Atef Maatallah El Fahs, b. 1981

Biography
Born in 1981 in Al Fahs, Tunisia, Atef Maatallah lives and works in Tunis. Maatallah graduated from the Institut Supérieur des Beaux-Arts of Tunis, and pursued his training at the Cite des arts de Paris. His work revisits the codes of narrative figuration depicting ordinary people and objects he encounters in daily life, evoking precariousness of existence. Maatallah's paintings and drawings give a cultural commentary through part of an intimate story or one suggestive aspect of everyday life inside Tunisia's society relating to historical narratives. He had solo exhibitions at Elmarsa Gallery in 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017 and 2019 in Tunis and Dubai. His works have been presented in exhibitions including L'Institut des Cultures de l'Islam de la Ville de Paris in 2016, Me.Na Pavilion in Singapore in 2014 curated by Catherine David from the Centre Pompidou, and have been widely shown at art fairs in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Miami, Marrakech, London, Paris, New York. He was twice the recipient of the Prize of Paris Contemporary Drawing in 2015 and 2016. His works have been acquired by various private and public collections in North Africa, Europe and the Middle East, including Barjeel Art Foundation, Kamel Lazaar Foundation and the Ministry of Culture in Tunisia.
Overview

Mohamed-Ali Berhouma: Archaeographing the interior lands. Some incursions into Atef Maatallah's drawings.

[Excerpts : essay from the exhibition catalogue (April 2018-May 2019), Elmarsa Gallery, Tunis|Dubai]
 
Native of El Fahs, Atef Maatalah is a graduate of the Higher Institute of Fine Arts of Tunis (2005) where he studied sculpture. Since the end of 2017, he had occupied the basements adjoining Elmarsa gallery, which can be accessed from Abdelhafidh El Mekki Street. Over the months, the artist's daily life has become a ritual: for days, he leaves the ground of the street's trivialities to sink into an underground and will only come back up tired of the labor. From the surface from which we write, this chthonian path, which has become a chorus, preludes what the artist is undertaking from below the world. Let us remember the root bonds between man (homo) and the earth (humus¹), let us remember the primitive strain they would share, of this first man made of materia prima, clay. Then, of these remembrances, we would almost see the artist, by sinking underground, inhuming himself (in-humus) and, as a result, inhuming his self (in-homo), through an entry into oneself. There, in himself where he faces his inner self, he works. But then, on what? […]
When the words were silent, the studio was filled with the rustle of the stones. Not only the figurative stones, the ruined stones, but their resonance in the practice of drawing: the graphite pencil leads. They are also stones whose erosion tells a story. The rubbing of the pencil lead on the paper seemed to be the scansions of a long poem, punctuated by stops: the choice of another lead, sometimes fatter, loaded with graphite, sometimes drier, loaded with clay. And each pencil, each lead refill and each level of erosion of the tip points made a singular noise. On the surface of the paper, graphite stones and their wear and tear echoed faithfully the ancient stones and their defeats on the surface of history. Even more than seeing the drawings being made, entering the artist's graphic monuments also involved listening to the eroding graphite ores.
At first sight, the first graphic fields, which we witnessed being created during our visits, state the interference of two different times: on the one hand, the time of History - already established by its capital initial -, borrowing its slowness and powers from the resistance of the stone, from the persistence of ruin; a time that then intended to be timeless, erecting its temples and carving its monuments towards an eternity by which its men would attain immortality. On the other hand, it is also the time of history - announced, this one, by its anecdotic lowercase -, being part of the transitional and fleeting course of a daily life, of the banal flight of a plastic bag, of the ballet of drying clothes. The time of a mezoued⁷ melody that spreads its complaints to the four winds, of the vulgarity of a garbage lying on the ground. Despite their apparent distance, these two times coexist together and in the same time: that of the work; two times whose strange encounter establishes the poetic power of these visions. […]

Mosaic:
Alongside the drawing, another work in progress begins: the opus tesselatum. From now on, it was no longer just a question of drawing, of putting by erosion the stone on paper. Participating in the Antika also meant laying the stone itself, in the way that it adorns the floors of an antiquity, in the way that it arranges the ornaments of the imaginaries of that time. In the mosaic, one tessera after another, the patterns of the time of men and gods are posed for an eternity. Undoubtedly, it was this mineral eternity that inspired the artist to write on it the patterns of a transient. A can of beer, a pack of cigarettes or a few marbles, visions that do not know how to last, are emblematized to participate in the persistence of the stones.
Works