A research entitled “The Affect of the Drone Strike: Subay’s 12 Hours and the Environmental Resistance of Street Art”, made by Kate Drazner Hoyt in 2015. The research is published on Academia website at:
PDF\ The_Affect_of_the_Drone_Strike_Subays_12
A research entitled “The Affect of the Drone Strike: Subay’s 12 Hours and the Environmental Resistance of Street Art”, made by Kate Drazner Hoyt in 2015. The research is published on Academia website at:
PDF\ The_Affect_of_the_Drone_Strike_Subays_12

An interview with me on BBC Radio in their based in London on “The Cultural Frontline” program, titled by “Identity and Adversity”. I talked in six minutes (20-26), about the street art campaigns and the situation in Yemen. April 2016.


Something peculiar is afoot in Yemen: the usually arcane topics of monetary policy and central banking have become part of everyday chatter, even street art.
Since a Saudi Arabian-led coalition began airstrikes in March 2015 in a bid to oust Houthi rebels from power, some 6,500 people have been killed, and those official numbers are likely far too low.
But what is less reported is how the war has also devastated Yemen’s economy. Most of the country’s exports came from oil and gas, and those industries are simply not functioning.
Last month, a mural appeared on a wall in front of the country’s central bank – seen as a rare neutral and stable institution in Yemen’s fractious conflict. The jagged red line reflected the wild fluctuations of the faltering Yemeni rial.
The artist, Murad Subay, called his work “The Saw”, a reflection of how the economic situation is sawing his country apart. He was inspired to take out his brushes by headlines that the central bank is the last hope for his country’s faltering economy.
“People are devastated because of the currency fluctuation,” Subay told IRIN by email. Prices have shot up while wages have stagnated, he said, and “many people can’t afford to live under this economic situation; they can’t afford to purchase food and basic services”.
For the past few months, commentators have been warning that Yemen’s central bank is in serious trouble.
It is perhaps surprising it has survived this long – after all the country has been ravaged by a war that has become too complex to fit into two sides: it includes multiple local conflicts and allegiances that are tough to untangle.
Related: Why does no one care about Yemen?
The central bank sets official exchange rates for imports of flour and grain. It had also, until recently anyway, managed to keep paying government employees like soldiers, teachers, and doctors – no matter their loyalty or location.
But how long it can prop up a country on the brink of complete economic meltdown is unclear.
Marwa al-Nasaa, resident representative for the International Monetary Fund in Yemen, told IRIN that “the Yemeni economy and rial are obviously in dire straits”.
“After 15 months of intense conflict, the central bank’s reserves, understandably, are running low,” she explained in an email. If foreign reserves become more depleted and the bank can’t prevent the rial from falling further, “it would hit the average Yemeni hard, and the very poor would likely suffer most”.
While there are unconfirmed reports that the Houthis have raided the bank’s reserves, under the hand of respected governor Mohammed Bin Humam, it has done it’s best to keep the currency stable, altering the official exchange rate to combat black market trading.
“Over the last 15 months, by all indications, the central bank tried to deal as neutrally as possible with a very difficult economic, social, and security situation in Yemen,” said al-Nasaa.
“But its ability to maintain foreign exchange support for the most basic imports, service sovereign debt obligations, and pay public sector wages is becoming more and more circumscribed.”
While all this sounds rather academic, it’s not.
Hisham al-Omeisy, an analyst based in Sana’a, pointed out out that what the bank does – or doesn’t do – has a direct impact on everyday life and everyone knows it.
“It affects us directly with pricing, with getting gas… A lot of people don’t have money to begin with,” he explained to IRIN, so any shift in prices can feel drastic.
One impact of the crisis in the banking system has meant that traders seeking to import goods into Yemen – including food – have been unable to acquire credit.
That means food imports are down, and prices are up. In the capital, a 50-kg sack of flour goes for 7,500 rial, compared to 5000 rial a few months ago. In areas like Taiz, prices are significantly higher still.
And it’s hard to buy pricey food without a regular salary.
As of September 2015, the General Union for Yemeni Workers’ Syndicates estimated that three million people had lost their jobs due to the war.Those who still have employment, like the always-in-demand taxi drivers of Sana’a, find it hard to keep going when fuel is in short supply and expensive.
“It’s really hard to make money for your children to survive while you [also] need to feed your car with fuel to keep working,” said cab driver Ahmed Shamsan, a father of three.
The situation is deteriorating fast. Earlier this month, the bank reportedly stopped paying some government salaries, at least for the time being.
And it could yet get worse.
“If basic imports such as grains, fuels, medicines, and fuel are constrained further, this would quickly spill over into the daily lives of people that are on the edge already,” warned al-Nasaa.
Among the sectors hit hardest by the economic crisis is health, an area that was already in a bad way.
Recently returned from Yemen, Karine Kleijer of the medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières has witnessed the country’s healthcare system come grinding to a worrying halt.
“You see that – slowly – programmes like vaccinations and things that should work are no longer functioning because [clinics and hospitals] are just running out of supplies,” she told IRIN.
If public doctors and nurses are unpaid it would represent a really dangerous situation, Kleijer said, as the majority of private clinics have already shuttered and locals are depending solely on publicly-funded healthcare.
“Our biggest concern is the health system is going backwards rapidly. We are at the end of our [tether],” Kleijer added.
Back in 2012, Saudi Arabia stepped in to help Yemen’s economy with a $1 billion deposit in the bank.
“No economic situation improves during wartime… the war needs to stop first”
But as a belligerent in the conflict, further financial support now seems an unlikely prospect, although there are reports that they have demanded the bank move to Riyadh or Aden, which had been a stronghold for Saudi-aligned forces.
Al-Nasaa said the IMF can’t “simply intervene to defend the rial”.
Instead, she said, “it could support a programme designed by the Yemeni authorities, where the authorities would be able to assume and implement programme commitments”.
The IMF does offer concessional lending to low-income countries with urgent needs.
“The IMF has closely engaged with Yemen in the past,” she said, “and it certainly stands ready to help again once conditions would allow [it] to do so”.
Everyone, and that includes al-Nasaa, says the best way to shore up Yemen’s economy is peace.
“The best that could happen is that the conflict parties find a way to a durable peace agreement, and all stakeholders could work together to stabilise and reconstruct Yemen,” she said.
But talks in Kuwait appear to be headed nowhere quickly.
Subay, the muralist, is concerned for his country, even if the bank gets help.
“I don’t think that this crisis can be solved by some kind of resolution on paper. No economic situation improves during wartime… the war needs to stop first.”
(TOP PHOTO: Murad Subay’s “The Saw” in Sana’a. Murad Subay/IRIN)

Artiste de 29 ans né au Yemen, Murad Subay est le Banksy local. Mais contrairement au street artist britannique qui dissimule son identité, Murad Subay expose son visage et ses oeuvres à la vue de tous. C’est en 2001 qu’il commence à peindre sur les murs de Sanaa, la capitale du Yemen et c’est presque seul qu’il lance, dans un pays divisé et en guerre le street art yéménite. Et dans une dictature, pas évident de faire des graffitis politiques sans être inquiéter.

Cependant, Murad Subay n’a pas toujours été un artiste pacifiste. En 2011, il est un des leaders du printemps arabe au Yemen, durement réprimé par le régime. Mais au moment où ces camarades prennent les armes, il choisit le pinceau et les bombe de peintures. Aujourd’hui pacifiste , Murad Subay dénoncent sur les murs de son pays les atrocités de la guerre civile opposant les miliciens chiites au régime sunnite soutenu par l’Arabie Saoudite et les États-Unis. L’artiste combat aussi l’intégrisme religieux caractérisé par la forte présence d’Al Qaida dans la région mais aussi la politique interventionniste des États-Unis, symbolisé par les attaques quotidiennes de drones.

Sa première campagne « colore les murs de ta ville » a été lancé en 2012 juste après les affrontements qui avait secoué la capitale. La campagne visait à effacer les traces du conflit dans les zones les plus touchées. Il encourageait ainsi les passants et les habitants sur les réseaux sociaux à venir peindre des messages de paix sur les ruines des immeubles détruits par les obus et les balles. Cette campagne a duré trois mois et s’est étendue à d’autres villes du pays comme Aden, Taizz.

En 2012, il lance sa deuxième campagne, « les murs se souviennent de leurs visages ». Elle présentait les visages de policiers, civils et opposants politiques disparus. Dans un pays où toute contestation est sévèrement réprimée, sa démarche a pourtant fait le tour du pays et ces visages oubliés ont pu atteindre des provinces reculées. Souvent ironique et irrévérencieux, Murad Subay n’a pas encore été censuré ou intimidé par le gouvernement à l’inverse des extrémistes religieux qui l’ont menacé de mort.


« 12 Hours », sa campagne la plus récente mettait en avant les 12 plus gros problèmes rencontrés par la société yéménite. Vaste programme pour un pays déchiré par la guerre civile. On peut citer au delà du terrorisme et de la dictature le trafic d’armes, les enlèvements, le trafic d’organes et d’êtres humains ou encore les frappes de drones. Avec sa démarche positive, l’artiste a reçu des récompenses liés à l’art ou encore le soutien de l’ONU qu’il a préféré rejeter pour maintenir son autonomie.


En l’espace de deux ans, Murad Subay a peint sur plus de 2000 murs dans tous le pays, invitant quiconque le souhaite à venir participer. « Mes campagnes ne seraient rien sans les gens, même des soldats baissent leurs armes pour donner des coups de pinceaux » dit l’artiste. Et entre la guerre civile, le sectarisme religieux et l’ingérence étrangère, les modestes peintures politiques de Murad Subay ne peuvent être que positives et saines dans une société dictatoriale ravagée par la violence.


انتقلت الثورة من الشوارع والمظاهرات والمسيرات، ومن الفن الحركي من الأفلام والأغاني الثورية والمسرحيات السياسية إلى فن جديد ومن نوع آخر، وهو فن الرسم على الجدران، فن الجرافيتي والطريقة المبتكرة في الثورة على الأنظمة والحكومات بسلمية من خلال الفن الصامت، الذي يصور قضايا مجتمعية من خلال رسوامت ملونة أو بالأبيض والأسود على الجدران.
اشتهر فن الجرافيتي بالتزامن مع أحداث الربيع العربي في مصر وفلسطين و اليمن بالذات، وذلك عن طريق رسم صور للشهداء على جدران الشوارع، لتذكير الشعب بالجرائم الدموية التي ارتكبتها الأنظمة تجاه شعوبها، كما يتم كتابة الشعارات التي استخدمها الثوار في بداية الربيع العربي حتى لا ينسى الشعب مطالبه التي لم تحقهها الأنظمة بعد.
اليمن

الفنان مراد سبيع، المُلقب في اليمن بفنان الشارع، الذي حوّل بقايا الدمار الذي أحدثته غارات التحالف السعودي على اليمن إلى جدران ملونة ورسومات تعبر عن الوضع الحالي في اليمن، استمر مراد في ملاحقة الأماكن التي تخلفها قوات التحالف مدمرة، ويعيد أحيائها بألوانه، الصورة السابقة هي لمجمع سكني تم قصفه من قبل قوات التحالف وقُتل فيه 15 طفلًا، قبل أن يذهب مراد إلى نفس المكان ليرسم على الجدران 15 وردة وبجانبها شريط أسود للحداد على أرواح الأطفال ضحايا القصف.
يقول مراد في حوار على على موقع هافينجتون بوست بأن هذا ما استطاع القيام به تجاه الحرب القائمة في بلده، وبأنه يجب عليه أن يلقي الضوء على ما تفعله تلك الحرب بأهله، وأن يُخلد تلك الصور على جدران المدن، لكي لا ينساها الناس أبدًا، ولكي يعرف العالم ما تكلفه الحرب، وما يخسره الناس بعدها.
قام مراد سبيع بحملة فنية في شوارع صنعاء سُميت باسم خراب، جمع فيها غيره من الفنانين لمدة ثلاثة أيام، للتظاهر عن طريق الرسم على الجدران، كما شجع فيها المارة العاديين في مساعدتهم في تصوير مطالبهم الثورية ومشاكلهم الاجتماعية في صورة رسومات على الجدران، تم منع مراد أكثر من مرة من قِبل الجيش في الشوارع من الاستمرار في الرسم وإلا سيتم اعتقاله.

قام مراد برسم لوحات معبرة عن حالة المدن اليمينة بعض الحرب، والتي وقع بعضها تحت حصار داخلي وخارجي ولم تتلقى المعونات الغذائية أو العلاجية لشهور كاملة، فرسم جرافيتي تعبيري لها في مركز مدينة صنعاء.

فلسطين
الجرافيتي فنٌ هادف، يسعى الفنان من خلاله إلى إيصال رسالة قد تكون متعلّقة بقضايا اجتماعية أو سياسية، أو أزمة معيّنة داخل البلاد، وتعدّ فلسطين أوّل دولة عربية ظهر فيها هذا النوع من الفنون مع اندلاع “انتفاضة الحجارة”؛ فكان أحد أساليب المُقاومة التي جرّمها الاحتلال وفرض على كل من يمارسه عقوبة السجن.

وكان عام 2000 وهو العام الذي قرّرت فيها سلطات الاحتلال أن تعزل الضفة الغربية عن القدس والأراضي المحتلة عام 1948، هو العام الذي تجلّى فيه فن الجرافيتي بشكل كبير، حيث وجد الفنانون الفلسطينيون والعالميون في جدار الفصل العنصري مساحة واسعة للتعبير عن رفضهم للجدار ذاته وللاحتلال.

حاجز قلنديا، الضفة الغربية
تعد الضفة الغربية من الأماكن التي تحتوي على فن للجرافيتي متجدد ومستمر، جعل للقضية الفلسطينية مكانًا بارزًا بين الفنون العالمية، وجذب الفنانين العالميين لإلقاء الضوء على القضية الفلسطينية، بل والذهاب إلى الضفة الغربية والمشاركة في رسم قطع فنية لهم من فن الجرافيتي على الجدار العازل.
مصر

يعد الجرافيتي أحد منتجات الحضارة الفرعونية والاغريقية، تجسد في الرسومات الموجودة على جدران المعابد والكهوف، استخدمه الزنوج مع موسيقى الراب في الولايات المتحدة الأميركية، للتعبير عن ما يجدونه من عنصرية وفقر، وتطور ليصبح فيما بعد وسيلة من وسائل الاحتجاج، تستخدمها الحركات السياسية للتعبير عن آرائها وأفكارها.
ولكن بعد عام 2005، وبعد ظهور روابط الأولتراس الرياضية، وفناني الهيب هوب، اتخذ فن الجرافيتي شكلاً جديداً أكثر احترافية، لأن شباب الأولتراس وفناني الهيب هوب يعتبرون فن الجرافيتي جزءاً من ثقافتهم، ووسيلة للتعبير عن أفكارهم، ونتيجة لتطور وسائل الاتصال، استطاع هؤلاء الشباب تعلم الجرافيتي عبر الانترنت.
اليوم يعد الجرافيتي في مصر هو بمثابة صرخة احتجاج على الجدران، وذلك لتوثيق أحداث الثورة عبر نقشها على جدران ميدان التحرير لينتشر في أكثر من مكان بالقاهرة والمحافظات، ورسم فنانون جداريات للشهداء تجسد بطولاتهم وأخرى تسخر من الرموز الذين قامت ضدهم الثورة.

وغالبًا ما يكون فنّان الجرافيتي مجهولًا حيث يوقّع فنّانو الكتابة على الجدران باسم مستعار يكون غالباً مزيجا من الحروف والأرقام، ويصرّ معظمهم على البقاء مجهولين، حتّى لو وصلت أعمالهم إلى المتاحف، أو حتّى بيعت حيث يعتبرها البعض مشاركة ضد اسقاط نظام بعينه أو ربما تساهم في تغير هيكلة الدولة التي تجرم قانون المظاهرات.
ورغم اختفاء بعض من رسومات الجرافيتي الاحتجاجية، لا يزال هذا الفن موجوداً بقوة، كوسيلة للتواصل، وصرخة مكبوتة تجعل الجدران والأرصفة تنطق بما لا تستطيع أن تنطق به الألسنة.

Yəmənin ilk inqilabçı küçə sənətçisi Murad Subay.
Murad inqilabdan sonra divarlara müharibənin izlərini həkk edir
Rəssam həlak olan insanların üzlərini, onların həyat hekayəsini divarlara köçürür.
O, yanlış verilmiş siyasi qərarlara fırçasıyla etiraz edir.
“Yəmənli Banksi” ləqəbi ilə məşhurlaşan Murad məqsədinin insanların qorxularını, ümidlərini və düşüncələrini divarda əks etdirmək olduğunu deyir.
Murad tək deyil. Rəssamın müharibəyə, təcavüzə etirazına dostları da dəstək verir.

Yemeni Artist Murad Subay has spent the last seven years in decorating Sanaa’s streets with murals and colorful paintings.
Since the Arab Spring kicked off in 2011, Subay has drawn hundreds of paintings on the walls of Sanna’a, which have been damaged by the war, aiming to highlight the oppression and sufferance of millions of Yemenis caused by the war, poverty, and revolution in their country.
Till this day, Subay launched five artistic campaigns, and each focused on a different aspect of the conflict, including the incidents of kidnap, disappearance, corruption, poverty, killing of civilians, drones’ use, and the huge devastation of his country’s infrastructure.
While drawing one of his paintings near the Yemeni Central Bank, Murad Subay said: “Today we are near the Yemeni Central Bank, and we want to say that economy shall find real solutions, stop the corruption and the collapse of the national economy”.
The deterioration of the Yemeni economy has increased with the launch of the civil war in March 2015, when the Saudi-led Arab coalition kicked off an air attack to overthrow the Houthis, and to return the government of President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi. The conflict led to the death of more than six thousand Yemeni to date, displaced more than two million people, and involved the poor country in one of the worst world humanitarian crises ever.
Subay has called his recent campaign “Ruins”, and drew paintings on the walls of the buildings damaged during the war, to commemorate thousands of people who lost their lives in the conflict.
Subay does not work alone. Over the years, he has called the youth who live in the neighborhoods near the city to join him, and hundreds have responded. The artist stresses that art is the best peaceful and influential mean to refuse oppression and to emphasize sufferance. Subay said that colors and paintings are a decent and peaceful call for Yemenis to refuse hatred and conflicts, and to move toward the construction of their country and to stop its destruction.
Subay received many global awards for the political expressions he use in his works. Yet, he sees that he earned these awards due to the support of his friends, family, and the Yemeni people, saying teamwork can make a significant difference in Yemen.

“في صنعاء كذلك، رسمٌ متواصل على ما تبقى من المدينة. رسم مراد سبيع سابقاً على ركام المدينة مشروعه “حُطام”. صارت المباني المدمرة جزئياً دفتراً مفتوحاً له، وحوّلها إلى رسائل مضادة للحرب، نال بعدها جائزة “الفن من أجل السلام”. عاد سبيع في 16 آذار/ مارس الحالي ليحتل الشارع، ودعا معه ناس المدينة للمشاركة في الرسم على جدران شارع الرباط في صنعاء، فَقَدِم منهم رجال ونساء وأطفال وكبار. لا يعود مهماً هنا “جودة” العمل الفني بالمعنى التقني، لكن أن يستعيد سكان المدينة سيطرتهم على جزء من الحيز المعماري الذي يشغلونه، أن يكون لهم حق ترك أثر ما عليه، وأن ينقل هذا الأثر أملهم بيمن بلا حرب.
هذه الفنون التي تجاهلت الوسائط الكلاسيكية، يصنعها شباب يعتبرون المدينة مساحة ضرورية للعمل وعرض الأفكار، يرونها ستوديو كبيرا. أهمية الفن المديني تكمن أولاً في كونه (غالباً) غارقا في الهم الاجتماعي والسياسي. وفي كونه ثانياً يقدّم رؤية مختلفة لدور الفنون واستعمال الحيّز. عليك أن تركّب أفكارك مع المدينة أولاً، ثمّ أن تعيد تركيب العمل (ربما مع فنان جديد) فوق العمل الأول الزائل أو المتغيّر، وربما بتقنيات أخرى، ودائماً بنظرة مختلفة. تتراكم طبقات المدينة ويغمر بعضها البعض.
لا يكترث من يرسم على حائط بإمكانية أن يأتي أحدهم ليخرب عمله أو يعدله لاحقاً. الفن هنا سريع الزوال نسبياً، يعبر المدينة عبوراً سريعاً كما نفعل نحن حين نمر من مكان العمل إلى مكان السكن.. فن المدن يخترع أساليب لتطويع الأسطح المدينية العامة في خدمة الفكرة البصرية، صار مع الوقت جزءاً من الهوية البصرية لمدن عالمية كبرى وحركة فنية معترف بها، ويزداد تقبّلها في العالم العربي، خصوصاً بعد أعوام الثورات المتنقلة التي احتاجت الجدران لتقول قولها.”
من مقال للكاتب/ صباح جلول
جريدة “السفير”

On the first day of Saudi Arabia’s intervention into Yemen’s civil war in March of last year, warplanes bombed a residential compound on the outskirts of the capital Sanaa, killing dozens of people inside.
A Yemeni human rights organization said a coalition led by Saudi Arabia killed 27 civilians, including 15 children, in the strikes on the Bani Hawat neighborhood on March 26, 2015.
Yemeni artist Murad Subay headed to the compound with a group of friends a few weeks later, and together with local kids painted 27 flowers on its walls, 15 of them with just one leaf to symbolize the children whose lives were lost.
It was the beginning of the 28-year-old’s latest street art campaign, “Ruins.”
At least 6,200 people have been killed since last march in the latest round of conflict, in which Saudi Arabia’s military coalition and its Yemeni ally President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi are battling Yemen’s Houthi rebels and supporters of ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh.
“They have destroyed everything,” Subay told The WorldPost of the warring parties. “So, what can we do? Just this: Not remain silent, commemorate the innocent people who have been killed, and highlight the cost of this war.”
Over the past year, Subay and fellow artist Thi Yazen have gone to areas where the war has destroyed homes or killed civilians, and covered them in murals.
What can we do? Just this: Not remain silent, commemorate the innocent people who have been killed, and highlight the cost of this war.”
U.N.-sponsored peace talks between the government and rebels began on Thursday, 10 days into a shaky truce. Government representatives said their expectations of the talks were low, while Yemenis on social media urged the leaders: “Don’t come back without peace.”
“I hope this is an opportunity, and it’s not just me,” Subay said. “There are millions of Yemenis who want peace… who need peace.”
Subay has been making his case for peace in Yemen through street art projects for the past five years.
The Arab Spring uprisings of 2011 were a rude political awakening for the young artist. He joined thousands of Yemenis protesting then-president Saleh’s three-decade grip on power. He and his friends helped form a security cordon around Sanaa’s “Change Square” to prevent people bringing in weapons into peaceful sit-in.
But in the end, Yemeni activists weren’t able to stop the pro-democracy uprising from being hijacked by the political forces tussling over power in Yemen. The protests became street battles, and Saleh cut a deal to leave office in exchange for legal immunity, allowing him lurk around Sanaa trying to undermine the new government led by Hadi.
Subay was disgusted by the way politicians exploited the revolution. “It turned out that there was a game inside the revolution,” he said. “I was so frustrated by what happened, and that the country was heading into turmoil, and all I wanted to do was paint.”
In March 2012, he launched his first street art campaign, “Color the walls of your street.” He and his friends headed into battle-scarred neighborhoods where different factions were fighting for control, and covered them in colorful murals.
On social media, Subay invited people to come help them paint, and after a week, dozens of people started to show up, bringing their kids and their own paints. Similar murals began to appear on the walls of other cities.
“It’s like protesting by colors,” Subay said. “We painted to paint on the ugliness of war, and say there are options instead of going to war and using weapons.”
“To use colors — it is better than to use bullets.”
One of Subay’s next street art campaigns brought him into more direct confrontation with authorities. Inspired by the investigations of his friend, Yemeni journalist Sami Ghalib, into enforced disappearances in Yemen, Subay launched “The walls remember their faces” in September 2012. Over the next seven months, he and his collaborators painted portraits of over 100 Yemenis thought to have been secretly kidnapped or killed by authorities since the 1960s.
“It was very simple — just faces and names — but they are not remembered,” Subay said. “The people responsible for these crimes have silenced every voice who wanted to say something about this.”
Subay found his murals kept getting erased, but his team would just go back and repaint them, and add more portraits of the disappeared.
They also took the campaign right to the heart of the regime — painting faces of the disappeared on the walls of the intelligence agency, and outside the offices of powerful general Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar and ex-president Saleh. This drew the ire of Yemeni security forces, but Subay says the families of the disappeared and media who accompanied the painters prevented their arrest.
Saleh eventually allied with the Houthi rebel movement (which as president, he had repeatedly tried to crush), enabling their takeover of the Yemeni capital in September 2014.
As the Houthis continued to advance through the country, and Hadi fled for his life, Saudi Arabia formed a military coalition to oust the rebels, citing concerns that they were supported by the kingdom’s regional rival Iran.
The impact of the ensuing war has been devastating to Yemen, already the poorest country in the region. Some 35,000 people have been wounded, over 2.5 million people displaced, and 14 million people don’t have enough food. The United Nations and human rights groups say the coalition has bombed weddings, markets, schools, hospitals and homes around Yemen.
“Things people built over decades, they lost in one moment,” Subay said.
The war has made him constantly anxious — about making ends meet or getting hold of basic supplies — but he emphasizes that his family in Sanaa has had it much better than the millions who don’t have food, water or shelter because of the war. His older brother, a poet and journalist, was shot by unknown gunmen in the capital earlier this year, but he is recovering overseas.
Subay went to the U.K. last week to collect a “Freedom of Expression” award from the campaign group Index on Censorship. He dedicated his award to all “the unknown people who struggle to survive” in Yemen, while berating the “the world’s presidents, kings and leaders who misused their power,” and the international community and media for turning a blind eye.
While in London, he collaborated with British street artists to paint his first mural outside Yemen, slamming international involvement in the war and indifference to the civilian toll.
“Sometimes it feels like nobody knows what’s happening in Yemen,” Subay said.
He warned of the dangers of neglecting the fallout of Yemen’s war, which is exacerbating divisions and grievances in a country with weak institutions and awash with weapons. “You see what happened in Libya with nobody in government … some even say it could be worse than Syria because there is so much anger in Yemen,” he said.
Yet Subay is a determined optimist. He is encouraged that some Yemenis have replicated his street art campaigns and others have begged him for art classes.
In a country where people are fighting for survival and art galleries are a distant luxury for many, he stresses the importance of bringing art to people where they already are — “in front of their houses, the places they pass by on the way to work.”
Last month, he organized a three-day public art event in the capital, inviting passers-by, including some members of the security forces, to help cover the walls of the university in murals.
He hopes Yemenis will get both joy and insights out of participating in his art projects.
“War is not an option. There is a lot of beauty to see in this world,” he said. “If they take just this idea from the art, it would be enough.”
“Art humanizes us,” he said.
More images of the “Ruins” campaign with descriptions from Subay:
“We painted this on a big container in Taiz. The most common weapon used in that area at the time was mortars, and they were destroying many areas. I took a photo of a friend’s daughter holding a watering can, and painted her watering a flower that is growing out of a mortar. We have to believe and we have to hope… our life will not stop with this war. It will not prevent us from dreaming.”
“We left Taiz after we were stopped and questioned by gunmen. It was also for our safety as there was shelling in the area. So we painted this in north Sanaa. It’s very simple. The black crow has kicked the family photo out of balance. It’s like our country has lost its balance because of this war. A family was living in this house, and the only survivors were the father and the 1-year-old daughter.”
“Before the war there was 26 weekly or daily newspapers published in Yemen. Now, there are maybe only five and they all have one voice. The parties to this war have closed their websites. So I painted this mural on the Yemeni journalists’ syndicate to protest that there is no freedom anymore.”
“I painted this in the middle of the city of Sanaa, to say the whole of Yemen is under blockade — both from internal and external parties. The blockade is turning the whole country to ruins. I used barbed wire to convey the reality of how hard life is here.”