Ibrahim Abd Elmalak Egyptian, 1944-2011

Abd Elmalak’s diverse portfolio exemplifies not only his versatility, but perhaps even more importantly his unique ability to blend the conventional and unconventional in thoughtful harmony, which esteemed Modernist and author Hussein Bicar (1913-2002) deemed a “highly intelligent duality between the kinetics of the universe and its stillness.”

Abd Elmalak is the father of our resident artist Karim Abd Elmalak, and Ibrahim’s indelible influence is imbued in his son’s widely popular work in its figurative, technical and spiritual aspects. This exhibition constitutes a comprehensive curation of ink drawings, paintings, and metal and wooden sculpture sourced from across The breadth of Abd Elmalak’s diverse body of work spans sculpture, ink drawings, paintings, jewelry and poetry, which he exhibited in the various editions of his Years of Love series of exhibitions that he rose to prominence on. Abd Elmalak’s diverse portfolio exemplifies not only his versatility, but perhaps even more importantly his unique ability to blend the conventional and unconventional in thoughtful harmony, which esteemed Modernist and author Hussein Bicar (1913-2002) deemed a “highly intelligent duality between the kinetics of the universe and its stillness.”

 

Abd Elmalak’s accomplished sculptures that mostly depict his characteristic figures of feminine form and feeling – a central element to his creative process – which he thoughtfully marries with symbolically complementary elements from nature or with the alluring concoctions of his own imagination. Their fronts exude his romantic artistic language evident in his prose and poetry, as he was also a prolific writer, while their backs reveal a new composition of a different language and content, based on a concept of absolute abstraction. Bicar explains Abd Elmalak’s artistic duality as one in which the language of silence integrates with the language of dialogue to “create an unconventional moral unity that confirms its solidity and tenderness simultaneously.”

 

Abd Elmalak’s drawings are reflective of a compositional method that is based on free-flowing and distinct lines and contours that he uses to amalgamate caricature-esque female figures with monuments and landmarks from his travels, script, animals and natural elements into interconnected and unified tapestries. His works predominantly explore themes of entrapment, companionship, oppression, emancipation, and faith, which he animates through his demure and virtuous women subjects, all of which exhibit a certain poise, elegance and depth of character. 

 

Abd Elmalak graduated from the Faculty of Fine Arts Cairo in 1969 after which he completed his studies at the Italian Arts Academy of Rome in 1976-77. He featured in numerous solo exhibitions in Egypt and then abroad in many countries across Europe, Africa and America. He was press illustrator and art critic at the widely circulated Sabah El Kheir magazine. He was the recipient of the gold medal from the reputed Franklin Mint for the highest selling art product in the States in 1986/87 for the design of Pharaonic and Islamic jewelry. He also served on the board of the Association of Fine Arts in Egypt as a chief consultant for decor at the Ministry of Information and the Egyptian Armed Forces from 1969 to 1976, and authored a book on one of Egypt’s greatest pioneers Salah Abdel Kerim (1925-1987) in 2001, under whose mentorship he studied while at university.