Monday, March 30, 2015

If they can feel it... why don't you feel it?

            Through art, many messages can be delivered. Art is not all about happiness and positive sides of life, it is about hope, pain, love, grief, and many ups and down that would be fictional or real. A false concept that many people follow is that art is only to be displayed in exhibitions and published online for personal use. On the other hand, art can really touch the people’s hearts and change their thoughts. In the article “The Art of Syrian Refugees Sends a Message. Is Anyone Listening?” some readers would look at the article and feel like changing something, and others would not find the article igniting their interests or touching their hearts. The question is “Would war paintings reach to people from different regions and takes them to make a move due what is happening in Syria?”
            Due to the struggle millions of Syrians have and still going through, few men after moving to the Zaatari camp in Jordan started painting that they remember from the war in Syria. One Syrian man, who was called “Mohammed Al-Ammari” painted one of the Syrian war evidences that portray the tough times that do not leave the people for a second. By interviewing him, he mentioned that "There was no money. There was nowhere to work, nothing to do to support myself and my family," he says. "It felt like all the life stopped." The lack of work opportunities in al Zaatari camp made this poor man have more passion towards sad paintings. The paintings are basically propaganda to the world, to see what is really happening, since many people keep saying everything is peaceful everywhere.
            Media is affecting the world and shaping the people’s mind based on what benefits them and based on their views. According to Paul Gough, a professor in RMIT University, where he asked “Why send artists to the battlefield when a camera could capture the face of conflict so much more convincingly than a painter with a canvas and brushes?” Not everything published on a newspaper or viewed on the TV means it is right, while the paintings those men created are delivering a message, because every painting has a meaning and expresses something that a person might not be able to express in words. Some people would look at the war paintings and feel that there is a story behind this sad art.
            The paintings people created from the war are not recent. There is a history of paintings during the war, and it started a long time ago. The BBC published an article “Art from Different Fronts of World War One.” The article contained several ideas about the western front and the gas attack. The paintings were painted by John Singer Sargent, who portrayed a painting of depicting soldier suffering from effect of mustard gas. The message of this artist delivered even after hundreds of years, and people now know the truth.
            In conclusion, war paintings can deliver a message and make people hear what some people are suffering from. Even though the paintings would not affect people, but some might deliver a small hints of what those sad people are facing every day from lack of shelter, food, clothes, and freedom.