Life

Egyptian artist creates portraits out of burned tobacco in studio

August 15, 2017
Artist Abdelrahman Al-Habrouk creates a portrait of the Egyptian actor Adel Imam with tobacco in Alexandria, Egypt, in this Aug. 10, 2017 file photo. — Reuters
Artist Abdelrahman Al-Habrouk creates a portrait of the Egyptian actor Adel Imam with tobacco in Alexandria, Egypt, in this Aug. 10, 2017 file photo. — Reuters

ALEXANDRIA, Egypt — In a small studio littered with empty cigarette packets in Egypt’s second city, Alexandria, Abdelrahman Al-Habrouk sits hunched over a sheet of paper making portraits with tobacco. The cigarettes fuel his art; he breaks them in half, painstakingly traces out monochrome images of celebrities or animals with the fine flakes of tobacco, then sprinkles his creations with gunpowder and sets them on fire. The resulting scorch-marks on the white paper form the portrait. Al-Habrouk, now 23, started using unusual materials to make images a couple of years ago, experimenting with coffee, salt and sand before settling on the tobacco technique because it is more durable. “The idea is that I’m trying to make the art live longer,” he said. “I wanted to make something good out of something that is considered harmful,” he added. — Reuters


August 15, 2017
69 views
HIGHLIGHTS
Life
day ago

Spice Girls reunite at Posh's 50th birthday

Life
4 days ago

Taylor Swift releases surprise double album

Life
13 days ago

Jordan's Crown Prince and Princess Rajwa expecting first child this Summer