Sonja Hegasy - Religion and Intellectual Culture

Hassan Heshmat – A Decolonial Artist, Then and Now

Dr. Sonja Hegasy

This project investigates the Werkbiographie of Egyptian sculptor Hassan Heshmat (1920-2006), who rose to national and international recognition in the times of Gamal Abdel Nasser. Hassan Heshmat is considered a pioneer of modern Egyptian art. He was the first Egyptian artist to create artworks in porcelain with local motifs and with the explicit aim that average households could acquire a piece of art.

Born in Menoufiya, Hassan Heshmat was a student of the renowned potter, painter, and sculptor of Palestinian origin, Said el Sadr (1909-1986). Heshmat graduated with a diploma in Ceramics from the Centre for Applied Arts at Cairo University in 1938. To earn his living, he continued with a diploma in Art Education in 1954. Subsequently, he went to West Germany for a year to study at the Artistic Porcelain Academy in Selb, graduating in 1958. As the hometown of two internationally renowned porcelain manufacturers, Rosenthal and Hutschenreuther, Selb was already an international hub for students at the time.

His sculptures often reflect themes from rural Egyptian society, the working class, the arts, or ongoing political events, like the crossing of the Suez Canal in 1973 or the killing of 21 missionaries in Congo – a memorial commissioned by the Order of the Holy Cross in Hasselt, Belgium, in 1970. During the era of Hosni Mubarak, Heshmat received the Egyptian state’s Appreciation Award. After his death, his private home, including his workshop with three ceramic kilns, exhibit space, and garden in Ain Shams, was turned into a public museum. Current tours stress the aspect of love and unity between man and woman and the entity of the family in Heshmat’s works. 

Heshmat mastered various materials beyond porcelain, like metal, stone, wood, and clay, and he worked in all sizes between 5cm and ca. 10m. A number of large murals by him can be found in Egypt and around the world. His pieces are sold today on various online platforms (eBay, classified ads, artnet.com, mutualart.com, or etsy), but not much is known about the artist himself. Secondary literature in Arabic is scarce and nearly non-existent in European languages.

The project investigates a history of ideas in his works, including social realism, the democratization of art, neo-pharaonism, and Pop Art. It asks how changing debates about decolonization during his lifetime and today are reflected in his works.

The big leap. Memorial by Hassan Heshmat to commemorate the 1973 Arab–Israeli War when Egypt was able to secure a foothold on the Eastern bank of the Suez Canal

 

Memorial commissioned by the Order of the Holy Cross in Hasselt, Belgium, in 1970 to commemorate the murder of 21 missionaries in Kongo.

 

The statues of Hassan Heshmat. (Left: the dancers Mahmoud Reda & Farida Fahmy, right: the artist with Farida Fahmy)

 

H_Heshmat_digital

Hassan Heshmat – Ein Visionär seiner Zeit

 

A Digital Exhibition with five audio stages in German language.

Julia Tieke in conversation with Katharina Maria Raab and Sonja Hegasy

 

Concept: Sonja Hegasy

Author: Julia Tieke

Mixing: Matthias Karow

Art exhibition with accompanying educational programme:

 

Hassan Heshmat: Son of Egypt and Heir of the nahda
 

A cooperation between Der Divan. The Arab House of Culture and ZMO

Idea: Dr Sonja Hegasy. Curated together with: Katharina Maria Raab


You can download the accompanying publication here.

You can find the Vernissage on YouTube

 

Media Coverage

Al-Shorouk, 30 June 2025.

Fazit, Deutschlandfunk Kultur, 7 July 2025
 

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