Rani Sharabati PALESTINIAN, b. 1993
The joker on the wall, 2020
Oil on canvas
200 x 120 cm
Copyright The Artist
Further images
The clash of the Joker's character with human, cinematic, and realistic history, and its reformulation in a way that transforms it into an art form entrenched in it, creates a...
The clash of the Joker's character with human, cinematic, and realistic history, and its reformulation in a way that transforms it into an art form entrenched in it, creates a character that is a mixture of confusion, chaos, and sadness for the invisible people whom the world has turned its back on.
Hence, the character sequence begins gradually until it reaches its extreme. This scene on the apartheid wall is a global ignorance in light of the confusion and inability of the Palestinian people to get what it is, the land, and the future, which is entirely unknown due to the occupation of unfair decisions against the Palestinian people, who have become.
Hence, the character sequence begins gradually until it reaches its extreme. This scene on the apartheid wall is a global ignorance in light of the confusion and inability of the Palestinian people to get what it is, the land, and the future, which is entirely unknown due to the occupation of unfair decisions against the Palestinian people, who have become.