998; Omer 1983).

?Pinhas Cohen Gan
?Pinhas Cohen Gan,
Latent figurative circuit

Marc Eliany

Marc Eliany, born in 1948 in Beni Melal, immigrated to Israel in 1961 and moved to Canada in 1976.
He was educated at the Technion (1969-71), the Hebrew University (1971-76) and Carleton and Ottawa Universities (1976-1981).
Eliany is a multidisciplinary artist and writer dedicated to documenting Jewish life in Morocco.
He wrote a collection of poems ?On Wine and Love? in the Spanish Mauresque tradition,
a play ?Rezadeira? on Spanish-Portuguese Maranos and produced photographic documentation (The Last Jews of Ifrikia)
and canvases (Gates of Welcome) conveying the wealth of Moroccan Jewish Culture, past and present (www.artengine.ca/eliany/).

Eliany addresses issues relating to inter-cultural tolerance in a symbolic expressionist fashion.
“Eliany touches the heroic, the power of the symbol? His painting reduces rhythms to their essential?
His work expresses his deep and colorful spirituality, and his fierce sensuality?? (Ouaknine, 1994).

Eliany in his studio, 2002
Photo:C. Zacharia,
Museum of Civilization, Canada
Eliany,
Man at work, 1979,
Tempera on paper
Eliany, 1992,
Fes tombs, photo
Eliany,
After the market on a sunny day,
1993, oil on canvas board

References

Elbaz, Andre, 1971????????????????? Seuls
Elbaz, Andre, 1991????????????????? Of Fire and Exile
Eliany, Marc, 2002?????????????????? ?Artistic Creation and the Moroccan Jewish Diaspora? www.artengine.ca/eliany/
Fuhrer, Ronald, 1998?????????????? Israeli Painting, An Elephant Eye Book, New York
Omer, Mordechai, 1983?????????? Pinhas Cohen Gan 1983 Haifa Museum of Modern Art, Israel
Ouaknine, Serge, 1994???????????? Gates of Welcome, Virtual Publications, Canada
Yad Vashem, 1985????????????????? The Cry of Silence: Andre Elbaz, Yad Vashem Art Museum
www.artengine.ca/eliany/
www.maximebenhaim.ht.st

ANDRE ELBAZ

12, Rue Lagrange, Paris, 75005
33 1 46 33 25 91
elbaz.andre@gmail.com or andre_elbaz@hotmail.com

n? le 26 Avril 1934 ? Mazagan, Maroc
ETUDES : ?
Arts Graphiques et Th??tre
1957-1961?????????????? Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris
1950-1955 ????????????? Ecole d?art graphique, Rabat
1949-1950 ????????????? Ecole d?art dramatique, Rabat
ONE MAN SHOWS :
2002??????? Galerie Mabel Semmler, Paris
La Maison de la bibliophilie, Paris
2001??????? Remember for the Future Maison Fran?aise, Oxford – Galerie La Croix Baragnon,Toulouse
2000??????? Cinq triptyques en guise de perspective – M?morial du CDJC, Paris
1999??????? Le D?fit ? la Barbarie , Mus?e D?partemental, Epinal- Biblioth?que de l?A.I.U.? Parris
1993??????? Cegep Saint Laurent, Montr?al
1992??????? Sala dei Congressi, Milano ; Casa della?? Cultura, Livorno
Ottawa Carleton Regional Center, Ottawa ;
Jewish Public Library, Montr?al
1990??????? Centre Pompidou, Biennale du Film d’Art, Paris
1990??????? Se?bu Gallery, Tokyo
1989??????? Nishi-Azabu ; Azakloth Gallery, Tokyo
1985??????? Mus?e d’Art, Yad Vashem, J?rusalem
1984??????? Galerie Aut der Land, Munich
1976??????? Mus?e de Tel Aviv
La Rotonde, Aix-en-Provence ; Centre Edmond Fleg, Marseille
Ch?teau de Herbeys, Grenoble
1975 ?????? Centre Rachi, Paris
1972??????? Albert White Gallery, Toronto
1970??????? Terre des Hommes, Montr?al
1969??????? Waddington Gallery, Montr?al
1965??????? Centre Culturel Fran?ais, Casablanca
1964??????? Zwemmer Gallery, Londres
1962-63-1965 ??????? ?Mus?e de Bab Rouah, Rabat
1960??????? Balliol College, Oxford

PRIX :
1998?????? Prix M?moire de la Shoah – Fondation du Juda?sme Fran?ais
1968 ???? La Nuit n’est jamais compl?te? Laur?at du court m?trage – V?me Biennale de Paris.

SALONS & BIENNALES :
1973????? Jean Paulhan ? travers ses peintres
1968 ???? Nuit Culturelle de Nancy avec Ro?l d?Haese, Pierre Schaeffer, Ren? de Obaldia Esposito, Piem.
1961-1963-1965-1967 ?????????? Biennales de Paris, Mus?e d?Art Moderne
1955-1959?????????????????????????????? Salon des Surind?pendants – Salon de l?Ecole Fran?aise – Salon d?Hiver
Salon de la jeune Peinture – Mus?e d?Art Moderne – Paris

COURTS METRAGES & ANIMATIONS :
1972??????? Histoire d??ufs, animation Montr?al
1971?????? Regard sur la Peinture Am?ricaine, Whitney Mus?um, New York
1970????? L?homme ? la Bouteille,? R?alise ? l?Office National du Fim Montr?al ? la demande de Norman McLaren?
Les Mobiles chez Calder,  au MOMA New York?
1969 ???? Graphiques pour ? Kaddish ? de L?onard Bernstein
1966????? La Nuit n?est Jamais Compl?te,  Oratorio “A Survivor from Warsaw ? Arnold? Sch?enberg,
Service de la Recherche de l?ORTF – repr?sente la France au Festival du Court-M?trage ? Tours

REALISATIONS :
1971? -? SEULS, Portfolio de 20 s?rigraphies, Textes de Elie Wiesel & Na?m Kattan.
1991?? -? DE FEU ET D?EXIL, Portefolio de 20 s?rigraphies sur le th?me de l?Inquisition, textes de Fran?ois-Marc Gagnon, Shmuel Trigano & Na?m Kattan

COLLECTION :
Biblioth?que Nationale, Paris – Public Library, New York – Biblioth?que Municipale de Montr?al? Jewish Museum, New York – Biblioth?que Nationale, Qu?bec – The National Gallery, Ottawa – Mus?e des Beaux Arts, Montr?al  – Biblioh?que Municipale, Toronto – J?rusalem Museum  – Tel-Aviv Museum? -? Yad Vashem Museum of Art, Jerusalem  – Biblioth?que de l’Universit? de Toronto – Biblioth?que de l?Assembl?e Nationale, Paris – Mus?e des Deux Guerres, Paris – Minist?re de la C:ulture, Paris – Mus?e de la D?portation, Paris Mus?e d?Art et d?histoire du Juda?sme, Paris  – Biblioth?que, Toronto – Jewish Seminary, New York – Biblioth?que de l?Alliance, Paris – Wienner Libary, London – Jewish Museum, Copenhague

S.A.R. La Princesse Elisabeth du Danemark – Willy Brandt – Itshack Rabbin – Mme A. de Rothschild – Elie Wiesel – Bronfman Family – M . & Mme L?on Cligman et d?autres collectionneurs priv?s, U.S.A., Canada, Europe, Isra?l, France, Suisse, Maroc.

Art in the Moroccan Jewish Diaspora

Abstract

Modern art historians suggested that there was hardly any art tradition in Morocco. Putting things in perspective, this article demonstrates that much artistic merit is found in Morocco?s material culture, many Western modern artists found artistic redemption in it and Moroccan Jews made a significant contribution to it in creation and diffusion.

Introduction

Modern art historians may suggest that there was hardly any art tradition in Morocco. For in their eyes, Morocco was far from European influential art centers and much of the esthetic creation was not intended for artistic but utilitarian purposes. And yet much artistic merit is found in utilitarian objects that make Morocco?s material culture (Grammet, 1998).

The sense of esthetics is so omnipresent in Morocco that sensitive observers cannot discount it. It is present in structural and landscape architecture in urban centers such as Fez as well as remote villages high on the Atlas Mountains and further South deep in desert lands (Cherraddi, 1998). And it resurfaces in mosaics, sculpted surfaces (Grammet, 1998), stained-glass, illuminations of poetry and religious books as well as documents such as marriage contracts, tents (Sorber, 1998), carpets (Boely, 1998), curtains, bed covers, clothing (Sorber, 1998), musical instruments (Olsen, 1998), jewelry (Grammet, 1998), pottery (Martinez-Servier, 1998; Camps, 1961), ornaments of religious and secular values and much more?(Lovatt-Smith, 1995)

The sense of esthetics was (and remains) so pervasive in Morocco that it inebriated modern art pioneers such as Delacroix, Ferdinand Victor Eugene (1798-1863). Delacroix, a romantic painter, inspired by both classical and Medievial art, opened the gate to impressionism by introducing into European art the vivid colors of the Maghreb. Traveling in North Africa in 1832, he stopped in Tangier, Meknes and Algier. And moved by Jewish and Arab beauty, he produced masterpieces depicting the essence of Moroccan esthetics, including interiors of Jewish homes and portraits of Jewish women, which appeared in his eyes beautiful and charming and their costumes dignified and graceful. And so, observations of daily life in Morocco elevated Delacroix?s pictorial work to a classicism long lost in Europe. Following Delacroix, many artists, including Matisse, went on pilgrimages to Morocco, most searching for artistic redemption in the exotic, colorful and sensuous (Arama, 1991; Cowart et. al. 1990).

And the influence of Moroccan esthetics did not stop at the gates of the exotic. It inspired abstract contemporary art in the work of Le Corbusier and Kadinski, who evidently borrowed from Berber geometrical forms? (Minges, 1996: 20-21). These geometrical forms found in architectural design, carpets, ceramics and jewelry, were often spontaneous bursts of artistic creativity among Moroccan creators. And their compositions remain astonishingly modern, clearly preceding the abstraction that became the foremost characteristic of modern art (Boely, 1998: 121 and Lehman, 1998).

But what did Moroccan Jews do to depict themselves?

Oral traditions convey persistently that Jewish life in Morocco goes back to Biblical times. Some say that artisans came to Morocco as early as 950 BCE during the reign of King Salomon, perhaps as his artisan emissaries and perhaps to escape his oppressive rule (see hints to Ethiopian migration in Roger, 1924). And successive waves of Hebrews immigration followed one another in conjunction with major historical population movements (i.e., with the Phoenicians or after the destruction of the First Temple) and displacements (i.e., Romans sold Jews as slaves all across the Empire). One way or another, Moroccan Jews believe that they laid the foundation to arts and crafts in Morocco since antiquity (Skounti, 1998; Chouraqui, 1985; Zafrani, 1983) and some research lends credence to this belief (Grammet, 1998; Camps, 1961; Elkhadem, 1998).

Expressions of artistic creation

Jewish artistic expressions are evident in structural and landscape architecture, mosaic and pottery, sculpted surfaces on wood, clay and plaster, stained-glass, carpets, curtains, bed covers, clothing, embroidery, leatherwork, illuminations of poetry and religious books as well as documents such as marriage contracts, musical instruments, jewelry and metalwork, ornaments of religious and secular values and much more? All these may be considered as minor arts forms in Western lands but not so in Jewish and Muslim Morocco, where religion defined the meaning of life (Swarzenski, 1967).

Merchandising artistic creation

But Jewish influence in the arts did not stop at the actual act of artistic expression in Morocco. Jews played an important role in commerce and international relations and thus were a principal vehicle of transmission of ideas relating to artistic tastes. They introduced Moroccan objects of artistic merit to foreigners and thereby had a significant influence on local demand and production of these objects. Jewish impact on artistic/esthetic tastes was not limited to bridging between Europe and Morocco but also between Morocco and Africa. For Jews dominated trans-Saharan commerce until the capture of Timbuktu by the French in 1894? (Grammet, 1998: p. 216).

Jewelry, metalwork and gold and silver embroidery creation

It is common knowledge that Moroccan Jews dominated jewelry since centuries and metalwork (i.e., silver amulet, Hanukah lamps, copper trays) and some of their work was refined and exquisite in its artistic beauty (Grammet, 1998; Africanus, 1556). But less known is their leadership in gold and silver embroidery for secular uses (i.e., clothing for the Christian and Moroccan elite) and ceremonial uses (i.e., Torah mantle and wedding dresses) (Mann, 2000, Sorber 1998:182-183).

????? Jewish jeweler, Bni Sbih, Dra Valley,

Jean Besancenot, 1934/39, Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris

???????? Silver Amulet with star of David, private collection

????? Hanukah lamp, private collection

Copper tray with star of David, private collection

?Torah mantles, Beth El synagogue, Casablanca

?????? Gold and silver embroidered wedding dress, Sale

Young woman in traditional wedding dress Jeune Jean Besancenot, 1934/39,

Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris

In the case of jewelry, some suggest that after the departure of Moroccan Jews, the quality of jewelry declined, especially in rural center of production and in many cases, rural jewelry production disappeared completely (Grammet, 1998). Some also suggest that a significant Spanish/Moorish influence is noticeable in Jewish Moroccan jewelry in terms of design and techniques due to the contribution of the Spanish/Portuguese refugees after the expulsion from Spain (Gonzales 1994, Flammant 1959).

It is common, for example, to find the Star of David in Moroccan jewelry (i.e., on Ahl Massa, Royal Museum of Central Africa, RMCA, Belgium) but Moroccan jewelry had very specific Jewish characteristics too.? Headdresses of Jewish women in Southern Morocco were different from those of their neighbors due to edicts of hair concealment. In this particular case, head dresses consisted of colorful material (foulard) on which jewelry was set (Grammet, 1998: p. 336, i.e., Jewish women of Tahala of Besancenot, 1934/39, Institut du monde Arabe, Paris). In some cases, head dresses consisted of hair too (Morin-Barde, 1998: p.346).

??????????? Jewish women of Tahala of Besancenot, 1934/39,

Institut du monde Arabe, Paris

Architectural elements and sculpted surfaces

Synagogues tended to be modest on their outside but quite impressive inside. There were large glass vases set in metal ornaments (see memorial vase, Ben Saadoun synagogue, Eliany), illuminated manuscripts and amulets (see amulet, Ben Saadoun synagogue, Eliany), Torah mantle (Torah mantle, Ben Saadoun and Beth El synagogues, Eliany), Heichal curtains/cover (Ben Saadoun synagogue, Eliany). All these were well mentioned (i.e., Mann, 2000) but little was said about architectural elements and sculpted surfaces in synagogues and interiors of Jewish homes. Surely, Jews in Morocco shared much with their neighbors but there was enough to distinguish them too. For illustration purposes, the interior of the Ben Saadoun synagogue in Fes regroups elements that typify the finest of Jewish interiors in Morocco. Several of its walls and parts of its ceilings are made of sculpted plaster (interior, Ben Saadoun synagogue, Eliany) and a series of stained glass windows crown its upper ceiling (stained glass, Ben Saadoun synagogue, Eliany). In many cases, interiors were striking in their design sophistication in synagogues as well as in private homes (interior of Dahan synagogue in Fes, Eliany).

 

Torah mantle,

memorial vases

sculpted surfaces

Ben Saadoun Synagogue

Fes, Morocco

?

?Memorial vase, Ben Saadoun synagogue, 1992

? Heichal curtains/cover Ben Saadoun synagogue, Fes

?Sculpted interior, Ben Saadoun synagogue, Fes

?Stained glass, Ben Saadoun synagogue, Fes

? Interior of Dahan synagogue in Fes

Illuminated manuscripts

Manuscript illumination was widespread in Morocco, especially in Coranic contexts but also in amulets used in popular rites (Elkhadem, 1998). In this sense, Moroccan Jews had much to share with their Moslem neighbors. But unlike their Moslem neighbors, much of the artistic creation in the form of illuminations of manuscripts and amulets disappeared or was destroyed.

?Amulet, Ben Saadoun synagogue, 1992

Jews illuminated marriage contracts (Meknes, Gross collection in Mann, 2000) and Passover Haggadoth most frequently. But occasionally, they also illuminated other Biblical passages, i.e., the Book of Esther which gained special significance following the 1492-1497 expulsion and conversion events in Spain and Portugal.

? Illuminated marriage contracts, Meknes

Similarly, Jews played a significant role in folk medicine, writing amulets to heal Jews and non-Jews or bring upon them blessings and good luck. For this purpose, Jews illuminated amulets on paper, leather, textiles, clay and other metals. Some of the amulets were small, designed for individual and private use but some were displayed for all to see in synagogues and private homes (Mann, 2000; see amulet, Ben Saadoun synagogue above, Eliany).

Pottery and stone sculpting

Jewish women made pottery to satisfy their basic needs for the most part but occasionally they did produce some for neighbors and friends and possibly for sale in neighboring markets (Decorative fruit tray and pottery in the market place, Eliany). Most of the pottery making was done from local clays using modeling techniques, without a potter?s wheel. Deriving clay from a riverbank and fashioning it was associated with the act of creation and was often considered a sacred act of a mythical dimension (Martinez-Servier, 1998).

?Decorative fruit tray, Ouarzazat

? Pottery in the market place, Sale

Jewish men were rarely involved in pottery making but it is not inconceivable that there were Jewish potters at one time or another. Men in Morocco often used potters wheels and according to some, Phoenicians introduced local inhabitants to it (Camps, 1961). It is also very likely that men sculpted stones, although it is rarely mentioned in art reviews.

Forms and decoration of Moroccan pottery and sculpted stone are loaded with meanings and symbolism, which according to some go back to prehistoric periods and may have special significance to archeological research (Martinez-Servier, 1998). Some of the symbols and decoration found on Moroccan pottery have been associated with Nabathian writing (Elkhadem, 1998). Some oil lamps, for example, resemble ancient Hebrew lamps and their forms may date back to Biblical/Roman times (i.e., ancient oil lamps sculpted in stone, private collection, Eliany). Decorations may be painted (butter pot, Batha museum, Fes), engraved (engraved plate, private collection, Eliany) or sculpted on a pottery surface (RMCA, Belgium).

Art reviewers tend to emphasize utilitarian use to diminish artistic merit (i.e., oil lamps) while artistic merit is understated or ignored in cases where utilitarian use was not intended, i.e., stone sculpting (for example: Man and Wife and warrior, below).

????? Ancient ceramic oil lamp, private collection

????? Ancient stone sculpted Hanukah lamp, private collection

?Ancient stone sculpted Shabbat lamp, private collection

????? Ceramic butter shop, Batha museum, Fes

??????????? Engraved ceramic plate, private collection

????? Pottery with sculpted surface RMCA

??????????? Stone sculpted man and wife, private collection

????? Stone sculpted warrior, private collection

Contemporary art expressions

Given the overpowering traditional cultural setting which provided the context for the artistic expression of Moroccan Jews, it is interesting to explore how and when the Moroccan Jewry wandered into contemporary form of art.

It is clear that in spite of the encounter with visiting artists such as Delacroix, Western art left little impression on Moroccan artists, probably because the world of meanings of Moroccan Jews remained bound by religious constraints. In this sense, a significant breach had to occur in Morocco for artistic creation per se to detach itself from artistic creation in its craft form. Given the strongly grounded traditional patterns of artistic creation in Morocco, an artist had to deviate from them to break ground into modern and contemporary art forms. But until the early 50?s, religious and traditional constraints remained potent and only sustained exposure to external cultures, i.e., French, Israeli or North American, made contemporary artistic expressions legitimate.

In this context, contemporary art expressions have gained ground in Morocco even if they did not detach themselves completely from the world of colors and symbolism in which they were born and which served a fertilization ground to Modern artists from Delacroix through Matisse and Kadinski. As Moroccan painters broke grounds into contemporary art forms of expression, they found themselves on a perennial crossroad, the crossroad where North and South or East and West met since many centuries.

The French influence

The exposure to French art centers is noticeable in the work of Elbaz and BenHaim.

Leading among contemporary Jewish artists in Morocco is Andre Elbaz, born in El Jadida (Mazagan), in 1934. He studied art and theatre in Rabat (1950-55) as well as in Paris (1957-61) and taught art in Casablanca (1962-63).

??? Andr? Elbaz in his studio

His work depicts Jewish themes in the abstract expressionist tradition: i.e., figures in synagogue settings, tragic events such as the Holocaust (exhibited at Yad Vashem in 1985) and the Inquisition in 1992.

???? Gouache on paper, Andr? Elbaz

Living in Paris, his most recent work vacillates between expressionistic portrayals of Jerusalem and powerful conceptual abstract work in which he yearns to eradicate interfaith destructiveness.

? Untitled, Andr? Elbaz, colored paper paste, 1987

Maxime Ben Haim born in Meknes in 1941, studied art in Paris in the mid sixties, lives in Montreal since 1979.

??? Maxime Ben Haim self portrait, acrylics on paper

Ben Haim elevates Moroccan the Jewish quarter (Melah) as well as ancestral figures from common existence to archetypal transcendence in a somewhat expressionistic/realistic style.

???? Miriam, 1988, Acrylics and oil on paper, 61×56 cm.

??? House in a shadow, 1988

?????????????????????????????????????????????????????? Acrylics and oil on canvas, 109x130cm,

Ben Haim?s work is firmly grounded in Jewish roots and yet it transcends cultural boundaries, bridging across collective memories binding Jews and Arabs across many generations.

The Israeli/North American influence

Pinhas Cohen Gan born in Meknes in 1942 in Meknes, immigrated to Israel in 1949, graduating from Bezalel Art Academy (1970), the Hebrew University (1973) and Columbia University in 1977.

????? Pinhas Cohen Gan, photo of Liora Laor

??????????? Latent figurative circuit, 1977,

Acrylic and oil on a sheet and a cardboard

30x32x218 cm.

Pinhas Cohen Gan is well known as a conceptual abstract painter in Israel. Cohen Gan juxtaposed the individual and his environment, confronting men to ?scientific? realities, a metaphor for the alienation of newcomers from Arab countries in a ?Westernized? Israel (Fuhrer 1998; Omer 1983).

Marc Eliany, born in 1948 in Beni Melal, immigrated to Israel in 1961 and moved to Canada in 1976. He was educated at the Technion (1969-71), the Hebrew University (1971-76) and Carleton and Ottawa Universities (1976-1981).

? ????????? Eliany in his studio, Photo of Camille Zakharia,

??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? Museum of Civilization, Gatineau, Canada

Eliany is a multidisciplinary artist dedicated to documenting Jewish life in Morocco. He addresses issues relating to inter-cultural tolerance in a symbolic expressionist fashion.

??????? Man at work, 1977, Gouache on cardboard, 50x70cm

??? After the market on a bright sunny day, 1994

??????????????????????????????????? Acrylics and oil on canvas board, 50×60 cm

?“Eliany touches the heroic, the power of the symbol? His painting reduces rhythms to their essential? His work expresses his deep and colorful spirituality, and his fierce sensuality?? (Ouaknine, 1994).

Discussion

From an historical perspective, much artistic merit is found in Morocco?s material culture in the work of common artisans and craftsmen.? Western modern artists found artistic redemption in it and Moroccan Jews made a significant contribution to it in creation and diffusion. Given the strongly grounded traditional patterns of artistic creation in Morocco, artists had to deviate from them to break ground into modern and contemporary art forms. But until the early 50?s, religious and traditional constraints remained potent and only sustained exposure to external cultures, i.e., French, Israeli or North American, made contemporary artistic expressions legitimate. There are certainly many more artists to represent Moroccan Jewish artistic creation and in due time, more will be written about them. Meanwhile, the four selected here, Elbaz and BenHaim on one side and Cohen-Gan and Eliany, on the other side, certainly typify the breakthrough into contemporary art, forgetting not their roots.

References

Africanus, Leo, 1556??????????????? Description de l?Afrique, Lyons

Arama, Maurice, 1991 ??????????? Itineraires Marocains, Jaguar, Paris

Boely, G?rard, 1998???????????????? Les Tapis du Moyen Atlas dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Camps, G. 1961?????????????????????? Monuments et rites funeraires protohistoriques

??????????????????????????????????????????????? Arts et M?tiers graphiques, Paris

Cherraddi, Cadre, 1998?????????? Les Kasbah du Sud dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Chouraqui, Andr?, 1985?????????? Histoire des Juifs en Afrique du Nord, Hachette, Paris

???????????

Cowart et al. 1990?????????????????? Matisse in Morocco 1912-1913

??????????????????????????????????????????????? National Gallery of Art, Washington

Elkhadem, Hossam, 1998???????? Les Manuscrits dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Flammant, P., 1959????????????????? Les communautes Israelites du Sud-Marocain,

Imprimerie reunites, Casablanca

Fuhrer, Ronald, 1998?????????????? Israeli Painting,

An Elephant Eye Book, New York

Gonzales, V., 1994?????????????????? Emaux d?Al Andalus et du Maghreb,

Edisud, Aix en Provence

Grammet, Ivo, 1998???????????????? L?esthetique de la culture materielle? dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Grammet, Ivo, 1998???????????????? Les tapis du Haouz dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Grammet, Ivo, 1998???????????????? Les bijoux dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Grammet, Ivo, 1998???????????????? El?ments d? architecture et mobilier en bois dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Lehman, Zineb, 1998??????????????? Le Tapi Ouaouzguite dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Lovatt-Smith, Lisa, 1995 ???????? Moroccan Interiors, Taschen, NewYork

Mann, Vivian B., 2000???????????? Morocco, Jews and Art in a Muslim Land,

Merrel and the Jewish Museum of New York, New York

Martinez-Servier N. 1998???????? La poterie dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Minges, K., 1996???????????????????? Berber Teppiche und Keramik. Museum Bellerive, Zurich

Morin-Barde, Mireille, 1998???? Coiffures, maquillages et tatouages dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Olsen, Rovsing, M., 1998???????? Traditions Musicales de la Montagne dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Omer, Mordechai, 1983?????????? Pinhas Cohen Gan 1983

??????????????????????????????????????????????? Haifa Museum of Modern Art, Israel

Ouaknine, Serge, 1994???????????? Gates of Welcome, Auberge des Arts Virtual Publications, Canada

Roger, R. 1924??????????????????????? Le Maroc chez les auteurs anciens, Les Belles Lettres, Paris

Skounti, Ahmed, 1998????????????? Introduction Historique dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Sorber, Frieda, 1998??????????????? La tente dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Sorber, Frieda, 1998??????????????? Technologie dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Sorber, Frieda, 1998??????????????? Les textiles d?ameublement dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren

Sorber, Frieda, 1998??????????????? Les vetements dans Splendeurs du Maroc, Musee Royal de l?Afrique Centrale, Tervuren (pp.182-183).

Swarzenski, Hanns, 1967 ??????? Monuments of Romanesque Art, Chicago University Press, Chicago

Zafrani, Haim, 1983????????????????? Milles ans de vie juive au Maroc. Maisonneuve et Larosse, Paris

Other sources:

Andre Elbaz, 1971?????????????????? Seuls

Andre Elbaz, 1991?????????????????? Of Fire and Exile

www.artengine.ca/eliany/

www.maximebenhaim.ht.st

Expsotions – Eliany Marc

Eliany – Expositions

2007 – 2010 Haela Art Center, Israel
2007
Galeria Cavendish Mall, Cote St Luc, Quebec
2006
Galeria Cavendish Mall, Cote St Luc, Quebec
2005 McMichael Collection d’Art Canadien

2005 Archive National, Ottawa, Canada
2005 Galeria Cavendish Mall, Cote St Luc, Quebec
2005 Cube Galerie, Ottawa, Canada

2004??? Michele Villeneuve Galerie d?art , Ottawa, Ontario, Canada,
2004 St Andrews Open Art Studio (exposition permanente)

2003??? Michele Villeneuve Galerie d?art , Ottawa, Ontario, Canada,
2003 Musee de la Nature, Ottawa, Canada
2003 COAT, studio ouvert, artistes d?Ottawa centre
2003 Billings Museum Art Fair, Ottawa, Canada

2002??? Universit? Ben Gurion, Beer Sheva, Israel (exposition, lecture de Resadeira, conference)
2002 Auberge des Arts, Montpellier, Quebec (exposition continue)
2002 Mus?e des Civilisations, Ottawa, Canada (Ces pays qui m?habitent)
COAT, studio ouvert, artistes du center d?Ottawa

2001??? Mus?e des Civilisations, Ottawa, Canada (Ces pays qui m?habitent)
2001 Galerie Saw, Ottawa, Canada
2001 Recycl’art, Argenteuil, Quebec
2001 Beaver College Fine Art Gallery, MD, USA

2000??? Mus?e Galerie, Colonie des artistes de Safed, Israel
2000 Mus?e contemporain de Baltimore, MD, USA???????

1999??? Galerie 101, Ottawa, Canada (Artistes contre la Violence)
1999 Collected Works, Ottawa, Canada (NOK, Artistes Africains)
1999 Parlement du Canada, Ottawa, Canada (Artistes contre le racisme)

1998??? CCIBB, Paris (Boulogne), France

1997? ? Enriched Bread Artists Gallery, Ottawa, Canada, collaboration avec
?Art sur la rue Preston? et l?Association des marchants de la rue Preston et la semaine des vendenges (La Vendemia)
1997 Z?rich Kosmos Galerie, Vienne, Autriche (parrain? par la companie d?assurance Z?rich)????????????????

1996??? Kasbah, Ottawa, Canada

1995??? 67eme competition international,
Association des art de la galerie Harrisburg, Harrisburg, Pennsylvanie??

1994??? 29th competition international, The Fine Arts Institute, San Bernardino, County Museum, Californie?
1994 Alvan G. and Carol J. Lampke prize,? New Heaven, Connecticut. USA
1994 Hilton, Vienne, Autriche (parrain? par l?embassade du Maroc)
1994 Galerie in der Sterngasse, Vienne, Autriche
1994 Palais Clam Gallas, Vienne (parrain? par les embassades de la France et du Maroc)
1994 Galerie Karl Strobl, Vienne, Autriche (parrain? par l?institut Afro-Asiatique)

1985???? Centre de conference de Winnipeg, Canada
1985 Universit? Carleton, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada??

1980?? JCC, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
1979???? Fine things Gallery, Fournier, Ontario??????????

Correspondence:
67 Chesterton drive,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2E 5T4

eliany.marc@gmail.com

Websites:
www.artengine.ca/eliany/
www.virtualpublications.ca
         www.civilization.ca/expo/eliany/

skype eliany10

Exhibitions – Eliany Marc

2013 – 2006 Haela art centre, Haela art association, Israel
2010 Chelsea Gallery, London, England
2010 – 2006 Havaya art centre, Haela art association, Israel
2010 – 2005 Galeria Cavendish Mall, Montreal, Canada  (www.virtualpublications.ca)
2005 McMichael Collection d’Art Canadien

2005 National Archive, Ottawa, Canada
2005 Cube Gallery, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
2004 – 2003 Michele Villeneuve Art Gallery, Ottawa, Canada
2004 St Andrew’s Open Art Studio (Ongoing exhibition)
2003 Museum of Nature, Ottawa, Canada
2003 – 2002 COAT, open studio, part of central Ottawa artists tour
2003 Billings Museum Art Fair, Ottawa, Canada
2002 Ben Gurion University, Beer Sheva, Israel (exhibition, reading of play Resadeira, lecture)
2002 Auberge des Arts, Montpellier, Quebec (ongoing exhibition)
2002 – 2001 Museum of Civilization, Ottawa, Canada (Lands within me)
2002 COAT, open studio, part of central Ottawa artists tour
2001 Saw Gallery, Ottawa, Canada (part of fund raising event)
2001 Recycl’art, Argenteuil, Quebec
2001 Beaver College Fine Art Gallery
2000 Museum Gallery, Safed Artist Colony, Israel
2000 Contemporary Museum, Baltimore, MD, USA
1999 Gallery 101, Ottawa, Canada (part of Artists Against Violence Exhibition)
1999 Collected Works, Ottawa, Canada (part of NOK, African Artists Exhibition)
1999 Parliament of Canada, Ottawa, Canada (Artists Against Racism Exhibition)
1998 CCIBB, Paris, France
1997 Enriched Bread Artists Gallery, Ottawa, Canada in collaboration with:
1997 Art on Preston Street and the Association of Preston Street Merchants and the Vendemia
1997 Zürich Kosmos Galerie, Vienna, Austria (sponsored by Zürich Insurance Europe)       
1996 Kasbah, Ottawa, Canada (part of art in living spaces)
1995  67th annual competition, The art association of Harrisburg Gallery, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
1994  29th International competition, The Fine Arts Institute, San Bernardino, County Museum, California
1994 Alvan G. and Carol J. Lampke prize,  New Heaven, Connecticut.

1994 Hilton, Vienna, Austria (sponsored by the Embassy of Morocco)
1994 Galerie in der Sterngasse, Vienna, Austria
1994 Palais Clam Gallas, Vienna (sponsored by the Embassies of Morocco and France)
1994 Galerie Karl Strobl, Vienna, Austria (sponsored by the Afro-Asian Institute)

1985 Conference Centre, Winnipeg, Canada
1985 Carlton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
1980 JCC, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
1979 Fine things Gallery, Fournier, Ontario     
See  Reviews

Community Art projects

1979 Established the Fine Things Gallery in Fournier, Ontario, a rural artists collaboration project in Prescott Russell, East of Ottawa

1980-1981 Contributed to Big Brothers Annual Art auction, Ottawa, Canada

1996-1997 Initiated Art on Preston Street in collaboration with the Preston Street Merchants association and the Vendemia Week, Ottawa, Canada

1997-1999 contributed to the development of NOK, African Artist Association,

Ottawa, Canada, acted as Secretary of the Association

1997-2000 Contributed and led the development of Crazy About Art in collaboration with the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA), Ottawa, Canada. Crazy About Art is an ongoing art therapy program based in Ottawa and managed by CMHA.

1997-2000 Contributed to United Way and CCOC art for fund raising development project

1997-2000 Contributed to Artists Against Racism, Ottawa, Canada

1998 Contributed to Artists against Violence, Ottawa, Canada

2001-2002 Contributed to Lands within Me, artists from Arab Lands established in Canada

1980-2002 ongoing community project documenting Jewish Life in an Arab Land (Morocco) in painting, writing, research, photography and video (see website www.artengine.ca/eliany/ for more publications and related exhibits).

2000-2002 Contributed to a round table committee for art development in la Petite Nation Region, North East of Ottawa. Contributed to a round table committee on the use of art for development of tourism in la Petite Nation Region, North East of Ottawa.

2002 Invited artist to Ben Gurion University, inaugurated “The Last Jews of Ifrikia” exhibition, launched a reading of the play “Rezadeira” and delivered a lecture on the documentation of Jewish community life in Morocco.

2003 Invited to Auckland, New Zealand to exhibit and deliver two lectures:

“Artistic creation and the Moroccan Jewish Diaspora” and “Burial Practices and the Fes Jewish Cemetery” two art and photography research projects. (see website www.artengine.ca/eliany/ for more publications and related exhibits).

2002-2003 Contributed to the Ben Zvi Diaspora Research Institute publication “The Moroccan Jewry” (Profiles of Jewish Moroccan Artists (article), Moroccan Landscapes (photos), Jewish life in Morocco (photos) (see website www.artengine.ca/eliany/ for more publications and related exhibits).

2000-2003 Established an artist residence program Auberge des Arts at Lake Schryer, North East of Ottawa.

2003 Contributor to COAT, Center Ottawa Art Tour.

Collections

Private collections in Canada, Austria, Israel, Danemark, Belgium, France, China.

Austria Karin Fuessl,Cecile Dujardin, Dr Nichola Wochins, Franz Maur, Chen Xi, Dr. Gabriele Kohlbauer, Musee Juif de Vienne,
Institut Afro-Asiatique,
Zurich Cosmos Corp.

Canada Gillette Trickey, Johanne Trickey, Societe Gama, CCOC, Robert Trepanier, Katherine Palmer, Carole Toone, Arthur and Rivka Waas, Genevieve Trickey, Steve Schreiber, Camille Zakharia, Louise Dupont, Ellen Rasnikoff, Joseph Levy, Dr. Leo Gaudet, Dr. Chantal Whelan, Lynda Bernfeld, Joseph Cohen, Mahnaz Tarkipour, Marcel Plamondon, Jacques Charboneau, Evie Duhard, Nicole Gagnon, Monique Landry, Aron Zohar

Marocco Sa Majeste le Roi du Maroc, Hassan II, Ambassade du Maroc a Vienne, Autriche, M. El Fassi Fihri, amb. du Maroc a Vienne, M. Ben Moussa, amb. du Maroc a Vienne

Israel Nathan Acoca, Rony Acoca, Yaron Scharlitz, Simon Lahyani, Pnina Shuruk, Margalth Scharlitz, Idith Shreier, Nicole Lankri, Miriam Bouzaglo, Samy Eliany, David Eliany, Yitschak Kerem, Shoshana Gueta

Belgium Ignace et Jacqueline Dujardin

France Philipe Levy, Helene Kutner

Senegal Mamadou Seck

Danemark Lars Peterson

USA Stephan Dupont et TJ Shia, Eliyakim and Toby Frank, Adam and Elizabeth Frank

Reviews abstracts

“Marc Eliany touches the heroic, the power of the symbol. His painting reduces rhythms to their essential. From his native Morocco, he does not paint the concrete object but powerful symbols, a transformation of his childhood milieu. In his allegory on canvases, Marc Eliany, does not express nostalgia but a desire to repossess the doors, the walls and landscapes of his native Morocco. His work expresses his deep and colorful spirituality, and his fierce sensuality.” (review from Gates of Welcome by Dr Serge Ouaknine, Universite du Quebec 1994)

“In his exhibition ‘Eroba Eroba’, Marc Eliany uses colors and forms as symbols to tell a story about Europe from a non-European point of view. He expresses: hope for a better future. deception… persecutions… and he turns back to hope… Using a language of Symbolic Expressionists, this artist tells a painted tale in which he bridges between two worlds” (Exerts from a review of Eroba Eroba by Dr Gabriele Kohlbauer, Vienna Jewish Museum, 1997)

For full reviews see website: www.artengine.ca/eliany/

Studies

A graduate in personnel management (Technion 1979), social sciences (Hebrew University of Jerusalem BA 1974, MA 1976), Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada (Doctorat 1976-1980) and University of Ottawa (Diplomes 1985). Published extensively in the area of Health Studies in Canada (1989-1996). Auto-didactic in the area of the arts, studied at the Tel Hay College of Art in Israel (1966) and the School of Art in Ottawa (1985), worked intermittently with other artists in Canada, France, Austria, Israel and Morocco.

Member of Saw Video, Art Engine, COAT Central Ottawa Artist Tour in Ottawa Canada, Recycl’Art of Quebec, CARFAC.
Involved in art and tourism initiatives in Israel and Canada.

Born March 26, 1948 in Beni Mellal, Morocco.

For detailed education and professional qualifications see life CV in www.artengine.ca/eliany/

Correspondence:

eliany.marc@gmail.com

Correspondence:

67 Chesterton drive, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2E 5T4 1 613 800 9030
15 Moshav Sedot Micah, Doar Na Haela 99810 Israel

eliany2603@hotmail.com

Websites:

www.artengine.ca/eliany/
www.virtualpublications.ca
www.civilization.ca/expo/eliany/
www.jewishmoroccanarchive.co

Education (Francais)

Eliany, Marc
Etudes????????????????????

Etudes en sciences sociales ? l’universit? de J?rusalem (BA 1974, MA 1976), Universit? Carleton ? Ottawa (Doctorat 1976-1980) et l?universit? d?Ottawa (Diplomes 1985). Multiples publications acad?miques au Canada (1989-1996) et au Nations Unies (1993-1996). Etudes au college d’art de Tel Hay en Israel (1966) et ? l’?cole des arts ? Ottawa? (1985) en plus de travail intermittent avec d’autres artistes au Canada, en Autriche, France, Maroc et Israel.?N? le 26 mars 1948 ? Beni Mellal, Maroc.

(Plus de detailes dans life C.V. en Anglais).

Correspondence
67 Chesterton drive,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2E 5T4

eliany.marc@gmail.com
Websites:
www.artengine.ca/eliany/
www.virtualpublications.ca
www.civilization.ca/expo/eliany/

Recherche sur internet: ‘eliany’
skype eliany10

Art Education

A graduate in personnel management (Technion 1979), social sciences (Hebrew University of Jerusalem BA 1974, MA 1976), Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada (Doctorat 1976-1980) and University of Ottawa (Diplomes 1985). Published extensively in the area of Health Studies in Canada (1989-1996). Auto-didactic in the area of the arts, studied at the Tel Hay College of Art in Israel (1966) and the School of Art in Ottawa (1985), worked intermittently with other artists in Canada, France, Austria, Israel and Morocco.

Member of Saw Video, Art Engine, COAT Central Ottawa Artist Tour in Ottawa Canada, Recycl’Art of Quebec, CARFAC.
Involved in art and tourism initiatives in Israel and Canada.

Born 1948, Morocco.

For detailed education and professional qualifications see life CV in www.artengine.ca/eliany/
Correspondence:

67 Chesterton drive,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2E 5T4

eliany.marc@gmail.com
Websites:
www.artengine.ca/eliany/
www.virtualpublications.ca
         www.civilization.ca/expo/eliany/

Projects D’arts Dans la Communaute

Eliany
Projects d’arts dans la communaute

1979??????????????? Development de la galerie Fine Things Gallery, Fournier, Ontario, un projet de collaboration des artistes dans un milieu rural,
Prescott Russell, Est d?Ottawa

1980-1981?????? Contribution au Grands Fr?res d?Ottawa, Ancan d?art annuel, Ottawa, Canada

1996-1997?????? Development d?Art sur Preston Street en collaboration avec les marchants de la rue Preston et la semaine de la Vendemia, Ottawa, Canada

1997-1999 Development de NOK, Association des artistes Africains, Ottawa, Canada, Secretaire de l?association

1997-2000?????? Contribution et development de ?Fou des Art? en collaboration avec la Soci?t? Canadienne de sant? mental (CMHA), Ottawa, Canada. ?Fou des arts? est un programme de therapie dans l?art base ? Ottawa.

1997-2000?????? Contribution ? United Way et CCOC art, un project de vente, therapie d?art, collection de fonds.

1997-2000 Contribution ? Artistes contre le racisme, Ottawa, Canada

1998 Contribution ? Artistes contre la violence, Ottawa, Canada

2001-2002 Contribution ? Ces pays qui m?habittent, artistes originaires des pays Arabes etablis au Canada

1980-2002?????? projet communautaire de documentation continue de la vie juive dans un pays arabe (Maroc) en painture, ?criture, recherche, photographie et video (voir le site web www.artengine.ca/eliany/ pour plus d?information).

2000-2002?????? Contribution ? le commit? pour le developement des arts dans la region de la Petite Nation, Nord Est d? Ottawa. Contribution au commit? pour le development du tourisme par l? art et la culture, region de la Petite Nation.

2002 Artiste invit? ? l?univesit? Ben Gurion, exposition ?Les derniers juifs d? Ifrikia? lecture de la pi?ce de theatre ?Rezadeira? et presentation sur la documentation des derniers juifs du Maroc.

2003 Invition ? Auckland, Nouvelle Zelande, exposition ?Les derniers juifs d? Ifrikia? et presentation sur ?La creation artistique et la diaspora juive Marocaine? and ?Practiques de funerails et le cimetiere de Fes? (voir site web www.artengine.ca/eliany/ ).

2002-2003?????? Contribution ? la publication Juifs du Maroc de l?institut Ben Zvi sur la recherch? sur la Diaspora des juifs (Profiles des Artistes juifs Marocain (article), Paysages Marocains (photos), La vie Juive au Maroc (photos)) (voir site web www.artengine.ca/eliany/ ).

2000-2003 Developement de la residence des artistes ‘Auberge des Arts sur lac Schryer?,??Nord Est d?Ottawa

2003??????????????? Contribution ? COAT, Association des artistes du centre d?ottawa.????

2004 Etablissement de St Andrew’s Open Studio, un espace d’exposition collaborative??

2005 Camps de formation dans les arts en collaboration avec l’ecole de arts d’Ottawa.
2005 developement du site web du cercles des artistes de montreal, Galeria www.virtualpublications.ca

Correspondence:

67 Chesterton drive,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2E 5T4

eliany.marc@gmail.com

Websites:
www.artengine.ca/eliany/
www.virtualpublications.ca
www.civilization.ca/expo/eliany/

skype eliany10

Community Art projects

Eliany
Community Art projects

1979??????????????? Established the Fine Things Gallery in Fournier, Ontario, a rural artists collaboration project in Prescott Russell, East of Ottawa

1980-1981?????? Contributed to Big Brothers Annual Art auction, Ottawa, Canada

1996-1997?????? Initiated Art on Preston Street in collaboration with the Preston Street Merchants association and the Vendemia Week, Ottawa, Canada

1997-1999             contributed to the development of NOK, African Artist Association, Ottawa, Canada, acted as Secretary of the Association

1997-2000?????? Contributed and led the development of ?Mad About Art? in collaboration with the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA), Ottawa, Canada. ?Mad About Art? is an ongoing art therapy program based in Ottawa and managed by CMHA.

1997-2000?????? Contributed to United Way and CCOC art fund raising project

1997-2000             Contributed to Artists Against Racism, Ottawa, Canada

1998                                Contributed to Artists against Violence, Ottawa, Canada

2001-2002             Contributed to Lands within Me, artists from Arab Lands established in Canada

1980-2002?????? ongoing community project documenting Jewish Life in an Arab Land?(Morocco) in painting, writing, research, photography and video (see website www.artengine.ca/eliany/ for more publications and related exhibits).

2000-2002?????? Contributed to a round table committee for art development in la Petite Nation Region, North East of Ottawa. Contributed to a round table committee on the use of art for development of tourism in la Petite Nation Region, North East of Ottawa.

2002                                Invited artist to Ben Gurion University, inaugurated ?The Last Jews of Ifrikia? exhibition, launched a reading of the play ?Rezadeira? and delivered a lecture on the documentation of Jewish community life in Morocco.

2003                                Invited to Auckland, New Zealand to exhibit and deliver two lectures: ?Artistic creation and the Moroccan Jewish Diaspora? and ?Burial Practices and the Fes Jewish Cemetery? two art and photography research projects. (see website www.artengine.ca/eliany/ for more publications and related exhibits).

2002-2003?????? Contributed to the Ben Zvi Diaspora Research Institute publication ?The Moroccan Jewry? (Profiles of Jewish Moroccan Artists (article), Moroccan Landscapes (photos),? Jewish life in Morocco (photos)?, (see website www.artengine.ca/eliany/ for more publications and related exhibits).

2000-2003             Established an artist residence program Auberge des Arts at Lake Schryer, North East of Ottawa.

2003??????????????? Contributor to COAT, Center Ottawa Art Tour.
2004 Established St Andrew’s Open Art Studio (A collaborative art exhibition space in Ottawa, Canada)

2005 Art retreats in collaboration with the Ottawa School of Art at Lake Schryer, Quebec

2005 Established Galeria Website for Le cercles des Artistes de Montreal, also member of the board

2006 – 2009 Contributor to Haela art association, Israel

2006-2011 contributor to the Museum of Moroccan Jewry, Israel

Correspondence

67 Chesterton drive,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2E 5T4
 
eliany.marc@gmail.com
Websites:
www.artengine.ca/eliany/
www.virtualpublications.ca
     www.civilization.ca/expo/eliany/
skype: eliany10

Revues d’Arts

En bref
“Marc Eliany touche ? l’h?raldique, ? la force du signe… Sa peinture…? r?duit les rythmes, les ?lans ? l’essentiel. Du Maroc, il ne peint pas d’objet figuratif mais des signes forts, nouvelle transfiguration des lieux de son enfance… Aussi, dans cette all?gorie des toiles de Marc Eliany, je ne lis pas la nostalgie mais un d?sir de r?appropriation de toutes les portes, murs et paysages de son Maroc natal. Un pas vers sa spiritualit? fervente, color?e et sa farouche sensualit?…” de L?Arche de la Tol?rence, Dr. Serge Ouaknine, Universit? du Qu?bec, Montreal. 1994

“Dans son exposition ‘Eroba Eroba’, Marc Eliany utilise couleurs et formes comme symboles pour parler de l’Europe selon le point de vue d’un non-europ?en; il exprime l’espoir d’un meilleur avenir… la d?ception… les pers?cutions… et il retourne ? l’espoir encore… A travers le langage du symbolisme abstrait, l’artiste raconte une histoire sur des toiles qui cherchent ? construire un pont entre deux mondes…” Dr Gabriele Kohlbauer, Mus?e Juif de Vienne, 1997

Revues detail?s

National Archive, Ottawa, Canada
January 20, 2005

C’est au Maroc, a Beni Mellal, qu’ Eliany a vu le jour en 1948. Il restera très attaché à son pays natal, qu’il quitte dès 1961, et y retournera régulièrement.
Son travail, reflète le retour constant vers les lieux de son enfance et la recherche de ses racines. Dans sa peinture ‘Orange en Vert,’ Beni Melal qui l’a vu naître, au coeur de ses vergers, forment un océan vert sur lequel flottent des oranges mythique. Sa peinture, comme sa poesie reduit les rythmes et les elans a l’essentiel.Il a participé à plusieurs expositions au Canada, aux États-Unis et en Europe. Ses œuvres figurent dans plusieurs collections publiques et privées.

 

Ces Pays qui m’habitent14 novembre 2001. Mise ? jour : 3 d?cembre 2001 ? Soci?t? du Mus?e canadien des civilisations
(voir aussi Kaouk, Aida, 2003 Ces pays qui m’habitent, Soci?t? du Mus?e canadien des civilisations)

C’est au Maroc, dans le village de Beni Mellal, que Marc Eliany a vu le jour en 1948. Il restera tr?s attach? ? son pays natal, qu’il quitte d?s 1961 pour Isra?l, et y retournera r?guli?rement. Durant ses ann?es d’?tudes universitaires ? J?rusalem, il fait un s?jour au Canada. S?duit par la beaut? et l’atmosph?re paisible du pays, il d?cide de s’?tablir ? Ottawa en 1976. Il y poursuit ses ?tudes et obtient un doctorat en sociologie. Engag? par l’Organisation des Nations Unies, il vivra temporairement en Californie, en Autriche et en France, et sera appel? ? se d?placer en Orient et en Am?rique du Sud.

Ce peintre essentiellement autodidacte a n?anmoins suivi des cours au Coll?ge d’art de Tel Hay, en Isra?l, et ? l’?cole des arts, ? Ottawa. Ses influences sont multiples. Il admire la spontan?it? des peintres marocains Andr? Elbaz, Maxime BenHaim et Shaibia, l’art de la composition de Klee et de Chagall, l’utilisation des couleurs des peintres du Groupe des Sept et, enfin, les lignes et les formes de la peinture am?rindienne. Pour cr?er ses toiles, Marc Eliany utilise des pigments du Maroc qu’il m?lange avec de l’huile ou, plus rarement, de l’acrylique. Il travaille ?galement avec de la p?te ? papier color?e et des collages de papiers peints, techniques qui lui permettent de produire des surfaces extr?mement textur?es.

Mon travail, dit-il, refl?te le retour constant vers les lieux de mon enfance et la recherche de mes racines. Il peint le Maroc non pas sur le mode figuratif, mais pour en reprendre les signes les plus forts de mani?re ? transfigurer le souvenir qu’il en a. Son choix de couleurs et de symboles marocains rend par ailleurs hommage ? la tradition de tol?rance envers les ?trangers qui existe dans ce pays.

Il a particip? ? plusieurs expositions au Canada, aux ?tats-Unis et en Europe. Ses ?uvres figurent dans plusieurs collections publiques et priv?es.

Une terre de faience miroitante
Le peintre d’un ciel de l’horizon
Philip Levy, Mai 1998, Paris.

Il existe deux marques distinctes, deux Marc Eliany. Deux plans, deux pans de l’individu, comme deux jambes. Deux complexes r?seaux, souterrains et apparents ? la fois qui constituent, construisent l’oeuvre et l’?tre. Jouet la trame est toute en m?me temps, au jour et ajour?, f?conde et secr?te.

Le premier pan est celui d’une ?vidence int?rieure port?e en lui. Ce lieu est une ?vidence, une histoire, son histoire de juif marocain-canadien-isra?lien-europ?en-mondialiste. Histoire structur? par une tradition enfouie et pens?e, autrefois, pour lui m?me, et pourtant si pr?sente. Elle ne cesse de le travailler pour produire un ?tat. Qu’est ce que c’est cet ?tat? Vu lieu doubl? d’un h?ritage et d’une m?moire retir?e et d?fass? par une conscience, un souvenir analitique prope ? son ?poque, ? sa nature d’?tre humain. Pourtant cet ?tat guarde une trace: une vie touchante, une innocence bless?e port?e en lui qu’il ?voquera – d’une fa?on ind?l?bile -? dans le regard des enfants d?racin?es: Tehyia, Sinayit et Yamit, d?racin?s ? nouveau – ?videment; qu’il evoquera par cette fleur color?e au rouge de coquelicot ou perdue adroitement sur le c?t? de la toile pr?sent?e et offerte; qu’il evoquera par ce corp de juif comme crucifi? dans les camps- exhum? ou enterr?? Mort ou vivant? Tel une deposition dans un instant arr?t? donn? ? voir comme une re-d?couverte pour que l’on oublie pas.

Signifiant comme “l’Ecorch?” de Rembrandt avec heureuse finesse du peintre- un clin d’oeil ? l’art de composer de Chagall. Derriere lui sommes nous en pr?sence du bourreau ou du fr?re? La question n’est peut ?tre plus l?. Les yeux absents montrent que ce qui compte c’est le geste, la choregraphie repr?sent?e. Le geste ? double sens qui prouve qu’il s’agit l? d’une histoire sans fin reposant sur l’extr?me liruite de l’ar?te aux versants li?es et peut-?tre confondus commme deux ailes d’ un m?me risque -perp?tuel- celui d’une mise ? jour ou d’un enfouissement vers l’oubli. Oubli aux alentours sombres qui rappelle le saisissement du “Retable d’Essemheim de Gr?nwald” et le tragique du Caravage. Car ce qui saute aux yeux – t?t ou tard – t?t ou trop tart, c’est cette complicit? volontaire ou non dans l’horreur comme desormais universelle – ce qui compte, c’est le lien entra?n? malgr? tout, malgr? soi, dans ce rapport entre deux ?tres pour lesquels nous attendons – souffle et battement en suspend – que reconnaissance et conscience soient enfin d?finitivement acquises. Cette oeuvre nous permettra de l’esperer au del? de ce double risque.

Mais derri?re cette fausse apparence et simplicit?, Marc Eliany continue de nous mettre en garde par ce monde qu’il d?voile et ouvre en d?signant ce pli au retour sur lui-m?me. Voila que ses origines orientales, foulard d?licat et coquet autour du cou de l’isra?lienne qui aussi signifie son appartenance; ce voile comme une peau sur la peau peut s’apparenter ? l’?piderme de l’eau et frisonner au moindre vent, au moindre soupir, au moindre sentiment. Au moindre souvenir et nous revenons l?, ? ce qui caract?rise ce premier plan, morceau d’etoffe en latin, de l’ histoire, vue religieuse, sociologique et anthropologique de cet artiste exprim?e par une lumi?re mouill?e, inconsolable et qui donne aux choses un halo d’un autre monde, la merveille d’une ros?e matinale – l’?blouissement d’un avenir ? d?finir. Car si l’homme ?bloui pareil ? “L’Etranger” de Camus peut se perdre, ce “mouill?” comme l’on dit en aquarelle apporte fra?cheure dans ce desert et ne conduit pas ? un aveuglement ? vue fine mais bien au contraire ? vue red?finition toujours port?e plus loin et plus haut que l’on entrevoit dans “les colonnes de l’espoir” par une vue inverse de la vue plongeonte, c’est ? dire du bas vers le ciel dans un mouvement tourbillionaire et vals? qui peut s’apparenter au danse religieuse, souffique, en arabe voulant dire “morceau de laine”, danse enivrante et extatique o? tente de fusionner corps et divin. Ces colonnes qui tournoient ont quelques choses de baroque et rappellent les fresques de guilio Romano pour le Palazzo delle T? ? Montoue. Le baroque devient chez Marc Eliany vu baroque d’approche, approches du ciel et de ses mythes. Il ouvre par le ciel – le ciel lui m?me; et la ligne d’horizon n’est plus ? l’horizontal de la hauteur des yeux, mais bascul?e au sommet dont l’altitude est infinie… Pos?e dans un coin du bleu… Alors il s’eprend d’une musique intime dont sa main f?brile, comme celle du compositeur note et griffonne des signes au plus pr?s des mots et de la calligraphie, comme dans “La Pri?re” o? nous revient l’image du “Philosophe”de Rembrandt se trouvant au mus?e du Louvre. Des signes au plus loin du litt?ral, comme une vibration en toute langue, poss?d?e par le biologique, l’humain, contenue dans l’arch?typale, c’est ? dire, dans le mod?le primitif. C’est la marque du moment, l’empreinte d’un ?nervement de la premier situation… comme chez Soutine…

Dans ce d?placement le long des oeuvres, ce parcours, l’on ?prouves la pr?sence d’autres artistes, De Sta?l, Klee, la periode Fauve de Matisse, Cezanne, un peintre juif Y?m?nite avec son “Immigrant en costume traditionnel.” Apr?s ce lieu traditionnel, son enfance, son nomadisme, l’autre pan est celui d’une projection dans un devers ? ellaborer plastiquement. Ce deuxi?me volet qui doit rester ouvert ? votre imagination, concerne la fabrication, le processus m?me de cr?ation de l’oeuvre. Oeuvre subtile qui me semble r?gie sous l’ordre de la superposition et de l’accolement. D?p?ts et juxtapositions par deux axes: verticalit? et horizontalit?, ?paisseur et collage, cette proc?dure d’ellaboration se produit en deux temps: – le premier temps est classique dans sa m?thode: emprunts ? partir des copies des oeuvres de Cesanne par example. – le deuxi?me temps est de laisser s’?chapper un oue, une s?ve de cette m?thode, s?ve toute ? la foit spirituelle, ?motionnelle et savante. Il par du mur, de sa mat?rialit?, de sa forme carr? ou rectangulaire dont il a pris possession en copiant les maisons peintes de Cezannes ou Braque dans sa ville D’Estaque, puis transpos? cette materialit? en ciel. Celui-ci prend un autre corps, une autre substance: une ?motion -paradoxalement- par l’alchimie d’une superposition d’un corp mat?riel et d’une lamentation ouverte vers les cieux qu’il tente desormais d’entrevoir. Et ce mur rappelle celui originaire et rep?re de tout un peuple, le mur des lamentations du Temple de Salomon ? Jerusalem o? s’est pos? peut-?tre, pour la premi?re fois, alors enfant, ce premier regard mouill?, innocent. Ce regard devient ? son tour r?f?rence – Noltige- au gr? de son voyages o? son esprit comme la feuille morte, la juge morte tourbillonne, et se tourne gr?ce ? un vent devenu souffle, espace, horizon. Et il le repousse -ce regard- au plus loin- toujours- vers “ce mouill?” peint, qu’il tente d’approcher sans vouloir y demeurer: “Le refugier dans l’insaisissable” dit Nitzche, tendre, vers la recherche d’une extase appais?. Son exile se dessine et se peint aux fronti?res d’une terre miroitante de ses reflets solaires – quelqu’ en soit le lieu -? log? dans une verticalit? ascensionnelle, bien “au dessus des miradors” et loin des guet-ajeus. Gradations aux bords que l’on retrouve chez Barnett Newman dans son oeuvre “Abysse Euclidien” de 1945. Son exil o? le bleu du ciel et de la mer-m?re ?voque une spiritualit? profonde et haute, ? atteindre. Pour cela, un accolement sans fin. “Le mur de l’Acropole” chez Baudelaire ou des “Lamentations” chez Eliany et le lieu d’une ruine, d’un h?ritage sur lequel se b?ti l’oeuvre gr?ce au don de sa mutation, en une fen?tre d’esp?rance, d’apparence. O? la loi de l’artiste n’est pas seulement raison mais aussi vie, chaire et lumi?re. Fen?tre qui se trouve parfois pos?e sur une jambe comme celle de cet enfant Sinayit preuve de cette marche par et vers un corps innocent o? s’imagine comme le symbole d’une route ? tracer et ? voir. Ici, l’oeil est embr? et la larme venant du fond du coeur une perle.

Les portes de la m?moire Dr.Serge Ouaknine, Universit? du Qu?bec, Montreal, 1994

En ?crivant l’?vocation d’une porte, d’un seuil, Marc Eliany touche ? l?h?raldique, ? la force du signe, simple comme un drapeau. Sa peinture est en ?charpe
comme un drape qui aurait r?duit les rythmes, les ?lans ? l’essentiel. Du Maroc, il ne peint pas l’objet figuratif mais les signes forts,nouvelle transfiguration des lieux de son enfance. Ses portes sont ses peaux. Elles nous convient ? franchir le seuil de la toile pour le corps entier de sa m?moire, les sensations de son appartenance.

Marc Eliany est interpell? par la joie des seuils, des portes, m?taphores des passages. La porte est par excellence le signe de l’Exode, de la transition du
nomadisme terrestre au nomadisme c?leste jusqu’au Saint des Saints infranchissable du Temple. La porte est encore exil. Une errance. Une perte.Mais la Porte est aussi celle du savoir, un Livre ? ouvrir et ? franchir.Aussi dans cette all?gorie des toiles de Marc Eliany, je ne lis pas la nostalgie mais un d?sir de r?appropriation de toutes les portes et murs et paysages de son Maroc natal. Un pas vers sa spiritualit? fervente, color?e et sa farouche sensualit?.

Il y a de la fantasia dans la trace de son pinceau et du silence soudain sur ses plages vides. Il entre dans l’ordre d’une conception abstraite car au-del? de toute porte peut surgir le champ du sacr?.Bleu de Chaouen.Blanc de Sal?.Ocre des remparts.Or embras? des cuivres.Or diamant? des pilons et des plateaux cisel?s.Vert ?meraude, acide presque des portes de bois,des ?choppeset des maisons du Nord.Rouge sang. Orange barbare.Pourpre et noir vieillis,bronze poussi?reux du Sud.Cramoisi de Marrakech.Bleu c?leste d’Essaouira.Blanc gifle d’Agadir? de tant d??clats dans la lumi?re.Glacis multicolore de ses? mosa?ques andalouses, de ses orf?vreries ommeyades.Les parquets rejoignent les fractals d’un ordinateur m?di?val. Les formes comme des ?quations cosmiques – pour ne faire aucune illustration de Dieu.Allah le veut.

Mais qu’en est il de la parole? Elle, si volubile. Parole du n?goce. Parole de l?inqui?tude et de la s?duction. Elles sont pour moi d?finitivement associ?es ? des odeurs. Peindre le Maroc serait retracer le chemin olfactif des ruelles.De ses portes aux milles cuisines quand le labyrinthe des yeux s’associe aux remous des pas in?gaux.Tous les sens sollicit?s en chaque instant quotidien.

Il n’est pas de peinture abstraite qui puisse entrer en concurrence? avec l’immense fresque des souks.Il n’est pas de figuration possible de l?all?gorie alti?re des campagnes. De ses fellahs dont la harangue habite la ville. Il n’est pas de geste plus civilis? que ses jardins insoup?onn?s derri?re des portes modestes.Car l’Islam oblige le poss?dant ? la pudeur.La femme, un jardin intime.Chaque seuil est une attente.L’architecture des portes quasi m?taphysique.Divines proportions de leurs forces et d?su?te certitude sur ce quelles prot?gent.Les portes sont dans toutes les mythologies les all?es de l’Enfer ou du Paradis. Au Maroc comme dans tout l’Orient, les portes sont associ?es aux sanctuaires de la pri?re et ? l??rotique de la maison. Passer une porte arabe c’est entendre ce que hospitalit? veut dire: l?acc?s ? la demeure de l’autre. ? sa loi.Un ?quilibre familier entre la chambre close et le patio, entre la terrasse des sommeils d??t?? et le ciel toujours proche d’un halo de paroles.

Un artiste se r?v?le Monsieur Mamadou Seck, Directeur du Bureau de l’UNESCO ? Vienne, 1993

Ce qui frappe dans la peinture de Marc Eliany, c’est d’abord la g?n?rosit?. Marocain de naissance, il est viss?, avec ?l?gance, ? son royaume d’enfance, ce village de B?ni M?lal qui l’a vu na?tre, au c?ur de ses vergers qui forment un oc?an vert sur lequel flottent des oranges presque mythiques. Pour lui, le Maroc, c’est d’abord le Pays p?tri d’humanisme avec feu Moulay Youssef et Hassan II, souverains ouverts au monde, artisans d’un consensus national dig?rant, avec bonheur, les clivages ethniques. C’est aussi le souvenir imp?rissable de ces gardes aux vestes rouges orn?es de boutons noirs, avec leurs tuniques vertes et leurs gants blancs. Enfin, il n’a pas oubli? ses femmes portant voile par signe d’humilit? et non ? cause d’une quelconque oppression, avec, toujours, cette splendide M?diterran?e qui baigne Rabat.

Bousculant les id?es pr?con?ues, Marc Eliany se veut un observateur objectif, saluant l’admiration d’un peuple pour son Roi. N’est-ce pas la bienveillance du Roi? que recherchent tous ces p?lerins priant pour la paix, confondant avec bonheur, royaut? et saintet?, invoquant le ciel pour ?tre prot?g? contre le mauvais ?il, contre le diable? Que dire des tableaux, symbole de p?lerinage, figuration de p?lerinage dans ce pays de pri?re? Le rouge, symbole du sacrifice, le vert, symbole de l’abondance, sont partout pr?sents qui pr?sagent un avenir? fait de sant? et de bonheur.

Marc Eliany? va plus loin dans l’enchantement. Les fianc?es radieuses, les grooms en extase sans oublier les haltes dans les march?s exhalant le henn? qui rev?t ici les vertus d’une couronne sur la t?te. Que dire, aussi, de cette culture berb?re qui transpara?t ?a et l? dans la description de la vie au village avec les filles splendides, sans oublier l’?ternelle babouche prot?geant du sable chaud et la beaut? de l’artisanat que symbolise une poterie dont l’art remonte longtemps dans le pass?.

En regardant la peinture de Marc Eliany, on est vite saisi par un d?sir violent de s’attarder sur les horizons marocains, de se d?lecter de ce ciel d’un bleu ?clatant, sans oublier le peuple l?-bas, si accueillant dans les march?s baign?s de lumi?res. Avec Marc Eliany, le Maroc se d?voile comme il a toujours ?t? : un royaume o? il fait somme toute bon de vivre. Il n’est pas ais?, peut-?tre m?me pas souhaitable, de tout dire en peu de mots sur la peinture de Marc. En suscitant des r?ves, elle ouvre les yeux sur les horizons marocains dont le bleu ?clatant du ciel est un symbole vivant d’ouverture et, surtout, d’optimisme.

Le Mus?e des civilisations annule une exposition
Jean-Fran?ois Bertrand Le Droit Le mercredi 26 septembre 2001

? la suite des attentats du 11 septembre, le Mus?e canadien des civilisations a report? ? une date ind?termin?e une exposition d?oeuvres d?artistes canadiens d?origine arabe. Ces pays qui m?habitent devait ?tre la grande exposition de l?automne. Elle devait ?tre pr?sent?e du 19 octobre prochain au 9 mars 2003. Mais vendredi dernier, le comit? ex?cutif a pris la d?cision d?annuler l?exercice. ?Il est important de prendre du recul, de s?assurer que la perspective soit plus large. Nous ne voulons pas changer l?exposition, mais prendre le temps de la placer dans une nouvelle perspective?, a expliqu? Pierre Pontbriand, vice-pr?sident aux affaire publiques du mus?e.

L?exposition devait mettre en vedette les oeuvres de 26 artistes, dont trois avaient des liens avec la r?gion. Il s?agit de Farouk Kaspaules et de Sami Zubi. Marc Eliany a son studio dans la Petite-Nation. ?Apr?s ce qui est arriv? ? New York, les gens auraient vu l?exposition d?un oeil diff?rent? a dit M. Kaspaules, qui se dit tr?s d??u de la d?cision du mus?e. ?J?esp?re qu?il y aura une chance, dans l?avenir, de pr?senter les oeuvres? a ajout? l?artiste d?origine irakienne. Il a soulign? qu?il sympathisait avec les familles qui ont perdu un ?tre cher le 11 septembre. Marc Eliany comprend ?galement la d?cision du mus?e. ?On ne peut pas pr?dire la r?action des gens en g?n?ral. C?est dommage, c??tait une belle exposition. C??tait un bel acte de partage multiculturel, g?ch? par quelqu?un qui n?a pas assez de compr?hension?, a dit M. Eliany.

L?artiste est d?origine marocaine. ?Je suis juif arabe et mes oeuvres parlent de tol?rance, d??v?nements culturels partag?s par juifs, chr?tiens et arabes.?
Dans le cadre de cette exposition, ?Les oeuvres, le parcours et les paroles des artistes permettent de saisir l?exp?rience immigrante et le m?tissage des cultures?, peut-on lire dans le programme d?activit?s de l?automne du Mus?e canadien des civilisations. Plusieurs activit?s parall?les ? l?exposition ?taient ?galement au programme.
M. Pontbriand a d?clar? que l?exposition, par la nature de l?art contemporain, est plus difficile ? comprendre et a un attrait plus limit? que l?art populaire.
L??quipe de conservateurs, pr?parateurs et designers de Ces pays qui m?habitent est ? pr?parer des options qu?elle pr?sentera aux instances dirigeantes du mus?e.
Le mus?e ne voit pas sa d?cision comme allant ? l?encontre des appels ? la tol?rance, ? la compr?hension des autres cultures et ? la d?nonciation des st?r?otypes exprim?s par les ?lus, les autorit?s polici?res et les leaders spirituels de plusieurs religions.

Le Devoir Montreal, Quebec 2001 Expo Arabe? Jerome Delgado collaboration speciale

VAUT MIEUX en parler en mal que pas du tout, se sont peut-etre dit les gens du Musee canadien des civilisations de Hull de l’exposition: Ces pays qui m’habitent-Expressions d’arttistes canadiens d’origine arabe.? Annulee un premier temps par la direction pour de nebuleuses raisons reliees a l’actualite internationale, l’expo a finalement ete inauguree grace a l’intervention de Jean Chretien. Qui sait si sans ce boiteux coup politique , les medias se seraient tournes vers cette etrange reunion, ou l’on pretend que, par le fait d’avoir des memes origines (faudrait-il encore prouver que la culture arabe est uniforme), des individus se retrouvant dans un nouveau pays puissent former un groupe homogene et donc etre evalue comme tel. Principale constation : les 26 artistes rassembles ne jouent evidemment pas dans la meme ligue. Et l’amateurisme de certains, voire le mercantalisme d’autres , ne fait que porter ombrage aux quelques? signatures plus audacieuses parmi lesquelles la peintured’Hannah Alphah ou l’installation de Rawi Hage, une surprenante correspondance mi-personelle mi-fictive avec la photographe Raymonde April. L’expo se revele d’une grande banalite, avec la triste impression que l’on veut faire de ces gens des victimes. Sinon pourquoi auraient-ils fui leurs pays, ou, pis encore, pourqoui le Canada les auraient-ils accueillis? Bref, l’ensemble joue sur les liches avec un ton passablement naif “M.E a vu le jour au Maroc et a vecu en Israel (…); il reside maintenant a Ottawa, au Canada.” A qui s’adresse-t-on?

Correspondence:

67 Chesterton drive,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2E 5T4

eliany.marc@gmail.com

Websites:
www.artengine.ca/eliany/
www.virtualpublications.ca
www.civilization.ca/expo/eliany/

skype eliany10

Art Reviews

Eliany
Art Reviews

Abstracts?????“Marc Eliany touches the heroic, the power of the symbol? His painting reduces rhythms to their essential. From his native Morocco, he does not paint the concrete object but powerful symbols, a transformation of his childhood milieu? In his allegory on canvases, Marc Eliany, does not express nostalgia but a desire to repossess the doors, the walls and landscapes of his native Morocco? His work expresses his deep and colorful spirituality, and his fierce sensuality??? a review from Gates of Welcome by Dr. Serge Ouaknine, Universit? du Qu?b?c 1994

“In his exhibition ‘Eroba Eroba’, Marc Eliany uses colors and forms as symbols to tell a story about Europe from a non-European point of view? He expresses: hope for a better future? deception… persecutions… and he turns back to hope… Using a language of Symbolic Expressionists, this artist tells a painted tale in which he bridges between two worlds” Exerts from a review of Eroba Eroba by Dr Gabriele Kohlbauer, Vienna Jewish Museum, 1997

Reviews

National Archive, Ottawa, Canada
January 20, 2005

C’est au Maroc, a Beni Mellal, qu’ Eliany a vu le jour en 1948. Il restera très attaché à son pays natal, qu’il quitte dès 1961, et y retournera régulièrement.
Son travail, reflète le retour constant vers les lieux de son enfance et la recherche de ses racines. Dans sa peinture ‘Orange en Vert,’ Beni Melal qui l’a vu naître, au coeur de ses vergers, forment un océan vert sur lequel flottent des oranges mythique. Sa peinture, comme sa poesie reduit les rythmes et les elans a l’essentiel.Il a participé à plusieurs expositions au Canada, aux États-Unis et en Europe. Ses œuvres figurent dans plusieurs collections publiques et privées.


The Lands within me
Canadian Museum of Civilization, 2001

Introduction

Marc Eliany was born in the town of Beni Mellal, Morocco in 1948. He left Morocco for Israel in 1962 but remained very attached to his native country and returned there regularly. During his undergraduate studies in Jerusalem, he spent some time in Canada. Seduced by the beauty and the peaceful atmosphere of the country, he decided to settle in Ottawa in 1976 and pursued doctoral studies there. He worked for the United Nations and lived for brief periods in California and Austria and worked on assignments in the Far East and Latin America.

Essentially self-taught, his painter has nevertheless attended courses at the Tel Hay College of Art in Israel and at the Ottawa School of Art. The influences on his art are many. He admires the spontaneity of Moroccan painters Andre Elbaz, Maxime BenHaim and Shaibia, the composition of Klee and Chagall, the use of colours by painters in the Group of Seven, the lines and shapes of the Ameridian painting.

Marc Eliany uses Moroccan pigments that he mixes with oil, or more, rarely with acrylics, to create his canvases. He also works with colored paper pulp and collages techniques that allow him to produce highly textures surfaces.

?My work? he says, ?reflects the constant return to the places of my childhood and the search for my roots.? He paints Morocco, not figuratively, but recapturing its most visible landmarks in a manner that transforms his memory of it. Additionally, his choice of Moroccan colors and symbols pays tribute to the tradition of tolerance towards strangers in that country.

Marc Eliany exhibited in Canada, United States and Europe. His works are included in several public and private collections.

October 2001

From: Artistic Creation and the Moroccan Jewish Diaspora by Marc Eliany
The Israeli/North American influence

Marc Eliany, born in 1948 in Beni Melal, immigrated to Israel in 1961 and moved to Canada in 1976. He was educated at the Technion (1969-71), the Hebrew University (1971-76) and Carleton and Ottawa Universities (1976-1981)…Eliany is a multidisciplinary artist dedicated to documenting Jewish life in Morocco. He addresses issues relating to inter-cultural tolerance in a symbolic expressionist fashion…“Eliany touches the heroic, the power of the symbol? His painting reduces rhythms to their essential? His work expresses his deep and colorful spirituality, and his fierce sensuality?? (Ouaknine, 1994).
Discussion
From a historical perspective, much artistic merit is found in Morocco?s material culture in the work of common artisans and craftsmen.? Western modern artists found artistic redemption in it and Moroccan Jews made a significant contribution to it in creation and diffusion. Given the strongly grounded traditional patterns of artistic creation in Morocco, artists had to deviate from them to break ground into modern and contemporary art forms. But until the early 50?s, religious and traditional constraints remained potent and only sustained exposure to external cultures, i.e., French, Israeli or North American, made contemporary artistic expressions legitimate. There are certainly many more artists to represent Moroccan Jewish artistic creation and in due time, more will be written about them. Meanwhile, the four selected here, Elbaz and BenHaim on one side and Cohen-Gan and Eliany, on the other side, certainly typify the breakthrough intocontemporary art, forgetting not their roots.

Paintings and Photography A Moroccan Pilgrimage
Marc Eliany, at the Museum Gallery of Safed’s Artist Colony, May 25 through July 2, 2000.

Marc Eliany was born in Morocco in an enchanting town at the foot of the Atlas Mountain: Beni Melal. And he grew up as a child in Casablanca, before immigrating to Israel at the age of 12. Israel was for him, as for most Moroccan Jewry, the promise of ancestral dreams. Israel was the land of freedom from persecution and Justice. But upon settlement in Israel, the reality was different and Morocco became for him the land of dreams. And for many years, Marc Eliany studied the land of the Maghreb and engaged in an ongoing comparative analysis. In Israel, Moroccan Jewish culture disappeared with the exception of caricatural vestiges, too distant from the truth.

But in Morocco, 5000 Jews still lead the life they led for two thousand years. In “A Moroccan Pilgrimage” Marc Eliany brings a refreshing testimony on Jewish life in Fes. It is a sensitive review of life in a very old community, perhaps as old as the city itself, which was founded in 789 CE.

Jews contributed to Fes a tradition of learning, for here even Maimonides came to study, rich and colourful arts and crafts and especially jewellery making, national trade and international commerce and high court diplomacy. This was the place where even the dhimi Jew was respected.

Nowadays, only 160 Jews live in Fes, some young and some old. They no longer live in the old mellah we see in Marc’s photos, but they still congregate at the Rambam community centre for celebrations or for bi-weekly ritual slaughter of innocent chicken. They pray at the Ben Saadoun synagogue and they burry their dead in the ancient cemetary, where saints are still revered.

Here the present remains a testimony to a magnificient past.

Art Against War – June 18-26/99
a multi-media Grop Show at Gallery 101, 236 Nepean St., Ottawa, June 18-26, 1999
Sara Atkinson Johnathan Brownz John Crepano Beth Cumming Marc Eliany c.j. fleury Barbara Gamble Shaun Hupka Claude LaTour Eliza Linde Allan Harding MacKay M. Patricia McColl Don Monet Maja Nedeljkovic Margaret Nicholson Uta Riccius V. M. Roberts (MBL) David Van Sertima Yvon Villarceaux Art Wilson (Wii Muk’willixw) Paula Mitas Zoubek
Vernissage – Friday June 18, 8 pm

Art Agains War is a spontaneous event organized by artists concerned about the effects of war. "The artists taking part in this show are Canadians who resent being 
represented and implicated in the current military action in Yugoslavia, and in all wars where bombing civilians is being used in the name of making peace," 
says Ottawa artist and curator Dan Monet.? "We all felt a compelling need to say something.? To do something."
The art represented in this show covers a range of issues associated with many wars taking place around the world:? the use of Canadian bombs against a civilian 
population and civilian infrastructure in Yugoslavia and Iraq; the plight of the victims of Serbian war crimes; the further subversion of the UN general assembly as 
a political body; the immoral use of depleted uranium tipped bullets in Iraq and in Yugoslavia; Canadian support for food and medecine embargoes in Iraq; 
and the simle suffering of the innocent who are the true targets of any war.Mr. Monet says "I started with a couple of phone calls, not really knowing if anyone 
would want to take part in this show.? Then the phone started ringing with calls from across Canada.? This theme has obviously touched a raw nerve within 
the national arts community."
Note:? Allan Harding MacKay is the former Canadian War artist who initiated daily destruction of his own work in response to the Canadian government's 
active participation in the bombing of Yugoslavia.? His work is in a number of prestigious public art collections across Canada, including the National Gallery 
and the Canadian War Museum.'Wii Muk'willlixw (Art Wilson) is an hereditary chief (Wold) the Gitxsan people in Northern British Columbia.? 
He has chronicled in a combination of ancient and modern images, the struggles of people around the world.? His book of illustrations recording injustice and 
resistance "Heartbeat of the Earth" was released in 1996.
 Contact Curator:? Don Monet (613) 728-1750 Allan Harding MacKay (416) 596-7949
 Traveling Exhibitions - Snapshot

Beaver College, Fine Arts Gallery
Febrauary 25, 2001 – March 25, 2001

SNAPSHOT
An Exhibition of 1,000 Artists
February 25, 2001 – March 25, 2001

Beaver College, Fine Arts Gallery

Beaver College Participating Artists:

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W

E
Alan S Edelman, Mel Edelman, Susan Eder, Yvonne Eder, Jonathan Edmonds, Grier Edmundson, S. B. Edwards, Howard Ehrenfeld, Galia Eibenschutz, James Elaine,
Marc Eliany, Andrew Elliott, Dominic Episcopo, Naomi Epstein, Meret Erni, Roi Escudero, “Bubi” Jan Estep, Yvonne Estrada.

See also reviews in French elsewhere 

Correspondence:

67 Chesterton drive,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2E 5T4
 
eliany.marc@gmail.com

Websites:
www.artengine.ca/eliany/
www.virtualpublications.ca
         www.civilization.ca/expo/eliany/