Thorns in Bloom by Mohamed Abusal

Thorns in Bloom mohamed abusal

Mohamed Abusal, Samar's Garden, 2016, acrylic on canvas, 105 x 80 cm

 

THORNS IN BLOOM 
MOHAMED ABUSAL

21 SEPTEMBER - 6 OCTOBER 2016

 

The spiny bodies of Mohamed Abusal’s cacti emerge from the canvases of Thorns in Bloom, full and soft, like bodies ripe with sleep. As unique as the individuals who gaze at them, these do not stay botanical drawings that aim to capture the essence of a plant species, nor are they still-life drawings of static arrangements. These are living portraits and give the sabra a new artistic vocabulary.

Showcasing a variety of techniques through several different painting studies, the exhibit gathers luscious watercolor sketches on squares of paper beside striking and fluorescent acrylic on an oversize canvas. Bold and subtle, heavy with fruit or light with papery blossoms, some silhouettes take almost human shapes. The paintings variously evoke a man’s ribcage, the curve of a woman’s breast; soft folds of green flesh protected by a sheen of, at times, invisible thorns.

Abusal, who developed the paintings first as a technique of meditation, paints the cactus-like it has never been seen. The works reveal a true study of form. Markedly different from his widely shown photography and installation-based exhibits–which make bold and incisive political commentaries–the cacti reveal first a sensitive artist’s eye and beneath a reflection on the politics of Palestinian symbol.

To look at the works, the plants come alive, their flowers open, and they grow plump with water. Figured alone, in shared pots, lined up on a sill or a balcony ledge, or seen close-up, the color and diversity of a single plant are on display, and Abusal’s artistry is in full bloom.