You’ll find the Holy Land depicted with breathtaking subtlety on the partitions of church buildings and galleries throughout Europe. However Jerusalem and Bethlehem, within the Western creativeness, are likely to look extra like Italy’s Urbino or Siena, than Center Jap cities occupied for two,000 years by a melting pot of communities, together with Palestinian Christians. Now unfold throughout the Israeli and Palestinian territories, the Holy Land, sacred to Judaism, Islam and Christianity, has exercised generations of artists and ideologues, who’ve made and remade it in their very own picture.
Nevertheless, for the Palestinian artist Dima Srouji, The Holy Land is solely house—the positioning of childhood reminiscences, “each good and dangerous”, she says. Her present, A Cosmogram of Holy Views, which opens right this moment at London’s Ab Anbar Gallery, is the product of a decade’s price of analysis into the constructed heritage of Palestinian Christians, and a lifetime’s expertise of life beneath Israeli occupation.
It has at its coronary heart what the artist describes as “the cognitive dissonance” between the best way the skin world views her house and “the fact on the bottom”, which she has represented right here with quiet directness. In works of nice visible energy, she juxtaposes the parable with the fact. Making virtuosic use of a number of media—90s polaroids and Renaissance praedellas, in addition to blown glass, carved stone and moulded wax objects that had been hand-made in Palestine—she flirts continually with a darkish, surreal comedy.
In a sequence of tinted glass collages, European work are overlaid with scenes of recent life in Palestine. In Return to Nazareth, grandiose frescos of the Holy Household’s homecoming after Herod’s bloodbath of the innocents type the backdrop for a picture from Srouji’s personal childhood within the metropolis. The artist’s toddler pores and skin is seen turning purple as a consequence of lack of air, at a time, throughout the First Gulf Conflict, when few Palestinian youngsters had been issued with gasoline masks.
Dima Srouji, A Cosmogram of Holy Views, 2025. Set up view, Ab-Anbar Gallery, London
Photograph: Sergey Novikov. Picture courtesy of the artist and Ab-Anbar Gallery
Different works draw on Srouji’s cautious documentation of Palestinian heritage—stone quarries, mother-of-pearl makers, and unbuilt church buildings—a heritage which she describes as little-studied. Immediately, following years of conflict in Gaza, and amid the as but untested ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, that heritage stays in danger.
Although there are nonetheless thriving craft industries throughout Palestine’s West Financial institution, the observe of Palestinian artisans has been modified by a long time of violence and occupation. Historically, they might use mom of pearl, introduced from the Purple or Lifeless Seas, to make reliquaries for church buildings all over the world.
In A Cosmogram, Srouji has used the identical mom of pearl methods to make a mannequin of her grandparents’ “fully peculiar” home in Nazareth. Her grandmother, twice displaced by battle, evidently tended the home with nice care, however right this moment Srouji describes Nazareth as “an unliveable metropolis”. “No-one will ever stay in that home once more,” she says.
“I’m enjoying with what’s sacred,” she explains, pointing to a sequence of reimagined stone-cut shrines, studded with luminous roundels of stained glass. The objects have been left notably, hauntingly empty, as a result of, for Srouji, “what’s sacred is the shrine itself—and anyway all of the relics have been looted or destroyed”.
In a number of the exhibition’s most compelling works, we’re invited to ponder what will be thought of holy amid the horror in Gaza, the place the gradual withdrawal of Israeli Defence Forces is presently revealing nonetheless extra destruction. Feeling powerless within the face of the slaughter of her associates and family members, Srouji has frolicked in her studio carving, by hand, wax fashions of human kinds.

Dima Srouji, Phantom Votives, 2025. Beeswax, candles, sound by Dirar Kalash
Picture courtesy of the artist and Ab-Anbar Gallery
The works are a twist on the lengthy custom of votive choices in church buildings, however, right here, “it’s my very own votive to the folks of Gaza”, she says. Reproduced in 3D utilizing photogrammetry software program, some are based mostly on components of her personal physique, however others are the dismembered limbs of youngsters who’ve been killed by Israeli forces. In keeping with Palestinian well being authorities, as of October 7 this 12 months, the variety of youngsters killed had reached 20,179—30% of the entire 67,173 deaths recorded for the reason that identical date in 2023.
“It’s the one factor that has stored me sane these final months throughout the genocide,” Srouji says. With out flinching, she provides: “The wax looks like pores and skin—there’s one thing heat about it.”
It’s maybe the curse of the Palestinian artist right this moment to co-exist so intently with loss of life, however Srouiji’s work is a optimistic assertion of her neighborhood’s lengthy existence and heritage. “It’s rather more about Palestinian life than about Palestinian loss of life,” she says.
Underpinned by in-depth tutorial analysis into myriad strands of Palestinian tradition, A Cosmogram of Holy Views provokes us to interrogate dynamic and ambivalent relationships between delusion and historical past, artwork and actuality, the residing and the lifeless. “I wish to push our presence so we aren’t erased,” says Srouji. “I wish to hang-out folks.”
A Cosmogram of Holy Views is at Ab Anbar Gallery, London, till 29 November







