GAZBIA SIRRY (EGYPT, B. 1925)
GAZBIA SIRRY (EGYPT, B. 1925)

From the Balcony in Rome

Details
GAZBIA SIRRY (EGYPT, B. 1925)
From the Balcony in Rome
signed and dated in Arabic (lower centre)
oil on canvas
34¼ x 25¾in. (87.5 x 65.5cm.)
Painted in 1952

Lot Essay

Gazbia Sirry was a member of the Group of Modern Art, a movement which sought to express an Egyptian identity, formed at the time of the Egyptian revolution in 1952. In the words of a fellow member, the artist Hamed Oweis (b.1919), they "rejected 'surrealism', because it was essentially a rebellion, or an art which did not aim at the consciousness of the people at large" (Lillian Karnouk, Modern Egyptian Art 1910-2003, Cairo, 1999, p.80). However, unlike Oweis, who concentrated on labour and fellahin (farmers) as subject matter, Sirry's identity was more personal. As she said of herself "As a child I loved my colour crayons, as a teenager I always did what I wanted, as a woman I felt my body was my own, and I was always considered a rebel" (ibid, 1999, p. 85).

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