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Thursday, 6 January 2011

CARAVAN Festival of the Arts

Following on from the success of the interfaith CARAVAN Festival of the Arts held at the historic St. John’s Church in Maadi/Cairo over the last two years, a new and broader artistic CARAVAN Festival of the Arts 2011 with the theme of “My Neighbor” will open on February 3, 2011. The goal of the CARAVAN Festival of the Arts in February 2011 is to build bridges between East and West, Muslim and Christian, through the visual arts, literature, film and music. The initiative over the last two years has generated significant attention from the international media and art world, surpassing all expectations.

The CARAVAN Festival of the Arts comes out of a vision that the Arts can be one of the most effective mediums to enhance understanding and deepen respect between the Middle East and the West. Therefore the objective of this CARAVAN arts initiative is to use the Arts as a bridge for intercultural (East/West) and inter-religious (Muslim/Christian) interchange. Through this exhibition the goal is to highlight how the Arts can serve to encourage friendship and facilitate sharing between the Arab world and the West.

Opening on February 3, 2011, at 7 PM, the exhibition and festival will be officially opened by the Grand Imam of Al Azhar in Cairo, Sheikh Ahmed el Tayeb. 45 premier Middle Eastern and Western visual artists will come together for the selling exhibition which will be held inside the church, with each submitting one piece of work that reflects the theme, “My Neighbor”. As the previous years have shown, it will be an exhibition that has a diverse range of artists ranging from one of Egypt’s leading contemporary artists, Mohamed Abla, to rising star Reda Abdel Rahman, to expatriate artists Britt Boutros Ghali and Roland Prime to name but a few. Many thousands are expected to attend and there will be considerable Arab and Western media coverage.

Special participating guests to this year’s CARAVAN Festival of the Arts are Reza Aslan, the New York Times bestselling Iranian-American author (No god but God, Beyond Fundamentalism, Tablet & Pen), Khalid Abdalla, British-Egyptian film actor (star of The Kite Runner, United 93, and Green Zone with Matt Damon), and Mohammed Antar, world renowned Ney (Middle Eastern Flute) player.

“Our experience has shown,” says Rev. Canon Paul-Gordon Chandler, author and the American rector/minister of St. John’s Church and founder of the Caravan Festival of the Arts, “that art is a universal language that has the ability to dissolve the petty differences that divide us. The words of Anish Kapoor, the contemporary Indian sculptor illustrate our objective; ‘We live in a fractured world. I've always seen it as my role as an artist to attempt to make wholeness.’”

In looking toward this upcoming February 2011 event, “Our desire through this third exhibition,” says Roland Prime, exhibition curator and a participating British artist, “is that we will see how much we all have in common and how we can enhance and deepen each other’s lives.”

All attendance is free of charge, but 20% of all art sales go to Middle Eastern charities assisting the poor.

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Taram - Mustafa / Moj Dragane.

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