Nabil Anani

نبيل عناني

Born: Latroun, Mandatory Palestine

Domain: Visual Arts

Recognition: REGIONAL

Biography

Nabil Anani (born 1943 in Latroun) is one of the key founders of the contemporary Palestinian art movement, a painter, sculptor, and ceramicist whose career has both produced a distinctive body of work and helped build the institutional foundations of art in Palestine. Displaced with his family to Halhul in the southern West Bank during the Nakba, he completed his early education there before studying at the Faculty of Fine Arts at Alexandria University, graduating in 1969. Returning to Palestine, Anani began his career as an artist and trainer at a UN college in Ramallah and held his first exhibition in Jerusalem in 1972. He has since exhibited widely across Europe, North America, the Middle East, North Africa, and Japan, developing a vivid visual vocabulary centered on the Palestinian landscape, village life, women, and the olive groves and terraced hills that anchor Palestinian attachment to the land. Anani is celebrated for his material experimentation. As a co-founder in 1987 of the New Visions group, alongside Sliman Mansour, Vera Tamari, and Tayseer Barakat, he pledged to abandon imported Israeli art supplies in favor of locally found materials. He discovered the expressive richness of sheepskins, leather, henna, natural dyes, and clay, integrating them into works that fused political resistance with a deep sensitivity to texture and craft. A tireless institution-builder, Anani co-founded the League of Palestinian Artists in 1973 and became its director in 1998, taught at Al-Quds University until 2003, and in 2006 helped establish the International Academy of Art in Ramallah, an effort to provide formal fine-art education within Palestine itself. In 1997 he received the first Palestinian National Prize for Visual Art from Yasser Arafat. Now regarded as an elder statesman of Palestinian art, Anani continues to paint richly colored, lyrical evocations of the homeland. His combined achievements, as artist, teacher, and founder of enduring institutions, make him one of the most consequential figures of his generation.

Why This Person Matters

A co-founder of the New Visions movement and builder of Palestine's art institutions, Anani pioneered the use of local materials as both aesthetic and act of resistance.