Kurdish refugee nominated for top Australian art prize

Mostafa Azimitabar, who painted using a toothbrush, fled Iran and was held for eight years in Australia’s immigration system.

Moz, in black t-shirt and beige shorts - stands in his studio wit a self portrait he has been working on
Moz has been named a finalist in Australia's prestigious Archibald Prize for portraiture Angus McDonald via Moz Azimitabar]

Mostafa Azimitabar, a refugee held for eight years in Australia’s hardline immigration system, has been named a finalist in the country’s top art prize for a self-portrait he painted with a toothbrush.

Azimitabar, a Kurd who fled persecution in Iran and is better known as Moz, said being a finalist for the prestigious prize was “one of the best moments of my life”. The Archibald Prize for portraiture is worth 100,000 Australian dollars ($72,192).

Moz’s self-portrait was painted using a toothbrush, a technique he began experimenting with in 2014, soon after being sent to the offshore detention centre in Manus Island, Papua New Guinea.

In this July 17, 2018, photo provided by Aziz Abdul, a man standing on a balcony at the East Lorengau Refugee Transit Center on Manus Island, Papua New Guinea.
A man standing on a balcony at the East Lorengau Refugee Transit Center on Manus Island, Papua New Guinea [File: Aziz Abdul/AP Photo]

“I asked one of the officers on Manus: ‘Can I have some paint?’… I would like to do some artwork because I don’t want to give up’,” he recalled.

After the officer said he might eat the paint to inflict self-harm, a frustrated Azimitabar returned to the room he shared with dozens of men.

On a table, he spotted a cup of coffee and a toothbrush.

“I don’t know what happened … that moment was so special for me. I grabbed the toothbrush and I put it in the coffee and I just dragged it [on some paper],” he said, describing this as his “moment of victory”.

KNS088

Azimitabar’s self-portrait is entitled “KNS088”, the government identification number he was given during his eight years in detention.

He said painting was a reminder that he was a person, not a number.

“Art and painting helped me to be strong, to continue. Because when I paint, I don’t feel any trauma,” he said.

The UNHCR has repeatedly called on Australia to close its offshore camps, saying they “undermined the rights of those seeking safety and protection and significantly harmed their physical and mental health”.

But when he was moved to Australia’s mainland for medical care and put in a detention hotel, Azimitabar found it difficult to make art.

Australia’s detention hotels, which made global headlines earlier this year when tennis star Novak Djokovic was held in a dispute over his visa, were “worse than Manus”, he said.

Then, on January 21, 2021, with little warning or explanation, he was released.

Life after detention

Azimitabar was given a six-month bridging visa, which allowed him to work, but not study, access welfare or claim support for accommodation. He told Al Jazeera earlier this year that he had been given just 150 Australian dollars ($107) and two weeks’ accommodation when he was released into the community.

Since then he has tried to build a life in Australia, working for The Run for Good Project, which provides furniture and household goods for people in need.

“We provide free furniture to people [fleeing] domestic violence, or people who have been through a lot of trauma,” he said.

He has also painted, a lot, but found traditional tools did not inspire him as much as the toothbrush.

“This toothbrush is a very good friend of mine,” he said.

Azimitabar wanted his self-portrait to capture the “suffering, sadness and strength” of life as a refugee.

He hoped that being named as an Archibald finalist will allow more Australians to understand that refugees are capable of anything.

“I believe that people look at me as a survivor,” he said.

The winner will be announced on May 13.

Source: AFP, Al Jazeera

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