Gaza war remains lead artists to create works of art
Published date: 28 October 2014 21:38 GMT
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Last update: 10 years ago
The atelier of Palestinian artist Raed Issa was badly destroyed when Israeli fighter jets attacked his house and destroyed it. His paintings, which hang in many galleries and exhibitions around the world, was burned. He preferred to draw a new painting that depicts the rubble of his house (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
The atelier of Palestinian artist Raed Issa was badly destroyed when Israeli fighter jets attacked his house and destroyed it. His paintings, which hang in many galleries and exhibitions around the world, was burned. He preferred to draw a new painting that depicts the rubble of his house (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
The atelier of Palestinian artist Raed Issa was badly destroyed when Israeli fighter jets attacked his house and destroyed it. His paintings, which hang in many galleries and exhibitions around the world, was burned. He preferred to draw a new painting that depicts the rubble of his house (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
The atelier of Palestinian artist Raed Issa was badly destroyed when Israeli fighter jets attacked his house and destroyed it. His paintings, which hang in many galleries and exhibitions around the world, was burned. He preferred to draw a new painting that depicts the rubble of his house (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
Mohammed al-Zummar, a Palestinian man working in a street cafe, collected unexploded shells and diffused ammunition rounds, at his house, and used them to form decorations and adornments, wrote on it in different languages, reforming the shells into vases, the empty rounds into musical symbols, and the shells fragments to form a Palestine map and birds forms with red color (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
Mohammed al-Zummar, a Palestinian man working in a street cafe, collected unexploded shells and diffused ammunition rounds, at his house, and used them to form decorations and adornments, wrote on it in different languages, reforming the shells into vases, the empty rounds into musical symbols, and the shells fragments to form a Palestine map and birds forms with red color (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
Mohammed al-Zummar, a Palestinian man working in a street cafe, collected unexploded shells and diffused ammunition rounds, at his house, and used them to form decorations and adornments, wrote on it in different languages, reforming the shells into vases, the empty rounds into musical symbols, and the shells fragments to form a Palestine map and birds forms with red color (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
The atelier of Palestinian artist Raed Issa was badly destroyed when Israeli fighter jets attacked his house and destroyed it. His paintings, which hang in many galleries and exhibitions around the world, was burned. He preferred to draw a new painting that depicts the rubble of his house (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
The atelier of Palestinian artist Raed Issa was badly destroyed when Israeli fighter jets attacked his house and destroyed it. His paintings, which hang in many galleries and exhibitions around the world, was burned. He preferred to draw a new painting that depicts the rubble of his house (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
The atelier of Palestinian artist Raed Issa was badly destroyed when Israeli fighter jets attacked his house and destroyed it. His paintings, which hang in many galleries and exhibitions around the world, was burned. He preferred to draw a new painting that depicts the rubble of his house (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
Mohammed al-Zummar, a Palestinian man working in a street cafe, collected unexploded shells and diffused ammunition rounds, at his house, and used them to form decorations and adornments, wrote on it in different languages, reforming the shells into vases, the empty rounds into musical symbols, and the shells fragments to form a Palestine map and birds forms with red color (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
Mohammed al-Zummar, a Palestinian man working in a street cafe, collected unexploded shells and diffused ammunition rounds, at his house, and used them to form decorations and adornments, wrote on it in different languages, reforming the shells into vases, the empty rounds into musical symbols, and the shells fragments to form a Palestine map and birds forms with red color (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
Mohammed al-Zummar, a Palestinian man working in a street cafe, collected unexploded shells and diffused ammunition rounds, at his house, and used them to form decorations and adornments, wrote on it in different languages, reforming the shells into vases, the empty rounds into musical symbols, and the shells fragments to form a Palestine map and birds forms with red color (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
Mohammed al-Zummar, a Palestinian man working in a street cafe, collected unexploded shells and diffused ammunition rounds, at his house, and used them to form decorations and adornments, wrote on it in different languages, reforming the shells into vases, the empty rounds into musical symbols, and the shells fragments to form a Palestine map and birds forms with red color (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
Mohammed al-Zummar, a Palestinian man working in a street cafe, collected unexploded shells and diffused ammunition rounds, at his house, and used them to form decorations and adornments, wrote on it in different languages, reforming the shells into vases, the empty rounds into musical symbols, and the shells fragments to form a Palestine map and birds forms with red color (MEE/Mohammed Asad)
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