Biography
Nada Sehnaoui is a Beirut-based visual artist whose work,
Paintings, and installations deal with issues of war, personal
memory, public amnesia, the writing of history, and the construction
of identity.
Sehnaoui graduated with a DEA in History from Paris IV Sorbonne, and
with a Diploma and Fifth Year from the School of the Museum of Fine
Arts in Boston.
Her body of painting works includes: “How Many How Many More”
2014-19 “Tulips for a Wounded Country” 1992, ‘War Games” 1993,
“Lebanese War Statistics” 1994, “When Reading T.S. Eliot” 1999, and
“Painting the Orient-Le Jour” 2000 and “How Many How Many More” on
which she has been working since 2016.
She has created installations in galleries and museums, as well as
large scale public installations such as “Atazzakar, Fractions of
Memory” 2003, “Waynoun, Where are they?” 2006, “Haven’t 15 Years of
Hiding in the Toilets Been Enough?” 2008, and “Light at the End of
the Tunnel” 2012.
Sehnaoui’s Paintings and installations have been exhibited in
Beirut, Boston, New York, Munich, Paris, London, Strasbourg, Tunis,
Algiers, Marseille, Abu Dhabi, Washington DC, and Dubai. Her works
have been featured in over sixty Lebanese and Arab newspapers, and
the international press such as Le Monde, The Los Angeles Times, The
Boston Globe, El Pais, El Mundo, The Washington Post, L’Express
International, The Washington Diplomat, Prophecy, Polystyrène, and
Berlin ¼ Quarterly.
Her work can be found in a number of private collections as well as
in the public collection of the Commissariat Général aux Relations
Internationales de la Communauté Wallonie Bruxelles, the Collection
of the Ministry of Culture of the United Arab Emirates, The Saradar
Collection and in the Sursock Museum.
Sehnaoui has a published book on the history of the westernization
of daily life in Beirut (1860-1914), as well as several published
articles on human rights and politics. She is a founding member of
the Civil Center for National Initiative and a member of Beirut
Madinati.