- Kinda Hibrawi
Kinda Hibrawi ( _ar. كندة حبراوي) (born
June 11 ,1978 ) is anArab American artist . Hibrawi’s original artwork is sought by collectors and is currently exhibited in group cite web |url=http://www.sunbulawomen.org/html/event.html|title=Sunbula Arab Feminists for change] and solo shows across the US. She is paving the way for a new generation of young Arab American artists. The mix of old world tradition with a modern twist has set a new standard in the Arabic calligraphy world. Of Syrian descent, she grew up betweenSaudi Arabia ,Syria ,Lebanon , and theUnited States . Her formative years in theMiddle East gave her the opportunity to study the power of theArabic language in all of its art forms. Through her studies she began to expand on the ancient tradition ofArabic Calligraphy by giving it a modern twist. As an Arab American, she felt the need for her artwork to reflect the richness of the Middle East coupled with Western diversity. She intertwines East and West and exposes audiences to this historic art form.She was asked by the
City ofLos Angeles to premiere her work in their 2006 CulturalCalendar andCity Guide.cite web|url=http://www.apahm.org/APIAHMweb.pdf|title=Asian and Pacific Islander American Heritage Month 2006 Calendar and Cultural Guide] and is featured online for the Syrian Culture,Arts andHistory Center inMontreal, Canada .cite web|url =http://www.creativesyria.com/kinda.htm|title=Creative Syria] . Recently her work has been acquired for the permanent collection at the Arab American Museum in Detroit, Michigan.cite web | url =http://www.arabamericanmuseum.org/Archive-eNews-61207.id.227.htm|title=Arab American National Museum]Biography
Born Kinda Hibrawi in
Riyadh , Saudi Arabia, she is the first daughter of Khalouk and Khuloud Hibrawi. She was born to a small middle-class family of Syrian heritage, with two othersister s. Hibrawi’s father worked forSaudi Aramco from 1979 until he retired in 2000, except for a one-year hiatus from 1987–88, and ended up in the company’sGovernment Affairs organization. The family moved toDhahran from Riyadh in 1985, and all of the Hibrawi children attended Dhahranschools .Encouraged to pursue the arts by her parents, Hibrawi enrolled in every art class in and out of school. It was at the
Saudi Aramco medical center in Dhahran that she first saw the artwork ofIraqi calligrapher Hassan Massoudy, who interprets inpaintings thepoetry ofKhalil Gibran . Metoui’s prints were displayed in patient waiting rooms.Aftergraduating from Dhahran School, Hibrawi attendedhigh school inManama, Bahrain for three years, and then completed her senior year at TheWilliston Northampton School inEasthampton, Massachusetts , in theU.S. , where she had her first exhibition.Hibrawi spent her
freshman year incollege inBeirut, Lebanon , and then moved tosouthern California in 1998, where she enrolled atCalifornia State University at Fullerton, majoring inillustration andgraphic design . Aftergraduation , she worked as a graphic/web designer for acomputer sales /distributioncompany , and in 2004 with a partner started the commercial artbusiness My Popart, LLC. My Popart (Mypopart.com) specializes in creating affordable,personalized fine art and prints for thehome andoffice .Her paintings range in size from 30 by 40 inches to 48 by 72 inches, and larger. Hibrawi is currently represented by the Chiarini Gallery in Santa Ana, California.
Giving back
On
July 12 ,2006 the tragic situation in the Middle East was set ablaze. It went beyond differing cultures,politics orreligion . It become an attack on basichuman rights and freedoms. Using her talents she created a Limited Edition Print cite web |url=http://www.hbindependent.com/articles/2006/08/24/features/hbi-kinda24.txt|title=Huntington Beach Independent] that would help spread theidea ofhope andaid in thehumanitarian relief efforts for Lebanon and its people cite web |url=http://www.beirutlosangeles.org/gallery/index.html|title=Beirut|Los Angeles: Imagine a united Middle East in peace] . Inspired from thesong “Ya Beirut Sitt Al Dunia” (Beirut ,Lady of theWorld ), written by Syrianpoet Nizar Qabbani and sung by world re-knowned Lebanesesinger , Majdah Al-Roumi. The verse selected from this beautiful song speaks of rising from under the rubble like thealmond flowers in April.In Lebanon an estimated 1 million people were reportedly displaced and
homeless . With a real and immediate impact onchildren , over 40% of those who died were children. As anadvocate of children’s rights Hibrawi donated 100% of the proceeds collected from theLimit ed Print toUNICEF , the United Nations Children’s Fund.References
External links
* [http://www.kindahibrawi.com/ KindaHibrawi.com]
* [http://www.mypopart.com/ MyPopart.com]
* [http://www.unicef.org/ UNICEF]
* [http://www.beirutlosangeles.org/index.html/ Beirut|Los Angeles]
* [http://www.creativesyria.com/ Arts and History Center | Montreal, Canada]
* [http://www.arabamericanmuseum.org/ Arab American National Museum]
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