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==Work==
==Work==


Exhibitions of his work jave been held in the [[United States]] ([[New York City|New York]]), [[Germany]] ([[Düsseldorf]]), [[Lebanon]], [[Jordan]], [[Dubai]], [[China]], and [[Greece]].<ref>''Jamal &ndash; The Silk Road'', 101</ref> His last solo exhibition (''The Silk Road'') took place in 2016, first in Athens at the [[Benaki Museum]] and then at the [[Museum of Asian Art of Corfu]].<ref>Lymperopoulou, ''Corfu: the Silk Road''</ref> In October 2018 the exhibition was transferred to China, at the [[Dalian]] Modern Museum.<ref>Artemiadi, ''Jamal Joratli: the next day''</ref>
Exhibitions of his work have been held in the [[United States]] ([[New York City|New York]]), [[Germany]] ([[Düsseldorf]]), [[Lebanon]], [[Jordan]], [[Dubai]], [[China]], and [[Greece]].<ref>''Jamal &ndash; The Silk Road'', 101</ref> His last solo exhibition (''The Silk Road'') took place in 2016, first in Athens at the [[Benaki Museum]] and then at the [[Museum of Asian Art of Corfu]].<ref>Lymperopoulou, ''Corfu: the Silk Road''</ref> In October 2018 the exhibition was transferred to China, at the [[Dalian]] Modern Museum.<ref>Artemiadi, ''Jamal Joratli: the next day''</ref>


==Style==
==Style==

Revision as of 12:05, 24 October 2019

Jamal Joratli is a Greece-based painter of Syrian origin.

Biography

Jamal was born in Salamiyah in 1961, and studied mechanical engineering at the University of Aleppo. He now resides and works in Greece, Athens, which he first visited in 1988.[1] He chose Greece "for its natural light and colors, which cannot be imitated even by the best photoshop application, and for its culture".[2]

Work

Exhibitions of his work have been held in the United States (New York), Germany (Düsseldorf), Lebanon, Jordan, Dubai, China, and Greece.[3] His last solo exhibition (The Silk Road) took place in 2016, first in Athens at the Benaki Museum and then at the Museum of Asian Art of Corfu.[4] In October 2018 the exhibition was transferred to China, at the Dalian Modern Museum.[5]

Style

According to Klaus Sebastian, Jamal uses tradition as a basis for his powerful paintings, while real life motifs are turned into "flowing colour energies". With his art, Jamal tries to look behind the sufaces, and to harmonically connect the oriental with the occidental artistic schools.[6]

Art professor Manos Stefanidis regards Jamal as a "pictor classicus" – in the way Giorgio de Chirico used the term, namely a painter first addressing the problem of positioning the subject in space – who integrates modern European painting in his art, "but with terms of locality and an emphasis on the personal agony of expression".[7]

Citations

  1. ^ The Silk Road by Jamal in the Musem of Modern Art
  2. ^ Angelopoulou, Jamal Joratli
  3. ^ Jamal – The Silk Road, 101
  4. ^ Lymperopoulou, Corfu: the Silk Road
  5. ^ Artemiadi, Jamal Joratli: the next day
  6. ^ Jamal – The Silk Road, 18–21
  7. ^ Jamal – The Silk Road, 86–88

Sources

  • Angelopoulou, Athanasia (1 December 2018). "Jamal Joratli: the Arab artist who works in Athens and deifies it". iefimerida.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 3 October 2019.
  • Artemiadi, Anastasia (4 April 2019). "Jamal Joratli: the next day after the invitation to China". artviews.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 3 October 2019.
  • Jian, Chen; Jamal; Moraitou, Mina; Sebastian, Klaus; Stefanidis, Manos. Jamal – The Silk Road. Dalian Modern Museum.
  • Lymperopoulou, Katerina (1 June 2016). "Jamal: the Silk Road at the Museum of Asian Art of Corfu". thetoc.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  • "The Silk Road by Jamal in the Musem of Modern Art". matrix24.gr (in Greek). 13 January 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2019.