Stitched together from a wealth of letters Alex Gibeily wrote to his children at the height of Lebanon’s civil war in the 1970s and 1980s, this beautifully crafted story provides an insight into the pathos and fears of separation caused by the unfolding drama of war, with its many parallels to current bloody conflicts across the world. These typewritten letters are reproduced faithfully and are interwoven with original hand-drawn illustrations by his youngest grandchild, Kyra Gibeily, born more than a decade after Alex’s death.
Shedding light on the perspective of a father desperate for his children to lead a better life far from the horrors of conflict, this story is as timeless as it is timely.
Beautifully produced hardback editions available now!
- Pelagia is conceived as a guardian spirit of the oceans, casting an askance gaze past the viewer at the impending change to her marine realm and the life it sustains. The intricate patterns emerging from the edges of her face are reflections of natural forms rendered as fragile and vulnerable as the marine life endangered in our warming seas. 10 x 18 x 19 cm
- Last call of the Kauaʻi Ōʻō - a dreamlike interpretation of the extinct Kauaʻi ʻŌʻō, curled in grief, weeping. Its last call was recorded in 1987, a mating song unanswered, echoing the species’ final moment. Driven to extinction by anthropogenic habitat loss, invasive predators, and disease, the bird’s absence is a haunting reminder of the fragility of our world’s life and our impact on it. Ripples across the head suggest the spreading consequences of forces beyond its control. The two patches of yellow at its base and the beak’s curve recall the bird’s true form, while the rest dissolves into memory, an elegy for what is gone and what remains only in echoes and dreams. 10 x 13 x 17 cm
- Mystic jester stoneware
- Severed hand of Om from La Planète Sauvage 1973
- Arbroath Smokey
- Energy Vampire
- Wanderer after the fall of Carthage
- Guardian of the Forest
- Safe house 8 Batesian mimicry decoration
Illustrated for an Emory student newsletter, Theory of Mind depicts the brains of various species – mouse, rat, cat,
bottlenose dolphin, marmoset, chimpanzee and human – with their brain
stems connected to the branches of an ancient yew tree. The coloured
regions highlight the visual, auditory and somatosensory areas within
each brain, revealing both similarities and differences across species.
This scientifically grounded artwork invites viewers to develop empathy
and a deeper understanding of non-human animals, recognising that
they possess distinct brain structures, leading to different cognitive
experiences. This recognition is set to become increasingly vital as life on
Earth faces the challenge of sharing diminishing resources. Graphite + digital, 29.7 x 42 cm
check it out here
A visual of a field experiment using the Merlin Bird ID app to document
Finnish bird calls, illustrating the eight most commonly observed species. I translated the calls into a linguistic, lyrical mix of
music and Arabic script, to fit the flow of the most recorded types of songs, calls and drums, relatively speaking. Ink + gouache
- Borealis
- Dinnertime - but for whom? You’ve set up your cutlery, but something seems to be waiting for you and your shadow doesn’t look too friendly either. And what are the sheep doing, lining up like that in the dark?
- Loveliness/Watchdog - Canada sleeping and Watcher watching at midnight (geese)
- Deer in the Headlights
- Dollhouse
- Ego Eclipse
- A Portrait of the Earl of Lemongrab
- Flowers for an Ancestor
- Standing By
- Tjørnuvík
from the WIndow
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Newcomer spotted/Freshmeat:
a new, beautiful place - but why do they all seem to be looking at you? Ink, watercolour, thread and coloured pencil
- Down to the Bay (old version)
- the view between two doors
- the birds don't seem to mind the rain
- Sleep well, round geese
- guard duty
- honk I
- honk II
- 11. 12. charcoal studies