Greenwich Exhibition – APRIL 2024
Why Mohamed Mohamed isn’t sentimental about his sculpture ‘Old News’. The piece depicting Boris Johnson’s face in precisely sliced newspaper can currently be seen at Blackheath’s Millennium Circle.
As we stand beside the head of Boris Johnson on Blackheath, a young spaniel scampers up and urinates on it. After I mention to the four-legged critic’s owners that I’m with the artist who created the sculpture, they’re immediately full of apologies and dash off with the same nervous energy as their canine charge.
Mohamed, however, welcomes the act. For him, Old News, is just that. He’s already set fire to it at Speaker’s Corner and, having been made, run its course and suffered symbolic destruction, it has now returned to the streets of Greenwich like the discarded newspaper it started life as.
He’s not sentimental about it – surprising, perhaps, given the effort that went into creating it.
“I built my own machines so that I can physically sculpt things,” said Mohamed.
“I’ve been an industrial designer since the age of 14 and, after graduating from the London College Of Communication, I’ve worked for large format fabrication companies in their research and development departments.
“When the pandemic struck I’d just signed a lease on a workshop in Greenwich and then I was furloughed.
“With Old News, I had been developing slicing capabilities – how to accurately cut an object at higher and higher resolutions.
“3D printing uses this technique and it’s similar to the idea of pixels in an image.”
“The first thing I made was using sheets of cardboard, then sheets of metal and then newspaper at 0.3mm per slice.
“The first Covid lockdown was kicking off and I collected newspapers.
“I had to remove the staples from every copy and iron each sheet. While I was doing that, I was thinking about what to make and Boris’ face was everywhere.
“I produced a digital version of him using photogammetry, which uses images from many different angles to create a 3D map.”
Mohamed used this to cut some 6,277 newspaper pages, working in layers of five to precisely reproduce the former prime minister’s head in three dimensions – stacking them on a steel base plate with precisely calibrated bars holding them in place.
“To iron the newspaper took a week, to cut it was three weeks, and to assemble it was me in a dark room for another three,” said Mohamed.
“There’s a level of dedication – of sacrifice to be able to make something honestly like that. Before I made my own pieces, I made work for lots of other people.
“If an artist uses a 3D printer or wields a violin themselves, that’s one thing. If you’re paying someone to do it for you, to me, that’s something else.
“I’m not qualified to judge whether it’s better or worse, but for me personally, I have to physically feel the sweat on my brow, and that links me with my work – that I have physically done it.”
During our conversation, the topics of truth and process come up consistently. Both sit very much at the heart of what Mohamed does.
“I have been making art as a way to sharpen my skill-set for as long as I can remember,” he said.
“It’s a gymnasium for my brain – you create geometry or a thing that doesn’t have to solve a problem – I just have to challenge myself to do it.
“In an art setting, you’re just expressing what’s inside you.
“While I work, I pick up litter and that’s what my sculptures are made from. I’ve always been very much into environmental causes and we’ve got a lot of stuff going into landfill.
“If you’re creative, you can turn those objects into something else.
“So I collect lots of things – I’ve picked up coins, a toothbrush and gambling pens on the way here – I have thousands of them in a bucket and I have lots of buckets of different things.
“I listen a lot to the Quran and I see the fineness of art in the world around me.
“The purest art would be the sunrise itself – then a painting of it, a scan of that printed out and so on.
“I know I’m not going to be at the top of that hierarchy, but I can take secondary creations like empty bottles of beer and turn them into something else.
“For me, it’s about taking objects which have been discarded – that someone felt were worthless – and giving them worth.
“I gather things then ask what skill level I’m at and what physics and technology will allow me to do.
“I use things like CNC machines or 3D scanners, but I’m not deluding myself – they are just tools, no different than a pencil.
“They allow me to produce what I want to create better.
“The beauty of it, for me, is the engineering element. Anthony Gormley is one of my favourite artists and I like how his pieces are made, how the magic is done, which no-one ever looks at.
“People might appreciate the message of a piece, but if an artist concentrates too much on that, they end up trying to sell you a message.
“Then what’s created is no longer art, it’s just decoration.
“When I work, I am trying to distil my skill level – my entire life’s work – into a physical object and then move on.
“I’m not then sentimental about that piece – it’s made.”
Mohamed, who has Palestinian roots and lives and works in Lewisham, uses the example of a tree.
While its trunk, branches, leaves and blossoms might appear impressive at any one time, he says he sees the whole growing process – the complete history of the entity.
He said people looking at his art were often considering the fruit of the tree, rather than seeing this story.
It’s one reason why those viewing his work may wish to be wary of interpreting his pieces as overtly political.
“The fact Old News features Covid and Boris is irrelevant to me, but significant to others,” he said.
“The beauty of art is that it doesn’t have to mean anything to me – I’m just the vessel for the thing and other people analyse it.
“If I was making Old News today, it would be about the Palestine conflict – 10 years ago, it would have been about weapons of mass destruction.”
Old News can currently be found at the Old Donkey Pit, also known as Millennium Circle, at 0º longitude on Blackheath.
Hackney Wick exhibition – August 2023
‘To the Curb’ is the culmination of years of continuous consideration, practice, and acquisition.
“It shines light on the worthless.
So even people drowning in luxury, can find and see worth in the worthless“
– mohamed, on the reasoning behind to the curb.
mohamed is an interdisciplinary conceptual artist, with a focus on the juxtaposition between personhood, society and spirituality.
“To the Curb” is a holistic installation which presents repurposed discarded items into a sculpted discussion within sacred geometries, highlighting the importance of the micro into the macro.
With an informed multi layered approach each “discarded” item is layered into a semi relief sculpture, within the conceptual conversion of the exhibition.
A few selected works previously shown, will be included in “To the Curb” as part of the installation.
The London Economic – June 2020
Artist makes Boris Johnson sculpture from 6,277 pages of pandemic newsprint
The work will go on show in ‘Isolation Mastered’ at JD Malat Gallery.
A giant sculpture of Boris Johnson made from 6,277 pages of newsprint collected during the pandemic is set to go on show in a major new Mayfair exhibition.
Mohamed’s ‘old news’ sculpture has been selected to sit alongside works by 24 other artists whose pieces show a creative response to the Covid-19 isolation period.
More than 1,000 artists responded to the call for submissions, with an Old Masters style painting of loo roll and pasta and a hyperreal nurse painting also selected.
The artworks will be on show at Mayfair’s prestigious JD Malat Gallery from 1-8 July in Isolation Mastered.
London Mayfair exhibition – July 2020
JD Malat Gallery is excited to announce the 25 artists selected for Isolation Mastered. From the 1st – 8th July, Isolation Mastered aims to give aspiring artists of all ages and backgrounds an opportunity to showcase and sell their artwork in oneof London’s leading galleries.
Selected Artists; Edward Povey, Josef O’Connor, Mauro Perucchetti, Petros Chrisostomou, Judy Clarkson, Richard Mensah, Graceland London, Mustafa Boga, Minjoo Kim, Andrew Litten, Ian Rayer-Smith, Lauren Carter-Bridges, Catherine Hyland, Rory Kee, Marcus Dove, Niki Usagi, Mohamed Mohamed, Samantha Parfitt, Marina Gonzalez, Isabel Bonafé, Kojo Marfo, Soimadou Ali Ibrahim, Harriet White, Wesley George, John Ayscough
JD Malat Gallery was delighted to receive over 1000 submissions from UK-based artists. All submissions were carefully reviewed by our experienced committee, with members from curatorial, art collecting, art dealing and art advisory disciplines:
Simon de Pury (Art Dealer & Auctioneer), Dylan Jones (GQ Editor), Robert Montgomery (Artist), David Bellingham (art historian, art market historian, author and Programme Director of the MA in Art Business, Sotheby’s Institute of Art London), Gavin Rossdale (Musician and Art Collector), Jean-David Malat (Founder, JD Malat Gallery), Victoria Aboucaya (Director, JD Malat Gallery) and special guests, Gavin Turk (British Artist), Katrin Fridriks (Artist).
This committee carefully selected artists who demonstrated innovative dialogue with the lockdown period and demonstrated a masterful exploration of their chosen medium.
During this exhibition, JD Malat Gallery will welcome members of the public to decide on their favourite artist through a series of online and in-person votes. The artist with the most votes will receive an exclusive solo show at JD Malat Gallery in 2021. With all profits made from the exhibition directed at each artist and their practice, the goal of this initiative is to support artists during this difficult time.
As a gallery that has inclusivity and diversity at the core of its programme, JD Malat Gallery recognises this unique artist-led initiative as an opportunity to foster connection and strengthen the art community despite this period of newfound distance caused by the global pandemic.
“During this period of unprecedented uncertainty, art is one of the most important ways to foster positivity and connect our society. We hope that this initiative not only provides a platform for artistic expression during this challenging time, but also upholds a collective mission to support the art sector and give creative individuals of all backgrounds an opportunity to exhibit their work.” – Founder, Jean-David Malat