Iraq's first pavilion for 34 years is about trying to change perceptions of a dictatorship-scarred and war-wounded country
"I want to create, I want to show the world what I am capable of, but I cannot." So says a 16-year-old Iraqi photographer, as Iraq fields its first pavilion for 34 years at the Venice Biennale.
The words of Ayman Haider Kadhm are part of a short documentary that looks at the experiences of three young Iraqi artists struggling to find a voice in a war-ravaged country.
He talks of his camera being confiscated by the security forces. "Do I look like a terrorist? I am only a photographer who wants to record life."
In fact the main installation of the Iraq pavilion contains work only by members of the Iraqi diaspora, most of whom left in the 1970s to study abroad before the outbreak of the Iran-Iraq war.
According to Rijin Sahakian, the Iraqi-born, American head of the Echo cultural foundation, another supporter of the pavilion: "There has been a severance of training, and an isolation for decades compounded by a newfound violence.
"That's why all the artists here are part of the diaspora. It's been fractured for years, and the last 10 years have been the final blow."
The biennale may be a critical event for visual arts, but – with its national pavilions – it also has inescapable overtones of soft diplomacy. Iraq's presence is also about trying to change perceptions of a dictatorship-scarred and war-wounded country.
Azad Nanakeli left his home city of Arbil in Kurdistan aged 23 to study in Baghdad and then Florence – and stayed in Italy. He has created a film work and a sculptural installation exploring the pavilion's water theme.
It is, he says, "a great thing to have a space here. In 1976 Iraq was present at the biennale but it was more political and belonged to the regime".
The curator, Mary Angela Schroth, agrees. "I want people to see the work of these artists and see that there are some untold stories. And I want people to see Iraq not as a 30-year conflict zone but like any other country.
"We have deliberately got away from the war – we want to give it an identity, an identity that it has lost since the Saddam dictatorship.
"In two years it could be more than a reality to show Iraqi work made in Iraq. But at the moment young Iraqis can't leave the country. It is very difficult for artistic practice – the country is essentially destroyed."
The pavilion is funded by the Iraq government and a handful of private sponsors including Total, the oil company. Zaha Hadid, the Iraqi-British architect, is its patron.
The artists argue that culture is necessary as a means of expression after a traumatic period in its history.
According to Nanakeli, after the war: "We thought we'd get freedom. Now we have a big problem when we speak about contemporary culture. The government doesn't give a lot of space for art, theatre, cinema and that is terrible for Iraqis.
"If we are to grow as a country we need to think about all areas of life. My hope is that there will be a future for artists, poets and writers."
Sahakian adds: "People have been silenced for so long. Art is a crucial tool for talking about what's happened, for self-expression, for the documenting of personal experience."
The London-based Walid Siti, who left his native Duhok in 1976 to study in Baghdad and then Ljubljana in Slovenia, has created a pair of linked sculptural installations which look at the rivers of Iraq.
"To have a show in Venice is important – to say that there is something positive. The water metaphor, it can bring us together."
He talks about the subject of one of his pieces: the river Azab, which rises in Turkey, flows through Kurdistan and then flows "like a vein – a kind of symbol of life and continuity" to the Tigris.
"In Iraq it is very hard for artists. Religious groups are pressurising the government to close to close down art, theatre, dance organisations.
"But people are coming up with ideas. For better or worse, what Iraq has been through is a source of ideas."
The Iraq pavilion is at Gervasuti Foundation, Castello 995, Venice, from Saturday until 27 November.