With his art, Mojadidi says he aims to make something that "disturbs identity and challenges authority." For one of his first
performance art installations, in 2009, Mojadidi set up a fake checkpoint in
Kabul. Dressed as an Afghan policeman, he filmed himself searching cars and offering drivers $2, in what he described as a "reverse bribe." In 2010, Mojadidi invented a character called the "Jihadi Gangster" as a
satire of what he saw as
jihad's "
Street cred" (credibility) in modern Afghan culture, which he connected to the American concept of "
bling." In a series of photos and posters, Mojadidi dressed up as this character, whose appearance was a combination of American hip-hop gangster and Afghan
mujahideen. During the
Afghan parliamentary election, 2010, Jihadi Gangster appeared in posters around Kabul wearing a black turban and a large gold chain with a gold-plated gun around his neck (
see photos). His campaign slogan read, "Vote for me, I've done jihad, and I'm rich." Mohadidi's other tongue-in-cheek work includes a fashion line of clothing for suicide bombers and soldiers called "Conflict Chic" and photography exploring the connection between Kabul City and the American
Confederate South. His art has been shown in international contemporary art exhibitions, including
dOCUMENTA (13) and the
Kochi-Muziris Biennale in 2012. ==See also==