Syrian artists explore themes of forgiveness in Damascus exhibition 

Syrian artists explore themes of forgiveness in Damascus exhibition 
Massar Rose Building in Damascus, Syria. (Robert Bociaga)
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Updated 01 May 2025

Syrian artists explore themes of forgiveness in Damascus exhibition 

Syrian artists explore themes of forgiveness in Damascus exhibition 
  • ‘The Path’ is a group show that curator Marwan Tayara says is ‘about healing’ 

DAMASCUS: In a city battered by years of conflict, a quiet revolution was unfolding earlier this month inside an unfinished concrete shell.  

“The Path,” a two-week exhibition curated by the Madad Art Foundation and staged in the once-abandoned skeletal Massar Rose Building in Damascus, confronted Syria’s pain, but, curator Marwan Tayara stressed: “This is not about politics. It’s about healing.” 

Tayara — who co-founded Madad alongside the late Buthayna Ali, a fine arts professor whose vision of a show on forgiveness inspired “The Path” — continued: “For us, the artist is a patriot. The bakery feeds the body, and art feeds the soul. The soldier fights for his country, and so does the artist — but with ideas, with beauty.” 




Lamia Saida pictured with her installation 'To Memory, Once More.' (Robert Bociaga)

Ali, who died in September, had envisioned a show that would offer something softer than some of Madad’s previous exhibitions around topics including war and disaster. “She wanted to make an exhibition about forgiveness but never had the chance,” artist Rala Tarabishi told Arab News. “We decided to do it as a gift for her — and for Syria.”  

Even the venue was part of the show’s message. “This is a construction site,” said Tayara. “It’s symbolic. Syria is unfinished. But we’re building. Art has to be part of that process — not just rebuilding walls, but rebuilding identity.” 

Tarabishi’s installation, “Embed,” was a forest of resin swords frozen mid-fall, through which visitors could walk. “When I embed my sword into the earth during a fight, I’m putting an end to it — in the most peaceful way,” she said. But none of the swords in “Embed” had yet reached that point. “The closer the sword is to the ground, the closer I am to forgetting, or forgiving,” Tarabishi explained. “Some things are harder to let go of.” 




Visitors to 'The Path' in front of Dalaa Jalanbo’s 'Accumulation.' (Robert Bociaga)

For viewers, she hoped, it would be “as if the swords are memories or people who caused them pain. I wanted them to lean more into forgiveness, so they could live a more peaceful life.”  

But for Tarabishi, forgiveness is anything but simple. “It’s very hard. Some things feel too big for us to truly forgive, so we just coexist with our pain instead.” 

Eyad Dayoub’s installation, “Crossing,” was equally visceral. Suspended black and red wires hung like fishing nets. “Each level represents a period in Syria — full of darkness and blood,” Dayoub said. “The material looks like something that traps fish. I feel like I’ve been hunted by my country. I’m stuck — I can’t leave it, and I can’t love it either.” 




Detail from Rala Tarabishi's 'Embed' installation on display at 'The Path.' (Robert Bociaga)

Creating the piece was part-therapy, part-confrontation. “Our dreams were lost. But I’m trying to find love again between me and my country,” he continued, adding that some visitors wept when he explained the symbolism of the piece. “People are ready to feel again. After war, we became numb. But I see us becoming sensitive again.” 

If Dayoub’s wires evoked entrapment, Judi Chakhachirou’s work addressed instability. Her installation featured a trembling platform — a metaphor for emotional imbalance. “When someone hasn’t forgiven you — or you haven’t forgiven them — you feel unstable. You don’t know what’s wrong, but you’re not OK,” she said. 

Her piece was a message to the living: “Take your chances now. Don’t leave people in your life hurt. Forgive — or at least try. Because one day, it’ll be too late.” 




Rala Tarabishi in front of her installation 'Embed.' (Robert Bociaga)

The war has buried so much in silence, she added, that emotions — even tears — feel like progress. “Some people cried when they saw it. Others said it made them feel calm, like they finally understood what was bothering them,” she said. “I hope my next work will be more hopeful.” 

For Mariam Al-Fawal, forgiveness is less emotional and more philosophical. Her interactive installation, “A Delicate Balance,” draws on Karl Popper’s formulation of the paradox of tolerance. Visitors can rearrange its colored puzzle pieces on wooden stands to construct a final, diverse pattern. 

“If you tolerate all ideologies — including the intolerant — you destroy tolerance itself,” Al-Fawal explained. “Without exclusion, there can be no true inclusion. To see the full picture, you have to flip the pieces, adjust them. That’s how people work too. You can’t have one color, one shape; you have to embrace difference.” 




Mariam Al-Fawal with her interactive installation 'A Delicate Balance.' (Robert Bociaga)

Al-Fawal’s puzzle asks viewers to build balance. “People interacted with it differently,” she said, “But most walked away with a shifted perspective. That’s why I made it interactive: the process carries the message.” 

Lamia Saida contributed “To Memory, Once More,” which consisted of a set of blood-red, burned and shredded canvases suspended like raw meat.  

“I thought if I wanted to express these memories visually, it had to be meat,” she explained. “That’s what they feel like. That’s why they hang. That’s why they bleed.” 




Massar Rose Building in Damascus, Syria. (Robert Bociaga)

Syria’s trauma, for Saida, is not abstract —it is textured, fleshy, and inescapable. And yet, through art, it is manageable. “Art is more than therapy,” she continued. “When I make something honest, I feel like I forgive people. I find stability.” 

Her final painting is a single, steady line. “It’s the calm I reached after expressing everything else,” she said. 

More than 400 visitors visited the exhibition daily, according to the organizers. Some brought questions. Some brought grief. Others brought quiet. “Even political officials came,” Tayara said. “Not to control. Just to understand.” 

What started as a tribute to a beloved teacher has become a mirror for the country. “All Syrians have this memory of grief,” said Tarabishi. “Whether from war or daily life — it’s what binds us.” 

Madad hopes to bring “The Path” to other cities too.  

“We believe in the power of art,” said Tayara. “It won’t rebuild Syria alone. But it might rebuild the spirit. That’s where everything begins.” 


REVIEW: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ — a stylish thriller lacking in substance

REVIEW: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ — a stylish thriller lacking in substance
Updated 07 November 2025

REVIEW: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ — a stylish thriller lacking in substance

REVIEW: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ — a stylish thriller lacking in substance

DUBAI: German filmmaker Edward Berger’s 2022 take on “All Quiet on the Western Front” was a masterpiece, and his English-language debut, last year’s “Conclave,” was a nuanced, smart political thriller. There’s no doubting his talent.

However, “Ballad of a Small Player” is not on that level. While it’s a visual delight, reminiscent of Wes Anderson’s vividly realized worlds. But the unusual stylistic choices often seem forced — art for art’s sake. It’s not helped by Rowan Joffé’s screenplay, which fails to build on initial intrigue and ends up feeling thrown together.

Colin Farrell plays disgraced Irish financier Brendan Reilly, who’s fled the UK for Macau having stolen the life savings of a wealthy old woman who had invested with his firm. In Macau, Reilly has reinvented himself as Lord Doyle — an aristocratic playboy hoping that his apparent wealth and upper-class upbringing (neither of which Reilly actually possesses) will be enough to fool creditors into funding his gambling habit. And his drinking.

Farrell is convincing as a fraudster adrift in the luxurious loneliness of five-star suites — a man who clearly wants to try and be ‘good,’ but whose moral failings and lack of self-control (and self-awareness) keep sabotaging his attempts. As his debts mount, he meets Dao Ming, a credit broker with her own issues (and debts). When one of her clients commits suicide, Reilly comforts her, and promises that when his fortunes change, he will clear her debts too.

But his losing streak continues, and he is found by investigator Cynthia Blithe (Tilda Swinton), who has been contracted by his former employers and gives him 24 hours to repay the funds he embezzled.

As Reilly spirals further into despair and stress he has a heart attack. As he loses consciousness, he sees Dao approach him, smiling. He wakes up in Dao’s house, where she nurses him back to health and they share their most intimate secrets. 

Reilly’s fortunes then turn around dramatically, resulting in an improbable winning streak at the baccarat tables. And then the opportunity to completely change his life, and Dao’s, by staking it all on a single hand.

Berger builds the tension and claustrophobia of Reilly’s world well at first, but he’s the only character close to fully developed. Dao’s intriguing persona is wasted, and the gifted Swinton’s role is too cartoonish to convince. Ultimately, the movie fails to deliver on its promising first impressions.