“2024 ARKO Young Artist Day: Neo-Meta-Trans” Poster image ©ARKO Art Center

Barakat Contemporary presents Lawrence Abu Hamdan's first solo exhibition in Korea, “Lawrence Abu Hamdan: Zifzafa,” through November 3. Abu Hamdan is a researcher, filmmaker, writer, activist, and self-described independent acoustic investigator (Private Ear) whose work unfolds through sound.
 
His auditory investigations have taken him all over the world, including Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, France, and the UK, where he has developed his own aesthetic. Abu Hamdan often works in collaboration with non-governmental organizations such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Defense for Children International, and the Israeli human rights organization B'Tselem.
 
In fact, it serves to emphasize the importance of the “politics of listening,” which is a fundamental and crucial element of the artist's practice. Abu Hamdan's sound work has actually been used as legal evidence to resolve real-life disputes, as well as having great appeal to people on the margins, those exposed to war and violence.
 
Abu Hamdan's new project Zifzafa, which will be presented for the first time at Barakat Contemporary, is an Arabic term for the sound of wind rattling and shaking objects, leaves, and anything else in its path. For the first time at Barakat Contemporary, Abu Hamdan presents a new project that examines the sound and wind dynamics inherent in Zifzafa in a broader geopolitical context.
 
In this exhibition, Abu Hamdan explores the relationship between noise and the harm and impact of the Israeli government's current coercive project to build 31 wind farms near villages in the Golan Heights, and exposes the Israeli government's political and ideological strategies behind the project.
 
In addition to the exhibition, Barakat Contemporary will also host Abu Hamdan's lecture performance Natq on September 4, Samcheong Night, at 8 pm.