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celebrated Wissa Wassef tapestries are the result of one man's extraordinary
"experiment in creativity" which began more than 50 years ago.
Born and educated in Egypt, Ramses Wissa Wassef trained in Paris as an
architect before the Second World War. Disturbed by the coldness and ugliness
of modern western architecture, he grew concerned about its unthinking
adoption in other countries and cultures.
When he returned to Egypt, Wissa Wassef paid close attention to indigenous
styles of architecture and became increasingly interested in periods of
history when craftsmen were respected and
prosperous members of society. This led him to conclude that the conventional
distinction between the "artist" who creates and the "craftsman"
who merely executes was prejudicial to creativity. He also observed that
although every child is moved to express him or herself in drawing from
the earliest age, this urge is almost always smothered once formal education
begins. He later wrote: "I had this vague conviction that every human
being was born an artist but that his gifts could be brought out only
if artistic activity was encouraged from early childhood by way of practising
a craft."
In 1941, Wissa Wassef was commissioned to design a primary school in one
of the oldest quarters of Cairo. When the building was finished, he obtained
permission to teach some of the pupils the craft of high warp weaving
after school hours. As soon as they had mastered the basic technique,
he left the children free to decide what images to produce. He insisted
on only three rules: no sketches; no external aesthetic influences; and
no critical interference from adults.
Encouraged by the success of this project, Wissa Wassef and his wife purchased
some land on the edge of the village of Harrania, 10 miles from Cairo
and within sight of the pyramids of Giza, in 1952. Having built a workshop,
they installed some primitive looms and invited any village child who
wished to do so - and whose parents consented - to come once a week to
learn to weave. Thus was the "art centre" established.
Just as in Cairo, the Harrania children were left to weave whatever they
liked, guided by their innate creative talent and drawing inspiration
from within themselves and their environment. Protected from external
aesthetic influences, adult criticism and interference, the children were
given the benefit of time in which to develop their skills and individuality.
Wissa Wassef's aim was to ensure that "these young artists have only
their own conception of their work, drawn from their own experience. They
know nothing of the hesitation of sophisticated artists who are continually
tempted to express themselves in the style of some other artist".
Ramses Wissa Wassef's modest experiment in Harrania rapidly demonstrated,
without exception, that any child was able to create works of astonishing
beauty. As he explained, "these children were not selected for any
special qualities they may have possessed. I can confirm, however, that
no child is devoid of the most surprising gifts."
In the 50 years since weaving began in Harrania, it has become clear that
this innate creativity can grow with the child into adolescence and adulthood.
Not long before Wissa Wassef's death in 1974, a second generation of young
villagers mastered the craft of weaving.
Although the Art Centre has greatly expanded since 1952, its fundamental
spirit and guiding philosophy remain alive. They are embodied in the very
fabric of the Centre. All the buildings, initially designed by Ramses
and later by his widow Sophie, are of dome and vault construction - for
which Ramses posthumously received the prestigious Aga Khan Award for
Architecture. At the northern edge of the garden is a large museum, completed
in 1989, whose permanent collection of tapestries shows the development
of individual weavers from the first days of the experiment. Under the
guidance of Sophie and her daughters, Suzanne and Yoanne, the "experiment"
has gone from strength to strength.
The artistic products of The Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre are not its
only contribution to Egypt and the world. The weavers are the pride of
the community. The project has transformed the lives of poor, illiterate
villagers, bringing prosperity, education, better health, self-respect
and satisfaction to all and high status to the women. The Wissa Wassefs
encouraged the first generation weavers to attend reading and writing
classes and the second generation to remain at school until the age of
16. They arranged for a private doctor to visit the Centre twice each
week to help combat bilharzia, stomach illnesses and other, then widespread,
problems. By 1963 all the weavers had joined the Egyptian government's
national health plan.
The Art Centre made an impact far beyond Harrania. It inspired commercial
entrepreneurs to introduce the craft of hand-weaving in many parts of
Egypt, giving employment to hundreds of young men and women. Suzanne Wissa
Wassef's husband, Ikram Nosshi, continued his father-in-law's pioneering
architectural work, providing job opportunities in Egypt's building industry
and inspiring others as far away as Australia to build in a similar style.
It is, however, for the remarkable results of the experiment in creativity
that Ramses Wissa Wassef and the Art Centre which bears his name are principally
renowned. Many major exhibitions in the USA and Europe have helped bring
these works of art to international attention and in so doing have helped
the Art Centre to be self-sustaining. The exhibition at the Brunei Gallery
in London further promoted the experiment and fostered understanding of
the philosophy that underlies it.
The Ramses Wissa Wassef Exhibition Trust is a registered charity and was
set up to mount exhibitions of weavings from the Art Centre in Cairo.
Further details of exhibitions, the Arts Centre and the Trust are available
in the UK by calling 020 7267 1034 or visit www.wissa-wassef-arts.com
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