Friday, November 22, 2024

Baghdad

Iraqi artist breaks Guinness World Record with giant drawing

 Iraqi artist breaks Guinness World Record with giant drawing

The Iraqi artist Ali Al-Rawi holding Guinness World Records certificate. Photo: Guinness World Records

Baghdad (IraqiNews.com) – An Iraqi artist celebrated his culture and history by recreating a mythical beast in a whopping piece of art that took him a whole year to complete, according to Guinness World Records.

The Iraqi young artist, Ali Al-Rawi, created a work of art depicting the ancient Assyrian winged bull by wrapping copper wires around nails attached to wooden boards to create the largest wire art, measuring 203.76 square meters.

The Assyrian winged bull, known as ‘The Lamassu,’ is a mythological hybrid composed of the head of a human, the body of a bull, and the wings of a bird.

This giant artwork extends over the space of approximately 15 car parking spaces, and it took a whole year to complete.

Around 89 thousand nails and 250 kilograms of pure copper formed into wires of 35,714 meters were used on the surface of 18 wooden planks.

Al-Rawi works as a physician assistant in the city of Ramadi in the Iraqi western governorate of Anbar. His artistic talent grew from scribbling on a school bench to now creating epic pieces of art with wires.

Al-Rawi was inspired after seeing a German artist using that technique in 2016.

After a long search online, he couldn’t find anything to teach him how to do it, so he practiced until he mastered the technique on his own.

“I drew a sail at the beginning. But after that, it took me a lot of experimenting to select the usable materials,” Al-Rawi explained.

“I decided on copper wires and one-inch nails with small heads in order not to affect the shape of the work, to make sure the monuments insulate heat, moisture and scratching, as wood is also coated with three materials to serve this purpose,” Al-Rawi added.

Al-Rawi worked hard over the course of a year and had to cover the board’s entire dimensions with wires of different colors to meet the requirements of breaking the world record.

Al-Rawi moved the entire artwork to several different locations in Iraq to carry out the final measurements and filming.