Fernando Botero’s Abu Ghraib

I came across these paintings the other day by Fernando Botero and remembered being very moved by them when I fist saw them some years ago.  The emotions I experienced when viewing them  ranged from gut wrenching horror to feelings of  pity and shame for both the tortured and those doing the torturing.  I am sure that the article that influenced this set of 50 paintings, Seymour M. Hersh‘s  Torture At Abu Ghraib, has not been forgotten by the International community nor have the actual photographs been put to rest.  How could they?  Such dishonor, such humiliation, such gross violation of human rights and all at the hands of soldiers representing the United States of America, a country that helps people, not hurt them!

Botero responded to Hersh’s article by saying, “I, like everyone else, was shocked by the barbarity, especially because the United States is supposed to be this model of compassion.” He was so upset about the injustices  done in Iraq that he began creating a series of paintings that would forever mark these atrocities  upon the collective consciousness of humanity.  Each are titled Abu Ghraib and numbered 1 -50.  The series is based upon actual testimonies that came out of the prison scandal but are his own interpretations of those events. Botero elected not to forgo his signature style of cartoon like characters, but instead uses the style to highlight the vulnerability of his subjects which are large, muscular, and  exposed.  They are bare and easily hurt.

Unlike the original news photographs, Botero’s prisoners seldom see their abusers nor does the viewer.  These prisoners are beaten, tortured, urinated on, and humiliated from outside the picture frame.  For example, in this painting, two soldiers are in attendance.  The presence of the one on the left side is marked only by the urine that is projected onto the victims whose heads are sacked.  The other soldier pins a prisoner down with his boot.  

In another  painting a naked prisoner is tied to his cell wall as though crucified with women’s underwear left on his head like a hood. 

We also see naked, hooded and bound Iraqis heaped in a pyramid along with paintings of prisoners being attacked by dogs.

When this series first appeared in 2005, Botero had a difficult time finding American galleries who would show the work.  As a result, they were first shown in Europe.  Then, they finally appeared in New York, and later they were shown at the University of California, Berkeley.  Botero refused to sell the work to collectors commenting that he did not want to profit from the pain of others.  He has since donated the collection to Berkeley because he wanted it to remain in America, for American viewers as a “reminder.”

Fernando Botero’s Abu Ghraib.