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Yara Said: The Artist In Exile

For Yara Said, the last 18 months have been epic. Leaving war-torn Syria in 2015 (alone, no less), she made her way across eastern Europe and over the treacherous Mediterranean. For weeks, she called tents, gymnasiums, and random office buildings her home, finally settling in Amsterdam, to reunite with friends, rekindle her art, and restart her life.

Then, last Summer, Yara was contacted by Refugee Nation, a New York based collective, championing the refugee Olympians at the Rio Summer Games. Yara was commissioned to design their official flag. And design it she did, bringing the kind of passion and directness she embodies.

I recently sat down with Yara to explore her plight and her work. Like a Syrian Lisbeth Salander, shrugging off any notion of can’t, Yara is the quintessential badass…

credit: Bambos Demetriou

CHRIS BAHARA: Thank you for speaking with me, Let’s start with your new home. How did you get here? And Who did you come with?

YARA SAID: Like all other people, I joined the [migration]. The same route. From Syria, Lebanon, Turkey, Greece. It was nine countries, I think. At first I didn’t come with anyone. I’ve always been by myself. For me it was just another thing I had to do.

Yara Said

CB: Any problems along the way?

YS: No. They’re my people.

CB: During your period of migration, was there a feeling of missing your art? Your work?

YS: I didn’t even think about it back then. When I was in the camps, yeah I had some [art] materials with me, but I couldn’t do anything. It was too constricting

CB: You’re now a part of Studio Yalla, a program for refugee artists here in Amsterdam. You have a great quote on their website: “What I need most is a place to create – to be surrounded with colors. Here I can get a glimpse of real freedom.”

YS: I think my studio is the only place I can ever be free… I think my studio is my home always.

CB: You designed the Olympic flag, representing refuges in the olympic’s, When and how did that come about?

YS: There was an initiative called I’m not a refugee. I’m a _____. I can’t remember how I got into it – I always get into things. I wrote something for them. They put up a photo of me, and then lots of people contacted me through it.

Yara Said

That’s how Refugee Nation contacted me as well. They told me, “We found you on I’m not a refugee… you said you were an artist. And we would like to work with you.” I had no idea what it would turn into.

CB: Were there others? Did you have to compete?

YS: No no. They just said “We just saw you on this initiative. We really like what you wrote. We have a feeling that this is going to work out.” We had a Skype call, and the next day I was thinking about it. I read a little bit about Flag designing, and I read that a flag should look like a six-year-old kid designed it. That a six-year-old can draw it. I read it on the internet. Then I told them “Okay, I have an idea.”

CB: What was it like to see the refugee team draped in your flag at the Olympic games?

YS: I saw the guy from Congo, and he didn’t see his family for 18 years. It was very hard for me. I was very emotional. I just thought about these people and how they… I mean when things are put on you, you don’t think you’re like… someone special. You’re just a normal person. But when you see there’s a team of refugees going to the Olympics…

CB: The flag now hangs in the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. It’s almost like you got a certain amount of celebrity from the experience.

YS: It’s funny because it’s not actually like I came here to make money or start a new life. I came here to go to museums, and go to live concerts, and see Andy Warhol. And I had the opportunity to do this. I went to Warhol Exhibition. Banksy. Dali. Picasso. All my heroes. For me, this is how you live it. This is why it’s worth it to get on a boat and risk your life. I’m an artist. I would do anything for it.

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credit: Bambos Demetriou
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