Mazen Kerbaj
Beirut, July-August 2006. | 2006
Ink on vellum. 177 drawings. 9 of 9 x 14 cm each and 168 of 13 x 20 cm each.

Mazen Kerbaj was one of the many people who, in reaction to the Israeli war with Lebanon (July-August 2006), expressed their anger, fear and resilience across the Internet. On a daily basis, Kerbaj was drawing in his notebook and posting them on a blog. In the aftermath of the 2006 war, the drawings were exhibited at Galerie Janine Rubeiz alongside the work of the artist’s mother, Laure Ghorayeb as well as published in a book. The works in the Saradar Collection regroup most of Kerbaj’s original drawings.

Reference MK-WP-2006-A(1-177)

Biography of the artist

Born in Beirut, Lebanon. 1975
Works and Lives in Berlin


Mazen Kerbaj is a Lebanese comics artist, visual artist and musician. He also works on selective illustration and design projects and is a part-time instructor at the American University of Beirut. Kerbaj is author of more than 15 books, and many of his short stories and drawings have been published in anthologies, newspapers and magazines. His work has been translated into more than ten languages in various local and international publications. His paintings, drawings, videos, live performances and installations have been shown as part of numerous solo and collective exhibitions, in galleries, museums and art fairs around the globe. Mazen Kerbaj is widely considered as one of the initiators and key players of the Lebanese free improvisation and experimental music scene. He is co-founder and active member of MILL, the cultural music association behind Irtijal, an annual improvisation music festival held in Beirut since 2001 (www.irtijal.org), and co-founder of Al Maslakh, the first label for experimental music in the region operating since 2005 (www.almaslakh.org). As a trumpet player, whether in solo performances or with long-lasting groups like “A” Trio, Kerbaj pushes the boundaries of the instrument and continues to develop a personal sound and an innovative language, following in the footsteps of pioneers like Bill Dixon, Axel Dörner and Franz Hautzinger.