Age, Biography and Wiki
Maha Maamoun was born on 1972 in Oakland, California, is an Egyptian artist. Discover Maha Maamoun's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 52 years old?
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52 years old |
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1972 |
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1972 |
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Oakland, California |
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United States
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1972.
She is a member of famous artist with the age 52 years old group.
Maha Maamoun Height, Weight & Measurements
At 52 years old, Maha Maamoun height not available right now. We will update Maha Maamoun's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Maha Maamoun Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Maha Maamoun worth at the age of 52 years old? Maha Maamoun’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. She is from United States. We have estimated Maha Maamoun's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2024 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2023 |
Pending |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
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artist |
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Timeline
Maha Maamoun (born 1972, Oakland, California), is an Egyptian award-winning visual artist and curator based in Cairo.
Maha Maamoun was born in Oakland, California in 1972 and grew up in Cairo.
She studied Economics and received an MA in Middle Eastern History.
She is a founding board member of the Contemporary Image Collective (CiC), an independent non-profit space for art and culture founded in Cairo in 2004.
In 2004 Maamoun co-founded the independent non-profit space for art and culture: Contemporary Image Collective (CiC) in Cairo.
Besides her artistic practice in photography and video, she collaborates on independent publishing and curatorial projects.
Maamoun was the co-curator of International Visual Arts Festival PhotoCairo3 in Cairo in 2005 and assistant curator for Meeting Points 5 in Berlin in 2007.
Since 2007 she is working on projects that take as their starting point the Pyramids of Giza as a visual and literary image.
Domestic Tourism I is the photographic series where the genres of touristic images of Egypt provided a formal reference for actually exploring a more psychological experience of the city.
These digitally manipulated images present more complicated, less-sellable and slightly uncomfortable images that comment on the Egypt consumed locally.
Domestic Tourism I consists of four images: Beach, Cairo by Night, Felucca and Park.
Domestic Tourism I: Beach depicts bathers at Alexandria’s famous Stanley Bridge where the density of the crowd in the water and the bathers’ conservative dress indicates that the fortunes of the private-access beach have changed and the coastal city’s celebrated cosmopolitanism ceded to a resolutely lower middle class, Egyptian populace.
Domestic Tourism: Cairo by Night offers a noctural view of one of the capital’s major Nile bridges where then-President Mubarak’s disembodied smile replaces the ads on many of the illuminated signboards lining the streets, recalling the former president’s irreverent popular alias: la vache qui rit (the laughing cow) and his rapacious neo-liberal economic policies.
Domestic Tourism I: Felucca presents a touristic image of an eponymous sail boat plying the Nile with carnivalesque landscape of signboards celebrating then-President Mubarak in the background.
She was awarded the Jury Prize for her film Domestic Tourism II at Sharjah Biennal 9 (2009).
Maamoun is a fellow of the Academy of the Arts of the World.
Domestic Tourism I: Park depicts young couples huddled on benches in front of the state headquarters for public administration at one end of Tahrir Square, at the symbolic heart of the capital and the site, six years later, of Egypt’s 2011 revolution.
The street lights with an abnormal intensity in the daytime scene and the oversaturated color of well-worn grass and strangled foliage looks unnatural in this notoriously polluted urban hub.
Domestic Tourism I has been acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of New York.
The film Domestic Tourism II, produced and commissioned by Sharjah Biennal 9, combines scenes from Egyptian films with the Pyramids as backdrop, examining narratives of recent history.
NY Times called the film "a funny, feature-length shout-out to the Great Pyramid of Giza".
To create Domestic Tourism II Maamoun looked for films that had a scene with the pyramids to see how different their cinematic representations are, and how they are implicated in the Cairo’s ongoing negotiations and active struggle over the past and present.
She discovered that a lot of the scenes by the pyramids are quite politically charged and tied to distinct chapters in Egypt’s modern history.
The film starts with the most recent scenes, descends back to the oldest scene, and then ascends up again to the present.
She also co-founded the independent publishing platform called Kayfa-ta in 2013.
In 2014 she curated shows at Sharjah Art Gallery at the American University of Cairo and film program in Wiener Festwochen at Künstlerhaus in Vienna.
In 2018, Maha Maamoun joined the Forum Expanded (Berlinale) curatorial team.
The same year she co-founded Kayfa-ta, a non-profit Arabic publishing initiative.
In 2018 Maamoun for the first time joined the 68th Berlin International Film Festival, Berlinale, as a part of curatorial team of "Forum Expanded".
The same year she moderated ‘Projections’ panel discussion on independent cinema and screening platforms during the 2018 March Meeting in Sharjah.
Currently Maamoun co-curates the exhibition How to Maneuver: Shape-Shifting Texts and Other Publishing Tactics that takes place at Warehouse421 in Abu Dhabi till 16 February 2020.
Maamoun works primarily with video and photography that address the form and function of images in mainstream culture.
She is interested in social conditioning and how the visual presentation of places and environments is expanded to appeal to different audiences.
She claims that common visual and literary images form the cultural environment that we weave and are weaved into.
Her work deals with circulation and function of images in vernacular culture, reframing these as tools for critical insights and analysis.
Maamoun’s work acts as a lens through which we see familiar images in novel and insightful ways.
Her recent video works consider the capacity of images to function critically in a variety of political, social and cultural contexts.
Maamoun is specifically interested in urban fabric of her home city Cairo, drawing attention in her photographic works to the visual contradictions that surround her.
Her generic visual representations of Cairo explore how images intersect with, and are negotiated by, personal experiences.
She reflects on generic and overused national symbols and the ways in which they have been appropriated to construct personal narratives and collective histories.