Name/Title

Untitled

Entry/Object ID

2009.03.007

Description

Relief linocut of two organic shapes. One in black and the other red. They are central to the page and have varying white carved lines in the middle.

Type of Print

Relief, Linocut

Artwork Details

Medium

Paper

Acquisition

Accession

2009.03

Source or Donor

May Hariri Aboutaam

Acquisition Method

Gift

Credit Line

Gift of Mary Hariri Aboutaam

Made/Created

Artist

Youmna Chalala

Date made

2008

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Secondary Object Term

Print, Relief

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Print

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Graphic Documents

Nomenclature Class

Documentary Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

Dimensions

Height

20 in

Width

15 in

Color

White, Red, Black, white

Exhibition

Re-interpreting the Middle East II: Artists Re-thinking Today's Terminology (2009)

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Cultural/Historical Context

Label

"Youmna Chlala is a writer and visual artist, born in Beirut and currently living in San Francisco. She received her Masters in Fine Arts from the California College of the Arts (CCA) and is working on a novel. She likes to tell stories that stem from the unreal and the all too real. Youmna is also co-founder/co-editor of Eleven Eleven {1111} journal of literature and art at CCA. (2) Youmna Chlala utilizes her experiences growing up in Beirut speaking Arabic and French and moving to Los Angeles as tools to affect her layered work in written and visual language. Her work ranges from large-scale painting and installation to hand-bound books of poetry with the narrative of stories unifying her mission. In the second year of her MFA program at California College of Art (CCA), Chlala founded Eleven Eleven {1111}, a journal of literature and art. She continues to edit the journal and lecture at CCA. Chlala has published in the Journal of Middle Eastern Studies (2005) and The Journal of Cross Poetics (2004); she has held readings at the National Arab American Museum, the Berkeley Art Museum, and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, SF."