EU/Other, 2000; Basics, 2001; Bosnian Girl, 2003; Sorrow, 2005; 30 Years After, 2006; What Do I Know, 2007; Gluck, 2010; 1395 Days Without Red, 2011; Ab uno disce omnes, 2015; Embarazada, 2015; Thursday, 2015; Keep Away From Fire, 2018; We Come With a Bow, 2019; Behind The Scenes I, 2019; Behind The Scenes II, 2019
Awards
DAAD Artists-in-Berlin Program Fellowship, 2007;
The ECF Routes Princess Margriet Award for Cultural Diversity, 2011.
Šejla Kamerić was born in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. As a child she lived in Dubai, where her father worked for several years as a volleyball coach. Her family returned to Sarajevo in the wake of the Yugoslav wars. When the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina started, Šejla Kamerić was 16 years old and had begun a career as a model for local and international fashion magazines and brands. She continued her modeling career during the early years of the war. During the Siege of Sarajevo, she graduated from the High School for Applied Arts, and enrolled in the Academy of Fine Arts Sarajevo, graduating from the Graphic Design department after the war. Between 1994 and 1997, she worked with the design group Trio, a group of young artists who designed a series of postcards Greetings from Sarajevo (1993) in attempt to draw international attention to the situation in the besieged Sarajevo. In 1997, she started to exhibit regularly in Sarajevo and internationally. During this period and until 2000, she was the art director of the advertising agency Fabrika. Since 2003 she was a member of the European Cultural Parliament. She was awarded with DAAD Artists-in-Berlin Program Fellowship[1][2] in 2007 and continued to live and work in Berlin as a freelance artist. In 2011, Kamerić received The ECF Routes Princess Margriet Award for Cultural Diversity.[3][4] Today she lives and works between Sarajevo and Berlin.
Artistic practice
Šejla Kamerić works with various media such as film, photography, objects and drawings. The all-pervading element in her work are her – often uneasy – memories. Based on her own experiences, memories and dreams, her work takes us to global spaces of displacement and discrimination, insisting that the delicate and the sublime are not pushed aside by catastrophe or hardship. Rather, they exist simultaneously, revealing a complex, psychogeographic landscape and the tenacity of the human spirit. The sadness and beauty, the hope and pain that emerge are part of the stories we share.[5]
Dunja Blažević in the catalogue of the exhibition “In the Gorges of the Balkans”, Fridericianum Museum, Kassel, Germany, 2003 wrote:
"What makes Šejla and the entire group of “war generation” artists essentially different from other members of their generation is the meaning inherent in their works, as opposed to the materials they use. Furthermore, in pursuing her work without worrying about what art really is or isn't, she proves herself a member of that generation born in the age of mass-media, in which the main references are the media and the reality around them, and not the history of art."
Exhibitions and screenings
In 1997, Kamerić exhibited her work for the first time at the annual exhibition[6][7] organized by SCCA - Sarajevo Center for Contemporary Art[8] and curated by its director and renown art historian Dunja Blažević.[9] In the following years, Kamerić worked closely with Blažević and continued to collaborate with SCCA.[10][11][12] In this period Kamerić started to exhibit internationally. In 2000, she was invited to Manifesta III (entitled Borderline Syndrom)[13][14][15] in Ljubljana, Slovenia. For this occasion, she made the installation EU/Others[16][17] which received international acclaim and later became part of the TATE Modern collection.
Since then Kamerić has done numerous installations and interventions in public space: Closing The Border (2002); Bosnian Girl (2003); Pink Line vs. Green Line (2006); Ab uno disce omnes (2015), BFF (2015); SUMMERISNOTOVER (2014–2020).
Kamerić’s works have been on view in solo exhibitions at prestige art institutions such as Portkus[18] in Frankfurt am Maine (2004); Galerie im Taxispalais[19] in Innsbruck (2008); mumok in Vienna, Röda Sten Centre for Contemporary Art and Culture in Gothenburg, Wip: Konsthall in Stockholm and Centre Pompidou in Paris (2010); Museum of Contemporary Art in Zagreb, Camera Austria in Graz, ArtAngel[20] in London and MACBA, Barcelona[21] (2011); MG+MSUM - Museum of Contemporary Art[22] in Ljubljana, Museum of Contemporary Art in Belgrade, Kunsthaus Graz,[23]Sharjah Art foundation - Sharjah Art Museum[24] and CAC Contemporary Art Centre[25] in Vilnius (2012).
2015 was marked by two extensive solo exhibitions, at ARTER Space for Art,[26][27] Istanbul and the National Gallery of Kosovo, Pristina. In the same year, Kamerić’s highly ambitious project Ab uno disce omnes, commissioned by Wellcome Collection,[28][29] was shown in London as part of the exhibition Forensics: The anatomy of crime.[30]