Wafa Hourani
Qalandia 2087

Qalandia 2087

Mixed media installation in 6 parts with sound, variable size
2009

Qalandia 2087

Detail

Qalandia 2087

Detail

Qalandia 2087

Detail

Qalandia 2087

Detail

 

Built from cardboard boxes and archive photographs, Qalandia 2087 (2009) is the third and last part of a series of installations by Wafa Hourani. The artist reproduced, as an architectural model, one of main check-points and Palestinian refugee camps. Located in the north of Jerusalem, Qalandia constitutes, since 1949, Ramallah’s entrance and the exit point, dividing the country on its western bank. The artist was interested in this particular place in the Palestinian history, because of its proximity with its own airport, transformed into military base during the Israeli occupation. This paradox of a territory, initially connected to the rest of the world and now a place for Palestinian isolation, illustrates the politico-social reality of the country.

In Qalandia 2087, the artist proposes a futuristic vision of this place, a hundred years after the first Intifada. Contrary to the first two pieces in the series, which presented an apocalyptic vision of Qalandia – a hundred years after the exodus Palestinian for Qalandia 2047 (2006) and a hundred years after the six day old war for Qalandia 2067 (2008), the last version evokes the future of Palestine on the basis of political Utopia. The question of the occupation of a given territory is no longer relevant, the main concern is now integration. The wall, which originally divided space between the check-point and the refugee camp, has been replaced by a mirror facade. Qalandia airport has also retrieved its initial function as a civil airport, while the check-point has become a place reserved for public speech. Life seems to win again. Racing cars, airline planes, whimsically shaped TV aerials, a coffee terrace and a swimming pool transform the refugee camp into a space where communication and social links become possible again. The new party, “The Mirror”, has just won the elections and is sending each Palestinian back to their history by inviting them to take part in the construction of a better future.

Vérane Pina
Translated by Valérie Vivancos 

"In Qalandia 2087, the artist proposes a futuristic vision of this place, a hundred years after the first Intifada (...) where racing cars, airline planes, whimsically shaped TV aerials, a coffee terrace and a swimming pool transform the refugee camp into a space where communication and social links become possible again."