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鈥楴arrating our own story鈥: Amid war in Sudan, art lovers take a stand

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Fatma Fahmy/Reuters
Salah Abdel-Hay Fathallah, a retired assistant professor in art education at the University of Kordofan, holds an artwork at his rented house in Cairo, May 30, 2023. Along with other artists, he fled a war raging in Sudan, leaving behind more than 100 large canvases.

Afraa Ahmed left with nothing.

When the Sudanese artist fled her home in Khartoum, the country鈥檚 capital, in late April, bombs were already falling on her neighborhood. There wasn鈥檛 time to pack a suitcase, let alone make a plan for the dozens of paintings and ceramics she had scattered across her home and throughout the city鈥檚 galleries.聽

鈥淚 live for my art and I live by it,鈥 she says of her life before a war that unexpectedly cleaved apart the lives of millions of Sudanese. Now, she can鈥檛 bear to paint. And even if she could, who would buy art in a time like this? 鈥淲e all live every day in anxiety, tension, and fear,鈥 she says from near the northern Sudanese city of Shendi, where she has temporarily found refuge.聽

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Creativity can be used to tell important stories in critical moments of history. Art lovers are fundraising to help Sudanese artists, uprooted and thrown into crisis by the war.

For Rahiem Shadad, a curator whose Khartoum-based space, Downtown Gallery, once displayed Ms. Ahmed鈥檚 works, such stories cut especially deep. 鈥淲e formed to display the revolution鈥檚 art,鈥 he says, referring to the 2019 movement that overthrew the three-decade dictatorship of former President Omar al-Bashir. 鈥淪ince then, many of our artists have been able to completely devote their life to their art鈥 for the first time, he says.聽

But the overthrow of Mr. Bashir鈥檚 authoritarian rule was followed by more than three years of political upheaval, which culminated in the fighting that began in April between Sudan鈥檚 army and a rival paramilitary force, both vying for political control.聽

Mr. Shadad wondered what聽these artists were going to do.聽

Fatma Fahmy/Reuters
Rahiem Shadad, co-founder of the Downtown Gallery in Khartoum, created a process for supporting Sudanese artists who fled the ongoing conflict in Sudan. He arranges art in his rented space in Cairo, May 29, 2023.

But instead of simply asking, he and his colleagues at Downtown Gallery decided to come up with an answer. They created , a crowdfunding site to collect money for artists, joining the grassroots movement of thousands of small-scale aid projects that have sprouted to assist Sudanese uprooted and thrown into crisis by the war. From university students rescuing people from areas under siege to neighborhood committees in order to open clinics and replace the city鈥檚 shuttered hospitals, Sudanese have responded to the recent crisis with action.聽聽

鈥淎s Sudanese we realize our plight is not Ukraine, and it鈥檚 not the Notre Dame de Paris, where an old building burns and millions of dollars come out of nowhere to restore it,鈥 says Azza Satti, a Sudanese curator based in Nairobi,聽Kenya, who was among the founders of Sponsor a Sudanese Artist.聽

But neither Ms. Satti nor Mr. Shadad dwelt long in that unfairness. Instead, they and their partners began reaching out to artists, asking them to fill out a Google form answering a basic question: What do you need?

The replies that came back were stark and simple. Food. Safe drinking water. To get my family out of Khartoum.聽聽

鈥淲e began to see how many people had fled with just the clothes on their backs,鈥 Ms. Satti says. 鈥淎nd so we said, what can we do to help?鈥

Aiding artists felt especially monumental because Sudanese art was undergoing a renaissance. For the three decades that Mr. Bashir was president of Sudan, the country鈥檚 artists had worked in fear. His regime censored creative work and threw its dissidents into prison, forcing many artists into exile. But when a mass protest movement against Mr. Bashir鈥檚 regime ripped through the country in 2018 and 2019, visual art became its mouthpiece. 鈥淧eople expressed their politics with their brushes,鈥 says Mr. Shadad.聽

Overnight, murals appeared on vacant walls and underpasses, depicting the movement鈥檚 martyrs and foot soldiers, and sometimes sharing the times and dates of protests. A social media movement, #BlueforSudan, resulted in people around the world changing their social media profiles to blue squares in solidarity with the country鈥檚 protesters.聽

Umit Bektas/Reuters/File
Artist Rashid Drar (right) works on a mural with a friend near the Defense Ministry compound in Khartoum, Sudan, May 4, 2019.

鈥淎rtists are not just nice to have 鈥 they鈥檝e been an integral part of the framing of the narratives of the democracy movement,鈥 says Linda Bashai, an adjunct professor of international affairs at George Washington University who studies social movements in Sudan. 鈥淧eople were exploding with the desire to create. It鈥檚 a marker of the democratic movement that it draws on this creativity.鈥澛犅

Art is a language

Once Mr. Bashir was out of power, Mr. Shadad and his colleagues wanted to keep that artistic momentum going. Downtown Gallery, founded at the end of 2019, was the product. And from the start, the gallery鈥檚 goal was to create a space where Sudanese art could sustain itself.

鈥淭he idea [of Downtown Gallery] was always to have a space that鈥檚 self-sustained and not reliant on any foreign entity,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e wanted to be completely locally led and self-funded.鈥

And the plan had gone well. By 2023, the gallery worked with more than 60 Sudanese artists, both established and up-and-coming. In early April, it shipped a collection of Sudanese art curated by Mr. Shadad to Lisbon,聽Portugal, for an exhibition that would tour Europe.聽

Then, on the evening of April 14, Mr. Shadad鈥檚 colleagues closed and locked the gallery as they would on any other day, leaving hundreds of works of art inside. But they never returned. The following day, explosions tore through the neighborhood around the gallery, Khartoum 2. Fighting broke out between Sudan鈥檚 army and the Rapid Support Forces, the violent culmination of a rivalry between two of the country鈥檚 top generals. Downtown Gallery 鈥 like much of Sudan 鈥 was suddenly caught in the crossfire of war.聽

Since fighting began in mid-April, more than a million Sudanese have been displaced, and half the country鈥檚 population is now in need of urgent humanitarian assistance. To date, Sponsor a Sudanese Artist has collected more than $12,000, nearly all of which has already been dispersed to local artists, mostly via small grants of $100 to $500.聽

For now, the organizers say, people鈥檚 needs have largely been similar to those of Ms. Ahmed, who asked for help getting her family out of the path of bullets. But already, Sudan鈥檚 artists are beginning to express what they鈥檙e going through in their art.聽

Five hundred miles northeast of Khartoum, in Port Sudan, a collective of artists has begun organizing public art projects in which people can paint and listen to music to relieve stress. Other artists have started displaying art about the war on pages and other social media platforms.聽

鈥淭hroughout history, art is always this time stamp,鈥 Ms. Satti says. 鈥淎rt is a language to tell the stories of this moment. It鈥檚 a way of narrating our own story.鈥澛

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