Object Details
Artist
Muriel Hasbun, born San Salvador, El Salvador 1961
Gallery Label
These works recover shards of a past lost to forced migration, assimilation, and genocide. Muriel Hasbun was born in El Salvador to a Salvadoran Palestinian Christian father and a French Polish Jewish mother, who as a child survived the Holocaust. Hasbun fled El Salvador at the start of the country's civil war in 1979, continuing her family's history of exodus and fragmentation. She addresses this history through a practice that combines archival research with photography.
The X post facto (équis anónimo) series is based on an archive of x-rays discovered in her father's office. As a dentist, he was often asked to use his archive to identify bodies of the victims of civil war--sometimes his own family. The layered images in the series Santos y sombras/Saints and Shadows allude to her grandfather's Greek Orthodox faith and her own Catholic upbringing. Hasbun arranged visual fragments in an altar-like manner, with a kaleidoscopic repetition of religious motifs: crosses, votive candles, and prayer books.
Credit Line
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the artist
Copyright
© 1997, Muriel Hasbun
Date
1997
Object number
2005.4.1
Restrictions & Rights
Usage conditions apply
Type
Photography-Photoprint
Medium
gelatin silver print
Dimensions
17 3/4 x 13 5/8 in. (45.0 x 34.7 cm)
See more items in
Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection
Department
Graphic Arts
Data Source
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Link to Original Record
Record ID
saam_2005.4.1