16/05/2025
Hatim Elmekki (Tunisia, 1918-2003)
Today we remember Hatim Elmekki, A pioneer of Tunisian avant-garde, An enigma of an artist with an astute eye and deep sense of social and societal responsibility.
Born in 1918 in Indonesia to a Tunisian expatriate father and an Indonesian mother of Chinese origins, Elmekki spent his childhood in Djakarta before arriving in Tunisia in 1924 where he would work and live until his death in 2003 in Carthage. During the 1930s, he studied at L’Ecole Nationale des Beaux Arts and worked as an artist and illustrator in Paris. He exhibited for the first time in 1934 at the Tunisian Salon. In 1938, he arrived in Paris where he exercised his talents as an illustrator in literary periodicals and produced graphic works for advertising and cinema. He would be introduced to the politically engaged members of the Parisian creative community including Albert Camus, Gaston Bachelard, and Gertrude Stein.
“De l’expressionnisme le plus débridé à l’hyperréalisme le plus ancré dans le quotidien, il passait d’un style à l’autre avec une facilité déconcertante.”
- Ridha Kéfi, 2003
His works have been exhibited widely in Egypt, the USA, the UK, Germany, Korea and China and he was commissioned to make 450 postage stamps for Tunisia and a few other countries. Toward the end of his life, he is quoted to have spent days in the galleries of the northern suburbs of Tunis.
Works in order of appearance:
- Hatim Elmekki, Self portrait, 1984, Colour pencil, 105 x 73 cm
- Hatim Elmekki, Abstraction, 50 x 65 cm
- Hatim Elmekki, The family, Oil on canvas, 55 x 46 cm
- Hatim Elmekki, Stamp Project for the UAE (Sharjah), 1975, Pencil and coloured pencil on paper, 22 x 28 cm
- Hatim Elmekki, Bal masqué, 1978, Coloured pencil, 65 x 50 cm