Woman in Ramallah Dress (1980s)

Name/Title

Woman in Ramallah Dress (1980s)

Entry/Object ID

2022.150

Tags

On View

Description

Lillian “Lily” I. Bandak was born on July 31, 1948 in Amman, Jordan into a Palestinian family from Bethlehem. In the 1960’s, Lily immigrated to the US with her family where they settled in Newark, Delaware. Lily was a gifted artist and world-class photographer with incredible tenacity to pursue her passion despite the adversity she faced. Lily focused her camera’s lens on beautiful cultural and historically relevant subjects. She captured prominent Arab leaders and historical and cultural sites that no longer exist today. In the 1970s, President Jimmy Carter added a photograph by Lily to the permanent exhibition at the White House, becoming the first and only Palestinian artist to be featured in the collection. In 1983, at the height of her career, Lily was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. In 2015, Lily reflected on the onset of the diagnosis through a press interview with "Ability Magazine" (2015). Preceding her diagnosis, she received an assignment from Newsweek to photograph the horrors of the Sabra & Shatila Massacre (1982). Lily shares, "And I covered it. That’s when I got sick. That’s when [Multiple Sclerosis] started. My nerves just couldn’t take it. I’m not that kind of photographer. I do art photography." Lily eventually required the use of a wheelchair, and although her hands no longer could control a camera the same way, Lily refused to abandon her passion for photography. She continued pursuing her life’s work through the use of a wheelchair with assistive technology—this time with a new perspective. Lily passed away, leaving a legacy of resilience, artistry and kindness on September 11, 2021. This photograph features the traditional ensemble of a woman from Ramallah during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, likely taken in the late 1980s.

Artwork Details

Medium

Photograph

Collection

Permanent Collection

Made/Created

Artist

Lily Bandak

Date made

circa 1980

Dimensions

Dimension Description

Unframed image

Height

23 in

Width

18 in

General Notes

Note

Gift of The Bandak Family