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Exhibition Honors Baghdad’s Cherished Literary Scene

Darren De La Pena, Mutanabbi Coalition. Letterpress print, 2008
Letterpress print by Darren de la Pena: Mutanabbi Street, Join the Coalition of Intellectual Freedom.

The Idaho Center for the Book and the Arts and Humanities Institute at Boise State University present “Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here.”

The exhibition opens at 4:30 p.m. on Oct. 2 at the Arts and Humanities Institute Gallery in the Ron and Linda Yanke Family Research Park (220 East Parkcenter Blvd). The exhibition honors Al-Mutanabbi Street, Baghdad’s cherished district of booksellers, publishers and literary cafés, which was devastated by a deadly car bombing in March 2007.

At 5:30 p.m., Jonathan Bloom, professor of art history at Boston College, will present a short talk in the adjacent Osher Auditorium on print and paper in Islamic history to mark the opening of the exhibition. Bloom is the author of “Paper before Print: The History and Impact of Paper in the Islamic World” among many other books.

In response to the deaths and the destruction, San Francisco poet and bookseller Beau Beausoleil and Bristol UK book arts professor Sarah Bodman issued an international call to artists and writers to create broadsides, books, poetry, prose and prints reflecting on these events, and commemorating Al-Mutanabbi Street and its significance to Iraq and the world. Today the collection includes an anthology and several hundred artworks, of which approximately 60 were selected by Stephanie Bacon, who curated this exhibition.

More than 30 distinct exhibitions of the Al-Mutanabbi Street project have occurred or are planned in the United States and internationally since 2012. The exhibition will remain at the Arts and Humanities Institute Gallery until the end of January 2016.

For more information, contact AHI@boisestate.edu.

BY: CIENNA MADRID   PUBLISHED 7:29 PM / SEPTEMBER 2, 2015