Session

Art & Digital Media

Description

The Unknown Soldier is the name of the monuments we have often heard, but in a different context from the one we will realize, this work of art is dedicated to women who fight for their rights on a daily basis, and is dedicated to them women who are no longer among us and there is no monument to the appreciation of their deeds in society.

"Unknown Soldier", the name is masculine, but the work is a portrait of a woman in large dimensions 3m high and changes the fact, to show greatness and gratitude to them by ironically with the name to highlight gender discrimination by expectation from naming. The portrait was selected from my project from the imaginary portraits "Dhe Jemi Ne" curated by Robert Wilton (Annex) to show the rights that have been truncated (portraits are deaf, blindfolded, powerful character with a lot of suffering, stick modeling that shows the traces that life has left on their faces, and the spiritual power not to stop (photo below)). The name is important to arouse curiosity because it refers to the male gender and we have a giant portrait of a woman, the most important is the comparison with the war because for women it has been and is multiple war, a war against patriarchal society, war against various invaders, the struggle for financial independence, the right to vote, the care of the family, and among all this the investment in knowledge and advancement of women to this day when we are in a position where at least it can be raised as an issue. I have labeled the portrait of the woman as the "Unknown Soldier" where in fact we all know that the most famous soldier is the woman.

ISBN

978-9951-550-475

First Page

1

Last Page

3

Location

UBT Kampus, Lipjan

Start Date

30-10-2021 12:00 AM

End Date

30-10-2021 12:00 AM

DOI

10.33107/ubt-ic.2021.57

Share

COinS
 
Oct 30th, 12:00 AM Oct 30th, 12:00 AM

Ushtari i Panjohur (Unknown Soldier)

UBT Kampus, Lipjan

The Unknown Soldier is the name of the monuments we have often heard, but in a different context from the one we will realize, this work of art is dedicated to women who fight for their rights on a daily basis, and is dedicated to them women who are no longer among us and there is no monument to the appreciation of their deeds in society.

"Unknown Soldier", the name is masculine, but the work is a portrait of a woman in large dimensions 3m high and changes the fact, to show greatness and gratitude to them by ironically with the name to highlight gender discrimination by expectation from naming. The portrait was selected from my project from the imaginary portraits "Dhe Jemi Ne" curated by Robert Wilton (Annex) to show the rights that have been truncated (portraits are deaf, blindfolded, powerful character with a lot of suffering, stick modeling that shows the traces that life has left on their faces, and the spiritual power not to stop (photo below)). The name is important to arouse curiosity because it refers to the male gender and we have a giant portrait of a woman, the most important is the comparison with the war because for women it has been and is multiple war, a war against patriarchal society, war against various invaders, the struggle for financial independence, the right to vote, the care of the family, and among all this the investment in knowledge and advancement of women to this day when we are in a position where at least it can be raised as an issue. I have labeled the portrait of the woman as the "Unknown Soldier" where in fact we all know that the most famous soldier is the woman.