Muslim in America (Nancy)

Description: Printed in an edition of 5. Medium: Uses lithographs and transfer prints on different-sized pages. Aileen Bassis is a visual artist in Jersey City working in book arts, printmaking, photography and installation. Her use of text in art led her to explore another creative life as a poet. Her work appears in Gravel Magazine, Milo Journal, Specs Journal, Spillway, Grey Sparrow Journal, Amoskeag and others.
My art has revolved around social and political issues. Like many, I opposed the war in Iraq as misguided and pointless, a waste of precious human life. Beau Beausoleils call for book arts for this project immediately appealed to me as a means to communicate across the divide between our culture and the Arab world. At that time, in 2010, there was a great deal of press in the New York City area about a proposed Muslim community center in lower Manhattan that included a mosque. It created a firestorm of controversy and it was politicised by different groups and politicians, everyone with their own agenda. That swirl of rhetoric made me think about a question, what does it mean to be Muslim in America now? I interviewed and photographed several Muslim friends and acquaintances, discussing this question. In this book, Muslim in America (Nancy), photos of her are combined with photos taken around the area of the World Trade Center site. Her quote, I get tired of defending my faith also appears in Arabic.
Origin: 2011
Created By: Bassis, Aileen
Contributor(s): Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here Coalition
Source: http://iuidigital.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/AMSSH/id/940
Collection: Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here Coalition Collection
Rights: http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Copyright: In Copyright
Subjects: artists book
art
bookworks

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