Oraib Toukan is an artist and scholar. She holds a PhD in Fine Arts from Oxford University, Ruskin School of Art. Until Fall 2015, she was head of the Arts Division and Media Studies program at Bard College at Al Quds University, Palestine, and was visiting faculty at the International Academy of Fine Arts in Ramallah. Between 2015 and 2017, she taught at the Ruskin School of Art’s University of Oxford Graduate Teaching program. In Autumn 2018, she was Mercator fellow at the Cultures of Critique program at Leuphana University, Lüneburg. Toukan is author of Sundry Modernism: Materials for a Study of Palestinian Modernism (Sternberg Press, 2017), and the essay-films When Things Occur (2016), Via Dolorosa (2021), among others. Exhibition venues include KW Institute for Contemporary Art Berlin, Akademie der Künste Berlin, Mori Art Museum, Asia Pacific Triennial, Istanbul Biennale, and Heidelberger Kunstverein Biennale für aktuelle Fotografie. Her writings have appeared in a number of publications, collected works, and readers. From 2011 to 2015 she analysed and remade works from a found collection of film reels that once belonged to now-dissolved Soviet cultural centers in Jordan in 1990-1991. In the academic year 2019-20, she was a EUME Fellow and in 2021-22 she was supported by a fellowship from the Swiss National Science Foundation. In the academic years 2024-25, she will be an associated EUME Fellow with support from the SNF, and an additional collaboration with the Harun Farocki Institute.
Decruelling Images
Cruel images epitomize degradation of sorts. In one way, images that represent politically degraded subjects that in turn get materially degraded via passage and mediation, and degrade the subject further by virtue of being seen, scrutinized, or passed over. Toukan’s postdoctorate departs from practice-based research on cruel images to explore propositions for decruelling images. Her methodology lies in handling and re-editing found archival materials in post-production, whereby knowledge is produced through an extreme closeness to the materiality of an image via the dialectics of montage. Her research questions whether abstraction via extreme proximity to the materiality of violence, at the level of the pixel grain can transcend representations of violence all together, into a field of knowing, via seeing; when images feel like they can be touched, and in turn become touching. She asks, can a navigational turn toward images of suffering become the new un-cruelling, at the very least toward a collective consciousness and in turn in the ‘shifting of the frame’ (Butler 2010), in the next round of violence?