This
art center was first founded by the late Egyptian Architect and
Educator Ramses Wessa Wassef in the early 1950s. He set out with
a goal to prove his idea that any human being using his natural
creativity is able to produce art when provided with suitable
circumstances. Through this art establishment, Wessa Wassef
began realizing his dream and offering people such
opportunities.
Wessa
Wassef was born in 1911. He earned his degree from an Art School
in Paris in 1935 and upon his return to Cairo, became a
professor of Art and History of Architecture in the college of
Fine Arts in Cairo.
His Belief in the human being’s freedom of creativity, which
from his point of view was not used to its full length, drove
him to form his art school. There, it would be possible for him
to allow anyone, whatever his social standard or education level
was, to create art.
T
he
school is located in Haraneya village, near the Pyramids road in
Giza. Wessa Wassef saw Haraneya village as a perfect choice. It
would be the best place to find youngsters with no previous
schooling, living a simple life away from the modern environment
that usually affects the freedom of mind and it’s creativity.
For this same reason he started his work with children since
they would be still free-spirited and in touch with their
imagination.
To commence his experiment, he chose to start working with a
group of 12 children, ranging between the age of 8 and 12. The
art center originally started as a tapestry weaving school,
which involves a great amount of patience and dedication.
A weaver has no preliminary drawings or sketches even for large
works.
The
art produced is meant to come straight from the image composed
in the weaver’s mind. Wessa Wassef considered this a life time
experience, meaning that the artist or weaver was meant to grow
gradually side by side with his craft.
The children first started working on small frame looms, using
only a few colors in each carpet.
With time and the constant efforts of Ramses and his wife
Sophie, the children gained skills and started producing designs
that mainly expressed their daily life in the village. In order
to broaden their horizons, Wessa Wassef took the children on
many tours, visiting new places to help them capture different
images in their minds.
After
Wessa Wassef’s death in 1974, his wife and children carried on
with his dream and project, preserving these crafts and
introducing new ones to new working generations.
More crafts were added to the school, such as Batik weaving and
ceramics workshops. Hand made carpets were either made of 100%
cotton or wool, each one with a unique design not to be
reproduced.

Wessa Wassef’s ideas and
philosophy regarding the necessity of keeping in touch with
nature was also reflected on his building techniques. The art
center, a beautiful architectural complex in itself was all
built in mud brick, an affordable and available material. When
he began building the workshops, he brought workers from Upper
Egypt where he had sensed the beauty of the Nubian architecture
and it’s absolute harmony with the surrounding environment.
He also considered these building methods as the renaissance of
the Egyptian Architecture adopted by Pharonic, Coptic and
Islamic civilizations. When he started expanding the center, he
began teaching the locals how to build vaulted and domed mud
brick structures keeping as far as possible from the modern
buildings that lacked the human touch and the environmental
friendly aspect. At the same time, he offered the locals an
opportunity to design their own houses, providing them with land
to realize their homes that were connected later on with the art
center.

The vast grounds of Wessa Wassef art center include workshops
and showrooms. Also a pottery and sculpture museum where the
works of his father in-law, Habib Gorgi are displayed. And
finally houses and farm buildings providing the workshops with
all the necessary materials
The family established another
museum in 1989 where all walls, domes and vaults are constructed
from sun-dried earth and mud brick. It exhibits the different
stages Wessa Wassef went through during his experiment.
It
shows works of the first generation of children he worked with
and other buildings he designed such as the Mar’ashly Church in
Zamalek and the Mahmoud Moukhtar Sculpture Museum in Cairo.
The art produced at the Haraneya art center is exhibited all
over the world. The first exhibition of the tapestries took
place in 1957 in Egypt followed by another in Switzerland.

This unforgettable unique
experiment had different successful impacts in various ways;
apart from ensuring the revival and preservation of old crafts,
it offered worldwide fame to the Haraneya village where the hand
made carpet industry has expanded in the whole area.