Photographer Dia Mrad captures aftermath of 2020 Beirut explosion
Architecture-trained photographer Dia Mrad’s first solo show, ‘The Road to Reframe', captures local architecture after the Beirut explosion of 2020, in terrible, dramatic, ‘surrealist' stillness
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Through his first ever solo exhibition, ‘The Road to Reframe', architecture-trained photographer Dia Mrad attempts to capture the essence of the Mediterranean city following the devastating Beirut explosion that took place in its port in the summer of 2020.
The show presents two series of photographs. ‘The Silos Experience’ was shot in and around the grain silos of the port of Beirut, ground zero of the blast of 4 August 2020, and it contains 28 shots taken in March 2021. The second series, ‘The Morning After' was created on 5 August 2020 and comprises 11 pieces. The body of work tells the story of Mrad's personal experience, depicting with mesmerising, dramatic and terrible stillness the destructive, ‘surrealist' impact of the event. Here, we caught up with the artist to find out more.
Wallpaper*: Please could you tell us about your background? What attracted you to photography?
Dia Mrad: Photography was always an integral part of my creative process. I decided to study architecture, and during my studies I was inspired by an industrial building with trees growing out of it. I snapped a photo with my old Nokia at the time and I thought: ‘This is it! I want to design buildings that look this cool!' I eventually realised, not too long ago, that I misinterpreted my initial inspiration. It should have been: ‘I want to take photos of architectural buildings, and make them look this crisp!' Luckily, my architecture education was very photo-focused.
In March 2019, on a family trip to France and Italy, as I was capturing images of the magnificent French and Italian architecture, I kept thinking of Beirut, reflecting on the rough diamond that’s there, but not quite there. Beirut, a city that has an equally, if not more, interesting and rich architecture as Europe. It triggered a series of questions that has led to my intimate relationship with Beirut and the way in which I photograph. Why isn’t our architecture given the same value? Why isn’t it shown and celebrated, why isn’t it open and accessible for the people to see? Why is it the subject of greed and unchecked negligence, and why is it so easy for some of us to destroy it and replace it with new construction?
The issue of historical preservation and conservation was already at the forefront of my academic journey. The urgency to save Beirut's heritage was always there for me, but it was beyond my wildest imagination that all this destruction would happen in one second and that everything would be pulverized as it so sadly was!
W*: How were these two series born?
DM: ‘The Silos Experience' was born out of a series of visits to the ground zero blast site of Port of Beirut in March and April 2021 respectively, but predominantly it was based on my first visit on 27 March. This experience came about through a French engineer, Emmanuel Durand, who encouraged me to engage with him as he had been volunteering on site since September 2020, doing a structural analysis study to determine the stability of the grain silos after the blast. We developed an online friendship and he wanted someone with a local perspective that advocates for heritage preservation to go down to the blast site area. This led to the series and the exhibition. Though my work on the silos has been described as ‘surrealist' and ‘expressionist', it is really the damage and the destruction of the architecture of the city that remains in my eyes ‘surrealist'. Part of me still cannot process that this happened!
When the explosion took place, something was triggered in me. I was right there in Mar Mikhaël, in the midst and epicentre of it, riding my Vespa, going to a shoot. After picking myself up from under the bike, I took a few shots of what I thought was the world ending. One of the thoughts that raced through my head was that if another explosion happens and we die, the camera is destroyed but the SD card could still provide insight into what was unfolding. It felt like an urge for something that needed to be recorded. The show is meant to revisit that feeling.
W*: What were you seeking to capture?
DM: My visit to the blast site. The experience directs the outcome. My photography relies on exploration and discovery, on unplanned journeys that I find myself in, and where I completely let go and surrender to the experience. It is then that the work produced turns out ‘different'. What I usually seek to capture is the raw unbeautified truth, but framing it in a relatable yet unordinary way. What attracts me in a shot is the straightness of the architectural lines, the ability to show an entire building façade, as if it is an axonometric view on a 3D or design software.
I love to show architectural details, but also the general vibe of the architecture and its influence on the street and surroundings. I try to do that without actually showing the context, but rather reflecting it in a way, while focusing on architecture. I focus on symmetry. The architecture of Beirut, and especially the traditional, heritage architecture, can be completely symmetric – floorplans, façades and even sections, often showcase perfect symmetry in dimensions and also interior functions. This type of architecture has been a big influence on my framing.
W*: Please could you tell us a bit more about the locations where you shot?
DM: ‘The Silos Experience’ series was shot entirely at the port of Beirut. The first section of ‘The Morning After' contains three pieces shot inside the Sursock Palace, on Rue Sursock, a true gem of Lebanese architecture, that was heavily damaged by the explosion. Another photograph was shot inside the staircase of the Tueni-Bustros palace in Achrafieh. The piece Gibran Khalil Gibran was shot right after my visit to the Sursock Palace and arriving at the Quantum House (or Villa Mokbel) on the same street, where I noticed a collapsed wall on the first level of the villa. I went inside the building facing it, and got a shot that was a turning point in my practice. The shot of the poet [Lebanese-American writer, poet and visual artist Gibran] peeking through the destruction soon became a symbol of the tragedy laid upon Beirut and the indescribable damage done to the people, the architecture, the art, the culture, the social fabric... and this shot was able to convey all that. There are also shots created inside apartments in Mar Mikhaël.
W*: What would you like the viewer to take away from this show and series?
DM: This show is meant to take the viewer on a journey as close as possible to my own explorative discovery of the blast site recently, and of the destroyed architecture earlier. It is meant to give facts, but leave a space open for interpretation and personal conclusions and impressions. It is why the show and display were set up to present the work in an unfolding pattern, similar to how the scene unfolded before my eyes. I wanted to bring the silos to the city, for example, since people cannot go down there.
W*: Were there any challenges in producing the series?
DM: The most challenging part of producing ‘The Silos Experience' was the actual overwhelming experience in itself. It was shot in confusing and dangerous surroundings. Navigating the site was tricky and a nerve-racking business, as at the time the engineering studies were not complete. We had no idea what was safe and what was not. Luckily, Emmanuel is an expert on the matter and was able to determine, if not 100 per cent, the relative safety of certain areas we could venture into. The biggest challenge, however, I believe came after the shots were done, and when I went back and started selecting and editing. I had so many strong shots. It was a very lengthy process.
INFORMATION
’The Road to Reframe’ by Dia Mrad (opens in new tab) is on view at the Arthaus, Gemmayzeh in Beirut, Lebanon until 6 July 2021
Ellie Stathaki is the Architecture Editor at Wallpaper*. She trained as an architect at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in Greece and studied architectural history at the Bartlett in London. Now an established journalist, she has been a member of the Wallpaper* team since 2006, visiting buildings across the globe and interviewing leading architects such as Tadao Ando and Rem Koolhaas. Ellie has also taken part in judging panels, moderated events, curated shows and contributed in books, such as The Contemporary House (Thames & Hudson, 2018) and Glenn Sestig Architecture Diary (2020).
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