Ezz Monem, The Pyramid Postcards: Following the Policeman #11, 2018-2019, photograph.
Ezz Monem, The Pyramid Postcards: Following the Policeman #4, 2018-2019, photograph.
Ezz Monem, The Pyramid Postcards: Following the Policeman #4, 2018-2019, photograph.
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The Pyramid Postcards: Following the Policeman

13 September 2024 - 19 January 2025

Curator:

Artist(s): Ezz Monem

Location: Billboard Project

This iteration of Ezz Monem’s photographic series is displayed as three large-scale billboards at Incinerator Gallery, exploring authority, surveillance, and tourism through the juxtaposition of the Egyptian Pyramids and the figure of an anonymous local policeman.

In 2014, Google Street View technology expanded to document some historic locations in Egypt, including the Pyramids. A policeman accompanied the Google Street View team during this process, resulting in his unexpected appearance in the online images. Ezz edited these photographs to remove other spectators, leaving the lone policeman as the sole figure representing authority. The figure of the policeman is both mundane and familiar; he traverses the landscape and stares back at the camera as a portrait subject. These photographs invert the usual order of authority in Egypt, where citizens are under constant surveillance in public spaces and online. Here, the viewer assumes a panoptic role, engaging in counter-surveillance where the watcher is, in turn, watched.

Reflecting on the original iteration of the series, Ezz explains,“I turned these images into postcards and hand-delivered them to friends in Egypt. Printed manually on silver gelatin paper, and then hand-coloured with oil paints, the images allude to vintage postcards of the Pyramids. I asked those who received a postcard to write on the back about their relation to Egypt as home and authority and return the postcard without an envelope. I asked them to document the card before it was put in the Egyptian post, which could intercept it because of its contents. And, because Australia prohibited the entrance of letters and postcards delivered by post from Egypt at that time, returns were redirected to Berlin.”

Ezz Monem (born Mohamed Ezzeldin M. Abdelmonem; October 23, 1985) is a photo-based artist from Egypt who lives and works in Melbourne, Australia. He uses photography to explore the pluralism of reality, playing with sensations of ambivalence and conflict, and giving visual form to the multiplicity of identity in places, people, and objects. Monem sources images from found photographs, fiction films, videos and the internet, utilising the mechanical reproduction capabilities of the camera along with various darkroom techniques to transform them into photographic works and alternate archives. Through the repurposing of images, Monem makes autoethnographic works drawing on his background growing up in Egypt and his experience migrating to Australia.

Monem graduated from the Faculty of Engineering, Cairo University and worked as a software engineer, but his explorations in visual arts began years earlier. His work has been shown in exhibitions in Egypt, Australia and various other countries in Europe and the Middle East where he has received numerous awards. Monem recently completed a Master of Contemporary Art at the VCA, University of Melbourne.

He is represented by THIS IS NO FANTASY.

Instagram: @ezzmonem

Friday, 13 September, 6-8pm

The opening night, with speeches and a Welcome to Country, will be held at Incinerator Gallery alongside the opening of the major exhibition, Incinerator Art Award 2024.