
9 March 2022
How would you describe your practice?
‘I want to investigate. My art and design practice is a way of learning and understanding the world around me. I like to approach familiar phenomena from nature from a different angle and add a story to what we already know. For example, in 2014, for the Huis van Hilde, the archaeology centre of North Holland in Castricum, I made a sculpture from an enlarged grain of sand that I found under the House. How do we relate to our immediate surroundings? I find that question interesting. Light and dark also fascinate me. Earlier, I built a machine that measures the light intensity in a room. I then translate these variations in light into a 3D print, as an alternative view of the world around us.’
What does the question of identity mean to you?
‘I was about six years old when we moved from Tunisia to the Netherlands. I was balancing between the culture I had inherited from home and our neighbourhood in Eindhoven. Above all, I wanted to be free. In secondary school, I started making my own programmes on the computer. I had the impression that everything was always and only viewed from the perspective of the West: the voyages of discovery, the inventions, the heroes. I found it difficult to recognise myself in that. During an art history lesson, we were discussing Orientalism. Suddenly I had the feeling that it was also about me. That felt good and my fascination for art was aroused. Later, at the Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam, I tried to abstract the environment around me, to reduce it to its essence. A bit like De Stijl, but different. I prefer programming, I am less of a painter.’







