London

Hajjaj, Hassan
Born 1961 in Larache, Morocco
Lives and works in London, United Kingdom and Marrakech, Morocco
Born in Larache, Morocco, Hassan Hajjaj moved to London at an early age. Turning to photography in the late ‘80s, Hajjaj is a master portraitist, taking studio portraits of friends, musicians, and artists, often wearing clothes designed by the artist. Heavily influenced by club, hip-hop, and reggae scenes of London as well as his North African heritage, Hajjaj’s works feature recycled utilitarian objects from North Africa, such as reversed Coca-Cola crates, stools and aluminium cans turned into lamps. These colourful and engaging portraits combine the visual vocabulary of contemporary fashion photography, pop art and the studio photography of African artist Malick Sidibé, in an intelligent commentary on the influences of tradition in the interpretations of high and low branding and the effects of global capitalism. Hajjaj’s work is part of the collections of the Brooklyn Museum, New York; the Nasher Museum of Art, Duke University, North Carolina; the Newark Museum, New Jersey; Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; the Farjam Collection, Dubai; Institut des Cultures d’Islam, Paris; the Kamel Lazaar Foundation, Tunisia; the Barjeel Art Collection and the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi Collection, United Arab Emirates.
Hassan Hajjaj, Nayla’s Gaze, 2015/1436, Framed photography, Metallic Lambda on 3mm dibond, and metal gold tray, 45.1 x 32.4 cm, 59.7 (64.7 incl. the handles) x 46.6 x 6.5 cm (framed), Edition 1/7. Courtesy L’Atelier 21|Hassan Hajjaj, Marmouche, 2012/1433, Metallic Lambda on 3mm dibond in wood sprayed white frame with "Aicha" tomato tins, 94 x 133 cm, Edition 1/7. Courtesy the artist|Hassan Hajjaj, Pois Bleu, 2000, Frame: Wood with Arabic Fanta cans, Print: C-Print, 93 x 136 cm, Edition of 7 + 3 AP. Courtesy Vigo Gallery