This August, journalist Moustafa Bayoumi broke the story that the primary photograph of a detainee in a Central Intelligence Company (CIA) black web site had been declassified. It exhibits an emaciated Ammar al-Baluchi, standing shackled and bare in a starkly white room. Subjected to years of torture, in accordance with CIA protocol, the photograph of the Pakistani detainee was meant “to document his physical condition at the time of transfer.” In a latest Hyperallergic opinion piece, Bayoumi mirrored on the darkish historical past of varied regimes’ use of comparable “atrocity photography” — a style of reminiscences they create for themselves that chronicle violence, however obscure it from public view.
Whereas this {photograph} epitomizes dehumanization, one other picture exhibits a distinct perspective. By means of a vortex of coloured traces and dots, al-Baluchi illustrated what he noticed throughout a spell of vertigo, which was introduced on by a traumatic mind damage attributable to this torture.
Ammar al-Baluchi, “Vertigo at Guantanamo” (2026) (picture courtesy Erin L. Thompson)
Now not within the media highlight, it’s all too straightforward for a lot of to overlook that dozens of persons are nonetheless imprisoned in Guantánamo Bay. The detention camp has incarcerated a whole lot of detainees from around the globe because it opened within the early 2000s within the wake of 9/11, and al-Baluchi is within the huge minority of those that have been charged with crimes related to these occasions. Whereas over half of the boys nonetheless held there as we speak had been cleared for launch years in the past, they haven’t been freed, and it’s attainable they by no means will.
Over a decade in the past, a gaggle of those males started to create artwork. At first, they used what little materials they may discover, equivalent to cleaning soap scratched on partitions or plastic forks scraped on styrofoam cups, even drawing with powdered tea on rest room paper. If these covert artists had been found, they had been punished. However beginning in 2010, after Obama-era reforms, detainees had been lastly allowed to attend artwork lessons. What occurred was a short flowering of the humanities in one of many least possible locations, and underneath inhumane situations.
Left: Erin L. Thompson (photograph courtesy Erin L. Thompson); proper: Molly Crabapple (photograph by Marina Galperina, courtesy Molly Crabapple)
On this episode, we converse with Erin L. Thompson, a Hyperallergic contributor, is a professor of artwork crime at John Jay Faculty who curated Ode to the Sea, a groundbreaking exhibition of art work by detainees that debuted in 2018. She just lately returned from a week-long journey to the Caribbean army jail with a purpose to view the 9/11 trials that ended up being delayed. Thompson spoke with Editor-in-Chief Hrag Vartanian about witnessing the strict policing of not solely embattled artwork, but additionally how authorities preserve a good management on images taken by the media.
Author and artist Molly Crabapple, however, discovered a workaround. She joined us to debate her 2013 journey to the detention middle, when she was granted entry to attract this surreal jail and its inhabitants, each the incarcerated males and medics, guards, and different actors that maintain the machine operating. Her work exhibits us how the craft of drawing can illuminate truths that censored images can’t.
Drawing from Molly Crabapple, “Guantánamo Sketchbooks” (2013) (courtesy Molly Crabapple)
And at last, we spoke with author Mansoor Adayfi, who was confined to Guantánamo Bay for nearly 15 years. Just like the overwhelming majority of these imprisoned there, he was by no means charged with a criminal offense. Adayfi gave us a first-hand account of starvation strikes, modifications in torture techniques and confinement that got here with every presidential administration, bonds fashioned between the boys within the jail, and the flourishing of artwork by portray, singing, dancing, and writing among the many detainees. He explains how such artwork grew to become a lifeline for his or her survival. The writer of Letters from Guantánamo and Don’t Overlook Us Right here: Misplaced and Discovered at Guantanamo, he works as an activist with CAGE towards the aim of completely closing Guantánamo Bay.
Left: Cowl of Don’t Overlook Us Right here by Mansoor Adayfi (2021); proper: Mansoor Adayfi (photograph courtesy Mansoor Adayfi)
In 2022, eight present and former detainees wrote a letter urging President Biden to finish a Trump-era coverage that barred their work from leaving Guantánamo. A number of males, cleared for launch simply that yr, mentioned that they might relatively their artwork be freed than themselves. Adayfi informed us that if on condition that selection, he’d say the identical factor.
“The art is not just art. It becomes a piece of you. You put your blood, your sweat, your memories, your time there. That art helped you to find yourself. To maintain your sanity, your humanity,” he defined.
Rabbani Ahmed, “Untitled (Binoculars Pointing at the Moon)” (2016) (picture courtesy Erin L. Thompson)
“Art from Guantánamo, we consider it one of us, like a living being. It went through the same process: the mistreatment, the abuses, the torture, the death, even. Like us, like us prisoners. It’s the same process. It went through everything we have been through.”
Whereas the Biden administration lifted the ban on artwork leaving Guantánamo Bay, they haven’t fulfilled the promise to shut the jail earlier than Donald Trump returns to workplace in January. His administration might usher in an enlargement of comparable detention camps, together with a brand new period of censorship and oppression in lots of varieties. However so long as such injustices proceed underneath any regime, tales like Adayfi’s are vital to carry on to and be taught from.
Moath al-Alwi, “GIANT” (2015) (picture courtesy Erin L. Thompson)
Even when a detainee manages to be launched from Guantánamo Bay, they nonetheless encounter vital challenges. You may donate right here to the Guantánamo Survivors Fund, which seeks to offer medical care, housing, and schooling to these launched.
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