ETERNAL WAR REQUIEM
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Poetry Despite/Music Despite

ETERNAL WAR REQUIEM

Poetry Despite/Music Despite (Eternal War Requiem) connects artists across time and place, from World War I to the “Global War on Terror,” from the UK to Iraq. These connections acknowledge the recurring traumas of war and, conversely, the human connections that happen despite the pain.

The project emerged out of my personal reflections on Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem (originally written for the 1962 consecration of the new Coventry Cathedral), the nine poems by World War I poet Wilfred Owen featured in the War Requiem, and maestro Karim Wasfi’s “spontaneous compositions,” solo cello performances held at sites of recent bombings in Iraq. These works, along with my own memories of being a U.S. soldier in Iraq in 2003-2004, resonate with each other. They facilitate connections between our current state of endless war and its historical antecedents. Aptly, Wasfi has said of his cello performances: “I was connecting everything: death, spirits, bodies, life.” I was inspired to do something similar.

Building off these connections, Poetry Despite/Music Despite (Eternal War Requiem) is comprised of four core elements. The first includes nine large-scale woodblock prints that visualize the relationship between the horrors of World War I and the ongoing “Global War on Terror.” The prints respond to Owen’s nine poems in the War Requiem, while exploring current issues, including state-sanctioned extrajudicial killing, torture and detention, the refugee crisis, the rise of extremism, and the failure of states.

The second element of the project reimagines each of Owen’s War Requiem poems, placing this historic work into a contemporary context. These reimagined works of poetry and hip-hop were performed live at the BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art in Gateshead, UK in February 2019. Each poetry performance was accompanied by a solo cello performance by maestro Wasfi and presented within the structure of the traditional Latin Mass for the Dead, the same structure Britten used for the War Requiem.

Working with sound artist Nate Sandburg, recordings from these live performances were then mixed, edited, and mastered into the third element of the project, the Poetry Despite/Music Despite (Eternal War Requiem) limited edition double vinyl record. This new composition includes an original sound design and samples from Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem, performed at Coventry Cathedral on May 30, 1962 by the London Symphony Orchestra, Melos Ensemble, The Bach Choir and London Symphony Chorus, Highgate School Choir, Simon Preston on organ, and soloists Galina Vishnevskaya, Peter Pears, and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau.

The fourth and final element reflects on the music and poetry created by those most impacted by war. In a humble gesture of reparation for the destruction and instability that has resulted from the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, I donated my artist fee from the BALTIC Artists’ Award to maestro Wasfi. I then invited members of the public—especially those from countries that supported the invasion of Iraq—to join me in supporting Iraqi musicians who play on, despite. The double vinyl record was offered as a gift to those who made a contribution to support Karim Wasfi’s work with young musicians in Iraq from 2019 - 2021.


—Aaron Hughes, 2019


Poetry Despite/Music Despite
ETERNAL WAR REQUIEM

Conceived & Organized by AARON HUGHES

Improvised Cello Performances by KARIM WASFI

Hip-Hop by THE SYRIAN KINGS (Ahmed & Hussein with contributions from Jowan, Ali and Mohammad; supported by GemArts music leaders Izzy Finch and Pawel Jedrzejewski)

Poetry by AARON HUGHES, CARLOS SIRAH, DUNYA MIKHAIL, & KEVIN BASL

Sound Design by NATE SANDBURG

Woodblock Prints by AARON HUGHES with support from Master Printer Paul Mullowney and printers Paul Kjelland, Kanani Miyamoto, Harry Schneider, Schuyler DeMarinis, Lauren Goding, and Russell Wood.

 

ARTISTS

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Karim Wasfi is a renowned cellist, conductor, and founder of Peace Through Arts Foundation. Wasfi conducted the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra 2007-2016 and established the Italy Iraq Scholarship program in Modena as well as the British Council office in 2005. Wasfi utilizes sound resonance on the brain, neuroscience function, cultural diplomacy, a unique music and sound approach for healing, cross cultural integration, deradicalization, and prevention of tension. His innovative approach helped thousands of people in crisis areas to rise from violence, fear, and intimidation of terror, by conveying creative peaceful resonance through music, sound and arts. Wasfi’s current effort is to rebuild Iraq’s war torn areas by focusing on healing and rebuilding inner and societal peace that aims to proactively prevent future relapse into war and conflict.


Kevin Basl is a writer, musician and activist living near Ithaca, New York. He holds an MFA in fiction from Temple University in Philadelphia, where he has taught writing. His work has been published or is forthcoming in War, Literature and the Arts, O’Dark Thirty, Miramar Magazine, Truthout.org and elsewhere. As a US Army mobile radar operator, he deployed to Iraq twice. He is currently a member of About Face: Veterans Against the War and Veterans for Peace.


Dunya Mikhail is an Iraqi-American poet. She is the author of  In Her Feminine Sign, The Beekeeper, The Iraqi Nights, Diary of A Wave Outside the Sea, and The War Works Hard. Her honors include a Guggenheim fellowship (2018), Kresge fellowship (2013), Arab American Book Award (2010), and United Nations Prize in the Field of Human Rights (2001). She currently teaches Arabic at Oakland University in Michigan.


Carlos Sirah is a writer, performer, and cultural worker from the Mississippi Delta. His work encounters exile, rupture, and displacement in relation to institutions, local and beyond. His most recent works include The Utterances, The Light Body, and Black ‘n da Blues: Stories and Songs from the Arkansas Delta, 1919-2019


The Syrian Kings is a hip-hop group featuring Ahmed and Hussein. The group formed out of GemArts, a leading arts organisation based in Gateshead, UK currently working with Syrian refugee young people on a songwriting and hip-hop project as part of their East by North East youth music programme. The core group of young people in this programme—Ahmed, Hussein, Jowan, Ali and Mohammad—have been working with music leaders Izzy Finch and Pawel Jedrzejewski to develop their musical skills and aspirations. These young people participate in sessions that are very much participant led resulting in lyrics that are often in Arabic and sometimes in English, with themes around the war in Syria, politics, nostalgia, love, lost love and friendship.


Nate Sandberg is a composer, artist, and performer based in Chicago. He creates music and sound design for film, art installations, video games, and more. He composed scores for the Netflix Original series Flint Town as well as the award-winning film T-Rex


Aaron Hughes is an artist, anti-war activist, teacher and Iraq War veteran, working collaboratively in diverse spaces and media. His work seeks out and shares the poetic connections that bind us together, reveal our shared humanity and make meaning out of personal and collective trauma. 

Hughes works with a variety of art and activist projects including Iraq Veterans Against the War, Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative, emerging Veteran Artists Movement, and Prison & Neighborhood Arts Project. He has shown his work internationally at institutions including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin, Maruki Gallery in Tokyo, Ashkal Alwan in Beirut, Sullivan Gallery in Chicago, and the School of Visual Arts Museum in New York. 

Poetry Despite/Music Despite (Eternal War Requiem) was conceived of and organized by Hughes for the 2019 BALTIC Artists’ Award, a worldwide biennial art award judged solely by artists. Hughes was selected for the award by artist Michael Rakowitz. 

In addition to the BALTIC Artists’ Award, Hughes has been awarded grants, residencies, and fellowships from a variety of art institutions, including Ashkal Alwan, Blue Mountain Center, Lawrence Arts Center, Links Hall, The Kitchen, and Penland School of Craft. In 2014, Hughes was awarded the Edes Prize for Emerging Artists for his ongoing Tea Project.


 
 

SPECIAL THANKS


Michael Rakowitz, Nicole Baltrushes Hughes, Karim Wasfi, GemArts, Carlos Sirah, Dunya Mikhail, Kevin Basl, Paul Mullowney, Kanani Miyamoto, Harry Schneider, Schuyler DeMarinis, Lauren Goding, Russell Wood, Paul Kjelland, Kevin Soens, Christina Theobald, Moriah Iverson, Katharine Welsh, Sarah Munro, Stephen Cleland, Sarah Farahat, Caroline Murphy, Emily Holmes, Tom Newell,  Adrianne Murray-Neil, Mullowney Printing, Watershed Center for Fine Art Publishing at Pacific Northwest College of Art, and BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art.


 

 
 

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Or email Aaron Hughes at poetrydespite@gmail.com