A DOVE FOR PEACE MADE OUT OF SHELL CASINGS
UNHATE DOVE is a symbol of non-hatred and non-violence. The casing is a memento of death; the dove is an icon of peace. UNHATE DOVE is an art installation that brings together two opposing elements with the aim of exorcising violence, abuse of power, rancor, injustice and intolerance.
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UNHATE DOVE - 15 Inauguration of the UNHATE DOVE
Video by Elio Colavolpe for COLORS With Love
UNHATE DOVE - Interview to Erik Ravelo, the author of the UNHATE DOVE
UNHATE DOVE - 14 Final set up
Video by Elio Colavolpe for COLORS With Love
UNHATE DOVE - 13 Transportation from the University to the King’s Palace square
Video by Elio Colavolpe for COLORS With Love
FROM COLORS, WITH LOVE
The magazine “that talks about the rest of the world” donates UNHATE DOVE to Tripoli, Libya. UNHATE DOVE is one of the first monuments to peace after the Arab Spring, which began in Tunisia in December 2010.
Tripoli, Libya, 24 December 2011. COLORS magazine gives UNHATE DOVE to the city of Tripoli as a sign of peace and hope. The large, dove-shaped sculpture is covered in over 22,000 spent cartridges picked up in the world’s “hot spots”.
Conceived by Fabrica, the art installation will be officially donated to Tripoli on Saturday 24 December 2011, Independence Day, which the Libyan people are celebrating again for the first time in 42 years.
The event is part of the Benetton Group’s UNHATE Foundation’s programme www.unhatefoundation.org
“The official handing-over of the dove is the UNHATE Foundation’s first act, both concrete and symbolic,” said Alessandro Benetton, Benetton Group’s executive deputy chairman. “Our aim in creating the Foundation is to oppose the culture of hate. It seeks to be a leader and driving force behind the desire for participation and change felt by citizens of the world, especially young people”.
The cartridge cases were mounted on the dove in the University of Tripoli. They were collected by COLORS from people who live in areas where armed conflicts seem to run on endlessly and who desperately ask for an end to hostilities: from the hands of children, from operating theatres in war-zone hospitals, from the mothers of young men killed during revolutions, from the victims of persecution.
Someone who finds a cartridge case finds a sign of death. Not her or his death, miraculously. But death is in the air, it can come at any time, from anywhere. From the right or wrong side? The answer is worthless, because life is the only value worth defending.
This “war waste” is also the theme of WITH LOVE, a COLORS special issue telling the stories of imprisoned lives that do not have the freedom to choose on which side to stay. There are love stories, too, of those who hold out in order to defend life. Like the 50 journalists working for Shabelle Media Network, an independent radio station of Mogadishu, Somalia, which broadcasts to a catchment area of some 250 km and online. Far from their loved ones, these brave journalists live barricaded in their studio because they fear the vengeance of Al Shabab. They put their safety at risk in order to provide non-partisan information.
Mayada, 55, decided to tell her story because the world should know what is happening in Syria where armed militias have for months repressed popular demonstrations with bloodshed, causing thousands of victims. After fleeing to Lebanon with her husband and their 18-year-old daughter, Mayada is anxiously awaiting the day when she can return to her homeland, which for her has the greatest value of all.
The Egyptian blogger Mina Ibrahim Daniel, Copt, fought for freedom and social justice too and believed in respecting religious beliefs. He was killed together with 24 others on 9 October 2011 during the Maspero demonstrations.
Gaetano, a businessman from Calabria, Italy, has been totally deprived of his freedom. His statements to the police led to the arrest of 48 ‘Ndrangheta mobsters, but for the past decade he and his family have lived under police protection. His greatest fear is not of being killed but of not succeeding in bringing about a radical change. Today his freedom is embodied in his courageous decision to stay in his home region and to not change his identity, in honour of his human dignity.
WITH LOVE is available in four bilingual editions: English + Italian, French, Spanish or Arabic.
The work of art UNHATE DOVE has been conceived by Erik Ravelo, creative director of the special issue COLORS WITH LOVE. The project UNHATE DOVE in Libya has been conceived by Enrico Bossan, editorial director of COLORS magazine.
UNHATE DOVE - 12 Completion and finishing
Video by Elio Colavolpe for COLORS With Love
UNHATE DOVE - The Making Of - University of Tripoli (Libya) - December 2011
A group of students of the University of Tripoli helped Erik Ravelo (Kiré), the creator of the UNHATE DOVE, to cover the sculpture in shell casings. COLORS would like to thank the students for their precious collaboration and help. You did a great job!
photos by Elio Colavolpe for COLORS With Love
UNHATE DOVE - 11 Covering the dove with shell casings
Video by Elio Colavolpe for COLORS With Love
UNHATE DOVE - 10 Collecting the shell casings
Video by Elio Colavolpe for COLORS With Love
UNHATE DOVE - 9 Arrival at the University of Tripoli
Video by Elio Colavolpe for COLORS With Love
UNHATE DOVE - 8 Trip to Lybia
Video by Elio Colavolpe for COLORS With Love
UNHATE DOVE - 6 Polyester resin is applied
Video director
Pablo Pastor/Fabrica
Video editors
Lea Dicursi/Fabrica
Marco Zuin/Fabrica
Filmmakers
Elio Colavolve
Pablo Pastor/Fabrica
Musicians
Jhon William Castaño Montoya/Fabrica
Geremia Vinattieri/Fabrica
