Karimeh Abbud
Karimeh Abbud | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 27 April 1940 | (aged 46)
Nationality | Palestinian Arab |
Education | American University of Beirut, Greater Lebanon |
Occupation | Photographer |
Karimeh Abbud or Karimeh Abboud (1896 – 1940; Arabic: كريمة عبّود), was a Palestinian professional photographer and artist who lived and worked in Palestine in the first half of the twentieth century.[1] She was one of the first woman photographers in Palestine and the Middle East.[2]
Biography
[edit]Karimeh Abbud was born in Bethlehem.[3] Her father Said Abbud, was working as a teacher in Bethlehem, after the family had moved from Khiam, in South of Lebanon to Palestine.[4] At the turn of the century, he became pastor of the Lutheran church for the following five decades. Karimeh was the second of six children. She completed her elementary education at "Talitha Koumi" school. Her mother, Barbara Badr, was also a teacher.[4]
She first began to take an interest in photography in 1913, after receiving a camera from her father as a gift for her 17th birthday. Her first photos were of family, friends and the landscape in Bethlehem and her first signed picture is dated October 1919.[1]
While studying Arabic literature at the American University of Beirut in Lebanon, she took a trip to Baalbek to photograph archaeological sites there.
In 1929, she married a merchant from Marjayoun with whom she had a son, Samir.[5]
Photography career
[edit]She set up a home studio, earning money by taking photos of women and children, weddings and other ceremonies. She also took numerous photos of public spaces in Haifa, Nazareth, Bethlehem and Tiberias.[1] By the 1930s she worked as a professional photographer in Nazareth. Her grandfather had been a senior pharmacist at the Nazareth English Hospital and her father had served there as a pastor. When local Nazareth photographer Fadil Saba moved to Haifa, Karimeh's studio work was in high demand for weddings and portraits in particular. The work she produced in this period was stamped in Arabic and English with the words: "Karimeh Abbud - Lady Photographer - كريمة عبود: مصورة شمس". In the mid-1930s, she began offering hand-painted copies of studio photographs.[1] In 1924, she described herself as the "only national photographer."[5]
Collection and exhibitions
[edit]Original copies of her extensive portfolio have been collected by Ahmed Mrowat, Director of the Nazareth Archives Project. In 2006, Bouky Boaz, an Israeli antiquities collector, discovered over 400 original prints of Abbud's in a home in the Qatamon quarter of Jerusalem whose owners fled the war and the Israeli conquest in 1948. Many are signed by the artist.[1] An exhibition of photographs by Abbud has opened at the Museum of Islamic and Near Eastern Cultures in Be'er Sheva. The exhibition focuses on tourism to Palestine based on souvenirs such as postcards, maps, spices, books and dried flowers.[5]
Tribute
[edit]On 18 November 2016, Google dedicated a Doodle to Karimeh Abbud on the 123rd anniversary of her birth. The Doodle reached all the countries of the Arab World.[6]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Ahmed Mrowat (Summer 2007). "Karimeh Abbud: Early Woman Photographer (1896-1955)". Jerusalem Quarterly. 31. Institute of Jerusalem Studies: 72–78. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
- ^ Verde, Tom (April 2019). "Women Behind the Lens: The Middle East's First Female Photographers". Aramco World. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
- ^ Raheb, Mitri (2011). Karīmah ʻAbbūd : rāʼidat al-taṣwīr al-niswī fī Filasṭīn, 1893-1940 كريمة عبود : رائدة التصوير النسوي في فلسطين، ١٨٩٣-١٩٤٠ [Karimeh Abbud: Pioneer of Female Photography in Palestine, 1893-1940] (in Arabic). Bethlehem: Diyār lil-Nashr. p. 44. ISBN 9789950376038.
- ^ a b Beirut Image Festival 2019 Catalogue, September 4 - October 5, 2019. P.9
- ^ a b c Aderet, Ofer (22 September 2022). "The Female Photographer Who Captured Palestinian Lives 100 Years Ago". Haaretz. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
- ^ "Karimeh Abbud's 123rd Birthday". Google Doodles. 18 November 2016. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
Gallery; postcards by Karimeh Abbud, from ca 1925-1930
[edit]-
1. NAZARETH
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2. NAZARETH
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5. NAZARETH - Mount Tabor
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6. NAZARETH - Mount Tabor - Basilica Church
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8. NAZARETH
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10. NAZARETH - Palestine Camels
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11. NAZARETH - Ploughing the fields
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12. NAZARETH - Trashing floor
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13. TIBERIAS
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16. HAIFA
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17. HAIFA - Mount Carmel
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18. Ruins of CAPERNAUM
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20. Jacob's Well (Near Nablus)
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21. BETHEL - Group of Children
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22. JERUSALEM
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24. River Jordan
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25. HEBRON - Abraham's oak
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26. TIBERIAS from the lake
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27. Sebastie Colonnade
Documentary films
[edit]- Mahasen Nasser-Eldin: Restored Pictures. Documentary (22 minutes), Palestinian Territories 2012, Vimeo (Arabic with English subtitles)
- Issam Ballan: Karimeh Abbud: The first Palestinian female photographer. Documentary (11 minutes), Palestinian Territories 2016, YouTube (Arabic)
External links
[edit]- Mitri Raheb: Karimeh Abbud Entrepreneurship and Early Training, Jerusalem Quarterly, no 88, Winter 2021
- Marwan Asmar: The ‘Lady Photographer’ of Palestine. In: Gulf News 3 January 2018
- Mary Pelletier: Karimeh Abbud: Lady Photographer of Palestine Archived 2018-06-12 at the Wayback Machine (PDF), grant report for Palestine Exploration Fund, 2016
- Mary Pelletier: Who Was Karimeh Abbud? Part 1 Archived 2018-06-12 at the Wayback Machine, Palestine Exploration Fund Blog, 8 December 2016
- Issam Nassar: Early Local Photography in Palestine: The Legacy of Karimeh Abbud (PDF), In: Jerusalem Quarterly 46 (2011), p23–31
- 1893 births
- 1940 deaths
- Palestinian people of Lebanese descent
- People from Bethlehem
- Arab people from Ottoman Palestine
- Arab people in Mandatory Palestine
- Palestinian Lutherans
- 20th-century women photographers
- Culture of Palestine (region)
- Photography in Lebanon
- Photographers in Palestine (region)
- 20th-century Palestinian photographers
- Palestinian women photographers
- Photographers from Mandatory Palestine
- 20th-century Palestinian women artists