Tribe 10

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ISSUEtribe 10/2020 1


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CONTEMPORARY ART FROM YEMEN @arsheef.yemen

GROUP EXHIBITION FEB 27 — APR 18

In recent times, much of the Arab world has experienced protest action, and while the political and economic demands differed between uprisings, at the core of each movement was the desire for a better future. Gulf Photo Plus invites you to this exhibition of images, video, and writing, which takes its title from graffiti scrawled across a wall in Baghdad that encapsulates this desire: ‘All What I Want is Life’ Featuring Myriam Boulos, Tamara Abdul Hadi & Roï Saade from Lebanon; Amir Hazim and Abdullah Dhiaa Al-Deen from Iraq; Lana Haroun and Salih Basheer from Sudan; and Fethi Sahraoui and Abdo Shanan from Algeria —these artists reside among the communities depicted in their work, and through their interpretations of these events, offer a variety of perspectives on the uprisings—a refreshing antidote to the mainstream media’s simplistic and trope-ridden depiction.

For more information, please visit https://gulfphotoplus.com, or @gulfphotoplus

Asim Abdulaziz. Untitled from the series detached, 2020


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Contents

Issue 10 / 2020

INDUSTRY

IN CONVERSATION

Vetera Novis, Gallery Isabelle van

TINTERA Gallery...................... 48 - 51

den Eynde, Dubai. For You Mother:

By: Yasmine El Rashidi

Ayyam Gallery, Dubai. The Place I Call Home: Maraya Art Centre, Sharjah, The Red Palace: Cultural Foundation, Abu Dhabi. Colour Bar: Maraya Art Centre, Sharjah. Past Tense: Birzeit University Museum, Palestine. Sourtna: National

Photography

Museum,

Distorted Reality...................... 52 - 57 By: Dr. Effat Fadag Process and Practices.............. 58 - 61 By: Veeranganakumari Solanki PORTFOLIO

Rabat. Theater of Operations: MOMA

Staging ‘Satellite Culture’........ 62 - 71

PS1, New York. FOCUS: Modern

By: Suzy Sikorski

Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas.

Reorienting our Gaze.............. 72 - 85

Keyword Palestine II: Middle East

By: Woodman Taylor

Institute Gallery, Washington, D.C.. I Am Who I Am Who Am I: Anahita

PROFILE

Contemporary, Berlin. Disclosed: United

Against Photography............... 86 - 91

Photo Industries Gallery, Brooklyn. Staff

By: Sabrina DeTurk

of Life: ICA London. Plastic: Tashkeel,

Faces of Erased Places ........... 92 - 97

Dubai ...........................................12 - 15

By: Valerie Behiery The Lebanese Revolution...... 98 - 107

ART FAIR I Love You, Urgently................ 16 - 17 By: Rachel Bennett

By: Aimee Dawson NEW MEDIA Delicate............................... 108 - 109

MUSEUM Continued Resonance............. 18 - 23 By: Rachel Dedman

By: Anna Seaman The Fifth Sun and Al Mars... 110 - 113 By: Rebecca Anne Proctor Syria Serenading Graveyards

REVIEW Turning the Light On............... 24 - 29

at Dusk................................. 114 - 115

By: Lizzy Vartanian Collier

By: Tara Aldughaither

Speaking Across Mountains.... 30 - 31 By: Katrina Weber Ashour Unreal. Unseen. Untouched.... 32 - 33 By: Woodman Taylor The Arab Street Vol. II............. 34 - 37 By: Reem Farah March Project 2019................. 38 - 41

BOOKS Succession.....................................116 Edge of Elysium.............................117 SERIES New Dutch Views................ 118 - 123

By: Cecilia Ruggeri

13301.................................. 124 - 127

Mara’ina (Our Mirrors)............. 42 - 45

Among You.......................... 128 - 133

By: Kevin Jones An Image and Her Woman...... 46 - 47

PROJECT SPACE

By: Stella N. Peisch

Grandma Ameena Wishes.............134

Editor’s note Community, cultural significance, uncertainties, belonging and reflection describes the landmark 10th edition of Tribe, that comes out at this time of uncertainty. The March art madness we typically wait for with abated breath in the UAE has been knocked out of left field—as the world copes with the impact of COVID-19. Major events have been postponed and others have shifted to online platforms. However, we adapt and still bring you an edition that opens to the evolving future of this publication. To rewind, Tribe captures the dynamic and growing community of creatives in photography and image-based media throughout the Arab world and its diasporas. Tribe continues its journey, taking on additional team members, like Creative Director David Howarth. March celebrates International Women’s Day, so we would like to thank the many creative women who have cheered Tribe on since its inception. Sama Alshaibi encapsulates this moment on our cover and warriors on as our feature portfolio story. Her latest work takes ownership of the image while opposing problematic Orientalist framings, as Woodman Taylor, also Tribe’s Associate Editor, explains. Other projects in this edition explore and reexamine issues of identity and belonging, transformations, reflection and memory. Exhibitions covered range from how identities are expressed on the Arab street to that of a young girl in the work of Rania Matar, as reviewed by Stella Peisch. While the viewpoints are diverse, fragility and awareness echo in both. As many returning writers engaged in conversations about and reviews of recent exhibitions, we also learn about exciting new photo galleries, in Cairo as well as the first in Yemen. In the United Arab Emirates, Sabrina DeTurk focuses on the archive in Akram Zaatari’s Against Photography. In Saudi Arabia, Rachel Bennett describes how 21,39 grasps the community in riveting conversations while Kevin Jones reflects on the ‘mirror’ and photography in a new exhibition at Ithra. Meanwhile, on the streets of Lebanon, creatives take hold of the moment of chaos that reverberated through social media in the revolution—Thawra—of 2019. Many have expressed a welcoming hope for 2020, so the team here looks to new ventures now postponed due to the pandemic until the Fall 2020 edition—when many art platforms and events plan to reignite. Stay safe and connected, follow us for the latest @tribephotomag. Thank you for your indulgence. Enjoy... Janet Bellotto

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Tribe has been supported by: Tashkeel and Kaleem Books. With Many Thanks to: Maysoune Ghobash // Lamya Gargash // Sirin Masri // Deborah Kanafani // Lulu Al-Sabah // Rami & Ramzi Tabiaat // Sophie Bray // Tammam and Dr Nasrine Abushakra, Ph.D. Cover Image: Sama Alshaibi, Ma Ijtama’t Aydina ‘ala Qabdah illa wa-Kanat

f tribephotomag d tribephotomag - www.tribephotomagazine.com

Mu’attalah (What our hands joined was broken) with Mu’allaqat (Suspended) in the background, from the Silsila series (2009) Digital collage.

Media Partnerships:

Editor Janet Bellotto

Associate Editor Woodman Taylor

Copy Editor Sabrina DeTurk

Social Media Leena Aboutaleb

Artfair Coordinator Daveeda Shaheen

Photo Editor Sueraya Shaheen

Creative Director David Howarth

Editorial Assistant Sarah Spendiff

Industry Editor Lizzy Vartanian Collier

Business Development Nanda Collins

This catalogue is created as a showcase of creative works within the region. Its aim is to create awareness of the arts. Please note that the information in this catalogue, including all articles, and photographs, do not make any claims. Any information offered is expressly the opinion of the creator/author of that material. The content created by the authors, creators and works on these pages are subject to copyright law. The reproduction, editing, distribution and any kind of exploitation outside the limits of copyright require the written consent of the respective author or creator. 7.05.16.9.3.4.5683.968

TICKETS ON SALE photolondon.org #PhotoLondonFair20 Photographic collage by Abigail Hunt


Writers Aimee Dawson is the Associate Digital Editor

Janet Bellotto is an artist, curator, writer and

Hyperallergic and Vogue Arabia. She was the

at The Art Newspaper. She specialises in art

educator from Toronto. A Professor of Visual Arts

curator of Perpetual Movement during AWAN

and culture from the Middle East and North

at the College of Arts and Creative Enterprises at

Festival in 2018 and in 2019 had a residency at

Africa having a BA in Arabic and Middle

Zayed University, Dubai, she engages in projects

The Lab at Darat Al Funun. Later that year she

East Studies and an MA in Contemporary

that promote cultural exchange, while examining

co-founded Yemen’s Arsheef Gallery. She has given

African and Asian art. She has contributed to

the ever-changing world that she travels. Her work

workshops at Manara Culture in Amman, Jordan

a number of publications including Harper’s

has been exhibited in a variety of collective, group

and the V&A, London. flizzycollier

Bazaar, Ibraaz and MOJEH, and was the

and solo exhibitions, as well as at international art

writer-in-residence for Shubbak Festival of

fairs. Her major research project on Sable Island

Rachel Bennett is a writer and editor who recently

Arab Culture and Nour Festival of Arts in

was published in 2017 by lightbox, Venice, with

2015. f amldawson

MAP Office in the book Our Ocean Guide (2017).

Anna Seaman is an art writer and curator,

Reem Farah received a Masters degree in Migration,

a Fulbright Scholar in the UAE during 2016-

Veeranganakumari Solanki is an independent

Mobility, and Development from SOAS, University

17, furthering her thesis by documenting the

curator, writer and researcher based in

of London and identifies as a serial student of the

pioneering Emirati artists at their studios.

Mumbai, India. Her interest lies in the manner

relocated to London. From 2013–2018, she lived in

social sciences. Having moved to Dubai, she sees

Currently, she is a Junior Specialist in Christie’s

in which interdisciplinary forms merge with

the UAE and spent significant time in Saudi Arabia,

art as a medium for social commentary, awareness

Dubai, in Modern & Contemporary Middle

art to create dialogues that travel from

Her forthcoming monograph, Planetary Fluke, is

where she worked on publications on art, music,

and impact. fteenage_bambi

Eastern Art department. Her exhibition reviews

public spaces into private ones and the way

to be published by impulse b. fjanetbellotto

architecture and urbanism with artists, galleries

and interviews have been published in The

curatorial research can be structured around

Sabrina DeTurk is an art historian, curator,

National, Canvas, Harper’s Bazaar Art Arabia

artistic practices that expand the idea of

writer and Associate Professor in the College

and Art Asia Pacific, Oxford University Press’

medium specificity through dialogue and

specialising in Middle Eastern contemporary

and cultural organisations. fspeculative.realness

art. She has been working with different

Katrina Weber Ashour is an arts strategy and

publications in the Gulf for the past 12 years

communications specialist. Her extensive

Rachel Dedman is the Jameel Curator of

of Arts and Creative Enterprises at Zayed

Benezit Dictionary of Artists and mideastart.

story-telling. She has contributed papers

and also works alongside artists and cultural

experience in the Middle East spans cultural

Contemporary Art from the Middle East at

University in Dubai. Her book Street Art in

com. She is continuing to document the

and articles to several international art

institutions in advisory roles. Originally from

organizations from the UAE, Saudi Arabia,

the V&A, London. Until 2019 she was an

the Middle East: Place, Politics and Visual

pioneer artists in the UAE while also traveling

journals and publications. She has curated

the UK, Anna began her career as a journalist

Qatar, Lebanon and Palestine, as well as global

independent curator based in Beirut, where

Style was published by I.B. Tauris in 2019.

throughout the Gulf on photography and

exhibitions, lectured on curating and

working for newspapers and magazines in

institutions from Belgium, Canada, Hong Kong,

she curated projects for Home Works 8 –

f deturk13

research trips. f mideastart

art practices, and conducted workshops

London. fannaseaman1

Italy, Korea, Switzerland and across the United

Ashkal Alwan, Sursock Museum, Beirut Art

internationally at prestigious institutes and

States. She graduated with honors from Wellesley

Center, and the Palestinian Museum. In 2020,

Stella Peisch is a researcher and consultant

Tara Aldughaither is an independent curator,

galleries. Solanki was recently the Curatorial

Cecilia Ruggeri received her MA from the

College and is currently based in Washington,

Rachel is curating Material Power: Palestinian

focusing on the Middle East and North Africa

writer and budding sonic artist. Aldughaither’s

Brooks International Research Fellow at the

Courtauld Institute of Art, London and is

D.C. fkatrinaweberashour

Embroidery for Kettle’s Yard and the Whitworth

region. She has worked for policy think-tanks,

passion for music and performance is integrated

Tate Modern, and a resident at the Delfina

Gallery in the UK. f racheldedman

NGOs, academic research centers, tech

with an education in cultural communication

Foundation (2019), and is the Programme Director for Space Studio, Baroda. fveequine

currently completing a Ph.D. in Art History at The University of Lausanne, Switzerland. She

Kevin Jones is an independent arts writer based

companies and consulting firms focusing on

and curatorial studies. This merge found her

has contributed to several museum exhibitions

in Dubai. New York-born and Paris-bred, he has

Rebecca Anne Proctor is the former Editor-

dynamics, trends and current events in the

practice forming a special interest in curating,

and has published extensively on Renaissance

lived in the Middle East for the past 13 years and

in-Chief of Harper’s Bazaar Art Arabia and

region. She has a Bachelors from Georgetown

writing about and making art that mirrors the

Woodman Taylor is a scholar of West and

art. She is particularly interested in the artistic

is currently the UAE Desk Editor for Art Asia Pacific.

Harper’s Bazaar Interiors, a role she held since

in government, Arabic and justice and peace

influence of intangible culture on society.

South Asian art. Trained at Harvard as a

exchange between the East and the West.

He has contributed to The Art Newspaper, Artforum.

January 2015. A speaker and moderator at

studies and a Masters from the London School

Her independent practice is fully focused on

curator of Islamic and South Asian art,

com, Art Review Asia and Flash Art International.

art and cultural events, her writing has

of Economics in international development

empathy-driven initiatives that are informed

he later curated at the Museum of Fine

Dr. Effat Abdullah Fadag is an Associate

Regionally, his writing has been published in Harper’s

been published in The New York Times

and humanitarian emergencies. She has

by the sonic and performative elements of

Arts Boston. With a University of Chicago

Professor of Fine Art at the University of Jeddah

Bazaar Art Arabia, Bidoun, Canvas, Brownbook

Style Magazine, Bloomberg Businessweek,

recently been focusing on collective trauma

any context­—with a special focus on retrieving

doctorate, he taught at the University of

and an artist, academic and curator working in

and The National. Formerly a brand strategist

Canvas, Artnet News, Frieze, BBC, Arab

in post-conflict periods, specifically on

women’s folk culture and exploring its role in

Illinois, Chicago, Jawaharlal Nehru University

the field of higher education since 1990. She

with international branding and communications

News, Galerie, FOLIO, The National, ArtNews

contested memories and incidences of mass

contemporary spaces. ftara3mad

and the American University in Dubai, where

received her BA in Islamic Art, King Abdulaziz

agencies, Kevin is also the creator of the niche

and The Business of Fashion. She has also

killings, as well as the role of service provision

University, MA and PhD of Fine Art from the

consultancy Juniper Mind, which mingles critical and

written several texts for books and catalogues

in the social contract between the state and

Valerie Behiery is a Canadian independent

Communication. Taylor has published on

UK. Fadag participated in the pioneering visual

creative thinking from the art world with strategic

on Middle Eastern art and culture. Proctor

the population. She is currently based in

scholar and arts writer whose research focuses

a wide variety of topics, including the

art movement in the Kingdom. She served as

storytelling from brand culture. The mantra: help

obtained her MLitt from Christie’s London

Beirut, Lebanon and is from Cambridge,

on historical and contemporary art and

visuality of Indian cinema and contemporary

the Chair of the of Islamic Art Department

brands be more like artists, and artists more like

in Modern and Contemporary Art History,

Massachusetts. f stellamnla

visual culture from or related to the Middle

Emirati photography. In 2018, he curated

at KAU, and the Dean of the Hekma School

brands. (www.junipermind.com) fjunipermind

a double MA in Middle Eastern Studies

East. Possessing a background in academic

Growing a Global Community: Celebrating

he was Chair of the Department of Visual

and Conflict Resolution from the American

Suzy Sikorski specializes in modern artists

teaching and museum consultancy, her

the NYUAD Institute. Currently Taylor is

the curator of the 21,39 Jeddah Arts with the

Lizzy Vartanian Collier aka Gallery Girl is a writer

University of Paris and a Master’s in Sociology

of the Gulf region, completing her thesis

writing has been published in many reference

Professor of Art History at both Dubai and

theme Al Obour or ‘crossing’ and Ard Altoud,

and curator based in London. Her work has

of Conflicts from the L’Institut Catholique.

on three generations of artists in the UAE

works, books, art catalogues, art magazines

Abu Dhabi campuses of Zayed University.

with Misk Art Institute. feffatfadag

been featured in publications including Dazed,

frebeccaanneproctor

at Fordham University, New York. She was

and peer-reviewed journals.

cwoodmantaylor

of Design and Architecture. In 2019 she was

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INDUSTRY

INDUSTRY Images - Courtesy of the artist.

For You Mother: Ayyam Gallery, Dubai In a new body of work photographer Rula Halawani evokes the emotional resonance of Palestine for her mother. As related by Halawani, “When I finished my series For My Father I showed it to my mother, told her that I did the series in honor of my Baba and asked her if she liked it? She replied “Yes of course darling I do like it very much!” Then she asked “Rula, are you going to make a series for me when I leave this universe?” Taking inspiration from her Mother’s words “even when we die and leave this world, our spirits will remain floating in the skies of our county, Palestine,” Halawani inserts old photographs of Palestinian families hovering in clouds, as if spirits, above historic views of cities and landscapes of their native land. As with her initial series, Halawani again creates moving visualizations of Palestine evoking the nostalgia for places and emotions of belonging eternally to their lands. 23 March - 30 April 2020

Untitled 8, from the series For You Mother (2020), Archival Print, 120 x 150 cm

The Place I Call Home: Maraya Art Centre, Sharjah The Place I Call Home is a project that uses contemporary photography to explore the idea of home related to the experiences of young people living in the Gulf and the UK at a time of rapid change and social mobility. The project comprises a photography exhibition and public outreach programme that travels to various venues in six Gulf states and the UK from Autumn 2019 through Spring 2020. The exhibition and accompanying activities are commissioned by the British Council and curated by David Drake, Director of Ffotogallery, the national photography agency for Wales. 7 March – 31 May 2020 Intallation view: The Place I Call Home

The Red Palace: Cultural Foundation, Abu Dhabi After an initial site-specific installation taking over the original Red Palace in

Memari, Ghanem Younes, Khalid Al Tamimi, Maha Al Hammadi, Maryam Al

Riyad during the Fall of 2019, artist Sultan Bin Fahad’s re-staging of momentous

Suwaidi, Mattia Gambardella, Renad Hussein, Roudha Al Shamsi, Saoud Al

moments in the history of Saudi Arabia travelled to Abu Dhabi where it took

Dhaheri, Sarah Aladayleh, Shamsa Al Omaira and Wafa Al Qasaimi.

over spaces within the recently renovated Cultural Foundation. In its second

26 January – 28 March 2020

iteration, The Red Palace exhibition was choreographed into seven ‘chapters’ reflecting specific historic events—from the completion of Abdulaziz’s Red Palace in 1944 to the occupation of Mecca’s Masjid al-Haram in 1979 and the initial

Vetera Novis, Gallery Isabelle van den Eynde, Dubai

Aqrah, Nineveh 1961 (2019) Inkjet print on Hahnemuhle fine art photo rag pearl paper 60 x 60 cm

Gulf War—to themes of ‘Labour’, the ‘Holy Economy’, ‘Payer Room’ culminating in ‘Dinner at the Palace’, where Bin Fahad recreates a hypothetical dinner for the labourers and servants of the Red Palace, using actual tableware from the palace. Bin Fahad uses a variety of material culture, from memorabilia, historical

The exhibition Vetera Novis (Argument with Old and New), in four

benefit from oil revenues. The new set of prints was produced in collaboration

relics, discarded objects, photographs and video collected at various sites across

movements—Architecture, Landscape; Modernity; Daily Life and Portraits

with the Arab Image Foundation (AIF) which maintains Al Ani’s archive. The

the kingdom, to engage audiences with redolent past histories of Saudi Arabia.

– displayed masterworks by veteran photographer Latif Al Ani. As a chronicler

exhibition follows last year’s retrospective Latif Al Ani: Through the Lens

Common Ground, a group exhibition reflecting the common ground between

of Iraqi life from the 1950s through the 70s, Al Ani poetically captures the

(1953-1979) curated by Hoor Al-Qasimi at the Sharjah Art Foundation.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE artists was organized in tandem with The Red Palace.

optimism and tremendous opportunities for a modern Iraq as it began to

18 November – 28 December 2019

It features the works of 13 artists: Ahmad Saeed Al Areef Al Dhaheri, Amna Al

12 tribe

Labor III (2019). Multichannel digital video installation, with sound. Duration variable

tribe 13


INDUSTRY

INDUSTRY

Images - Courtesy of the artist.

Images - Courtesy of the artist.

Colour Bar: Maraya Art Centre, Sharjah Colour Bar is an exhibition that places in proximity of creative minds from the United Arab Emirates

The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth presents

and Saudi Arabia, channeled together through a

Hrair Sarkissian’s debut solo exhibition in Texas.

showcase that is dedicated to feature time-based

Featuring three major works, FOCUS: Hrair

media art. Curated by Hind Bin Demaithan, the

Sarkissian explores how violence can be made

exhibition seeks to address a number of questions:

invisible, histories of erasure and restitution and

how is social media changing our art practice and

the sediments of conflict. The exhibition was

experience? How different is a gallery audience

curated by Omar Kholeif, Director of Collections

compared to a cyber-audience? Artists include Ahaad Al Amoudi (KSA), Ahmed Al Areef Al Daheri (UAE), Fawaz Al Batati (KSA/YEMEN), Mansour Al Heera (UAE). 12 October – 30 November 2019

Image courtesy of Fatima Zohra Serri

and Senior Curator at the Sharjah Art Foundation.

Sourtna: National Photography Museum, Rabat

taken today of the same location, shot from the

An exhibition of donated artworks for sale

same spot and angle—over that taken by a

to benefit the Institute for Palestine Studies,

photographer some one hundred years ago.

USA. Photographic highlights of artworks

29 October – 15 January 2020

throughout the project include works by: Jamal Penjweny, from the series Saddam is Here (2010) 60 × 80 cm.

Theater of Operations: MOMA PS1, New York

14 tribe

garment stretches the lengths and boundaries

intersect with hers, along with the documented

of the public and private spaces of the body

landscapes, and culture-specific symbols painted

which holds one’s narrative. The abaya serves as a

on the abaya garments. The abaya in these works

communication tool to uncover hidden narratives.

is a traditional garment from Kuwait which has

5 – 27 March 2020

Promotional poster for Disclosed

which often lead to forming a collective between women, an immortalization of the solidarity and support that exists between them. 7 – 21 March 2020

Staff of Life (2019) Moving image. Commissioned by BBC New Creatives with The Institute of Contemporary Arts London

Staff of Life: ICA London

Mohammed Abdelkarim, Raed Asfour, Aissa Deebi, Fouad Elkoury, Yazan Khalili, Huda Lutfi

Moza Al Matrooshi’s film Staff of Life was

moving image and interactive media from

screened as part of Current Transmissions,

London-based emerging artists.

a four-day showcase of new works in audio,

23 February 2020

and Jack Persekian.

Plastic: Tashkeel, Dubai

2 – 20 March 2020

Does a dystopia or utopia await us in the

This large-scale group exhibition examines the

future? Will we live amid the detritus of hyper-

legacies of American-led military engagement in

consumerism or lead a wholly sustainable

Iraq beginning with the Gulf War in 1991, featuring

existence where single-use plastic is the stuff

over 300 works by more than 80 artists based in Iraq

of history? Featuring works spanning a range of

and its diasporas, as well as those responding to the

mediums by 38 UAE-based artists, the exhibition

war from the West. These artists were also impacted

seeks to drive discussions around single-use

by significant cultural change during this period—

plastic and explore alternative solutions.

including the advent of the 24-hour news cycle, the

4 March – 14 April 2020 at Nad al Sheba

Internet, and new media and military technologies. Jack Persekian, Jaffa Gate 1917 (2017)

MENA region who have shared their stories which

each. In her works, her subjects play various roles Execution Squares (2008) Archival inkjet print, 125 x 160cm.

Keyword Palestine II: Middle East Institute Gallery, Washington, D.C.

an additional layer onto Jerusalem—a photograph

within sacred privacy. In this series, the abaya

women as she seamlessly weaves herself within

photography including M’hammed Kilito, Ismail Zaidy

present and to explore its future, by superimposing

purpose of this garment is complex, yet rooted

connections and invited individuals from the

Al Arashi’s work asks us to question the role of

photographers who are shifting the lines of Moroccan

Jack Persekian urges the community to discuss its

Throughout Farah Salem’s travels, she has made

photographer, subject and audience, Yumna

exhibition Sourtna (our image). He selected

Past Tense: Birzeit University Museum, Palestine

traditions and religious practices over time. The

Often blurring the power dynamics between

Yassine Alaoui Ismail curated the museum’s first

15 January - April 2020

been influenced by socio-cultural constructs,

traveling project which started in Kuwait in 2016.

I Am Who I Am Who Am I: Anahita Contemporary, Berlin

addition to the Moroccan Museum Foundation.

and Lhoucine Boubelrhiti.

Disclosed is an ongoing performance photography

24 January – 15 March 2020

The National Photography Museum is the newest

Ahmad Al Areef Al Dhaheri (2019) Video installation

Disclosed: United Photo Industries Gallery, Brooklyn

FOCUS: Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

3 November 2019 – 1 March 2020

Yazan Khalili: The Day We Saw Nothing in Front of Us (2015)

7 – 21 April 2020 at House 10, Al Fahidi Yumna Al Arashi, We Are Here (2019)

Altamash Javed, Stop Littering (2019)

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ART FAIR Images - Courtesy of the artists. Writer - Rachel Bennett, academic, artist and curator.

Alaa Tarabzouni and Fahad bin Naif, Al-Manakh, You Will Be Missed (2019) Installation view

21,39 Jeddah Arts: I Love You, Urgently Transformation, climate and home in the wake of the Anthropocene Since 2013, the Saudi Art Council—a collective of

with the contradictions and challenges of the

multi-person performance is mesmerising, a group

committed patrons based in Saudi Arabia’s Red

Anthropocene—the current geological age, in

of women moving as one in a choreography that

Sea port of Jeddah—have hosted annual winter

which human activity is considered the dominant

takes cues from the reactive, unconscious defence

art events, attracting regional and international

influence on climate and the environment.

mechanisms of organisms in nature.

curators, institutional heads and art lovers to the city. In the early days, a week of exhibitions,

For Aziz Jamal, the tension is palpable in the

auctions, and artist studio visits; today, an

abandoned waterparks of the Eastern Province.

extended programme across multiple venues

His film 1056% deals with water scarcity in Saudi

and three months attracting thousands of visitors.

Arabia—saddled with an unimaginable water debt, it still builds these monuments to excessive water

Absent of any people, the resilience of the landscape is poetic and reverent, respectful of what nature is capable of despite it all

Refreshingly, as the event has grown in scope, it

consumption. There are no people to be found

has remained steadfast in its intimate connection

in his candy-coloured scenes, no water either,

to its home, appointing curators who have long

just a heat that beats down and the occasional

been part of its distinctive scene rather than those

ominous presence of black crows. Fahad bin Naif

parachuted in from further afield. The 7th Edition

and Alaa Tarabzouni have, through photography

is no different—taking place under the stewardship

and artefacts, documented without human

of Maya El Khalil, the founding director of Athr

presence the human-made ecology found in

Gallery which last year celebrated its 10th

Riyadh’s Al-Manakh neighbourhood, home to

anniversary. Absent of any people, the resilience

the behemoth Yamamah Cement Company and

It’s in the extremes of empty expanses vs. human

of the landscape is poetic and reverent, respectful

a park. Though the plant’s role exacerbating the

discord sited within landscape settings in this

of what nature is capable of despite it all.

conditions of the Anthropocene is undeniable,

iteration of 21,39 that El Khalil offers a way to

the area also has a strangely abundant ecology.

grasp the contrary nature of the epoch. In the

The exhibition’s curatorial focus is no different.

moment in which we recognise the irreversible

Hewn close to themes of dialogue and

In contrast to these uncannily unpopulated scenes,

damage we have done to the earth, naming

transformation, its title I Love You, Urgently

Marwah Almugait and Mohammad Alfaraj train

our geology after ourselves, we also begin to

insists on a speaker and an addressee. There is a

their lens on human forms. But the figures have

appreciate the immense interconnectedness

subject unknown that projects the insistent lament

become absorbed and formed by the actions

of all planetary systems and our decentralised

to an object unspecified. In the exhibition’s new

and behaviours of nature, the qualities of their

insignificance in that scheme.

media works, this ambiguous absence/presence

civilised “human-ness” sublimated to a more

plays out in polarities—either across terrains

intuitive, adapted form. In the case of Alfaraj,

eerily unpopulated, or through human beings

this is a sinister subsuming shot in anxiety-inducing

pushed beyond any recognisable relationship

infra-red, where labourers subjected to impossible

to the alien environments they inhabit. In this

heat take on the qualities of hardy local flora and

poetic address, El Khalil and the artists contend

fauna. In stark contrast, Almugait’s meditative

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MUSEUM Images - Courtesy of artists and Art Fund Collection of Middle Eastern Photography at the V&A and the British Museum Writer - Rachel Dedman, curator.

Nermine Hammam, Armed Innocence II, from the series Upekkha (2011) Archival inkjet print, 90 x 60 cm Art Fund Collection of Middle Eastern Photography at the V&A and the British Museum

Continued Resonance: Photography in the V&A’s Collection Three series by Middle Eastern artists Three series from the V&A’s collection of

By contrast, Nermine Hammam’s Upekkha series

Middle Eastern photography, collected in the

makes tender the human face of military action.

early 2010s, are considered afresh in light of

Hammam describes seeing the army arrive in Tahrir

the present.

Square during Egypt’s January revolution in 2011, and the tension that preceded them. “But as the

For her Shadow Sites series (2011) Jananne

hatches opened…what emerged [were]…wide-

Al-Ani photographed Jordan’s landscape

eyed youths with tiny frames, squinting at the

from the air at dawn. The early light’s low

cacophony of Cairo.”1 Uniformed soldiers stand

shadows reveal the presence of ancient

in moments of repose and vulnerability; their

archaeological sites, industrial farm buildings,

fatigues are saturated in pastel, edited to match

and contemporary military infrastructure—

the placeless backdrops against which they are

forms that recede to invisibility in the glare

pasted: mountainous, white-capped, and floral.

of the full sun. Nine years on from the beginning of the Aloof though they are, Al-Ani’s images

revolution, as Sisi leads a brutal military regime

carry political charge. They challenge

in Egypt, the romance of these images feels

assumptions of the desert as barren and

remote, a little ill-fitting. They still critique the

lifeless. The perceived emptiness of Middle

masculine imaginary on which military power

Eastern landscape has been encouraged by

relies, and call attention to the performative

the Western film industry, which sets sci-

while sympathising with its lived reality. But

fi and military epics in the desert, a space

green-screened sunsets take us a long way from

threatening, alien, and ripe for discovery.

Cairo, and the early days of revolution.

Such associations are supported by colonial rhetoric: Zionism in Palestine claimed a ‘land

In Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige’s Wonder

without people, for a people without land.’

Beirut, idyllic images of a different kind break down under the pressure of the present. Tourist sites and

The perceived emptiness of Middle Eastern landscape has been encouraged by the Western film industry, which sets sci-fi and military epics in the desert, a space threatening, alien, and ripe for discovery As Lebanon enters its six month of civic action against its crippling political system, Wonder Beirut #14, The Statue of Riad Solh resonates loudest. Riad Solh square is the locus of the revolution that began in October 2019, in Beirut’s relentlessly gentrified Downtown, where highsecurity government facilities rub shoulders with max-luxe shopping. It is satisfying to see

Today, Al-Ani’s crisp black and white aerial

happy water-skiers, clustered on postcards of pre-

images recall the aesthetics of surveillance

civil war Lebanon, are here burned and swollen, their

and military speculation. In 2020 a bird’s eye

negatives stained with oily fingerprints. The works

view feels a long way from natural flight, more

collapse the clichéd image of Lebanon’s ‘Golden

reminiscent of a sniper plane or unmanned

Age’ of liberal values and Riviera sunshine, a myth

drone, infra-red footage of the kind played

that has long obscured the realities of inequality

1

on the news.

and sectarianism of Lebanon’s 1950s and 1960s.

upekkha.html

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facsimiles of this space blister and crackle, nostalgia buckle under an unseen force, heatcracked and acid-pocked, as these empty, elite streets fill again with people. See https://www.nerminehammam.com/

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Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, Wonder Beirut #2, General Weygand Street, Beirut, from the series Wonder Beirut: The Story of a Pyromaniac Photographer (1997-2006) C-type print mounted on alumnium, 105.5 x 70.5 cm

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Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, Wonder Beirut #2, General Weygand Street, Beirut, from the series Wonder Beirut: The Story of a Pyromaniac Photographer (1997-2006) C-type print mounted on alumnium, 105.5 x 70.5 cm

Jananne Al-Ani, Aerial III, from the film Shadow Sites II (2011) Pigment print on paper, 53.8 x 46 cm Art Fund Collection of Middle Eastern Photography at the V&A and the British Museum

Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, Wonder Beirut #14, Beirut, The Statue of Riad Solh, from the series Wonder Beirut: The Story of a Pyromaniac Photographer (1997-2006) C-type print mounted on alumnium, 105.5 x 70.5 cm

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REVIEW Images - Courtesy of the artists and Arsheef Gallery. Writer - Lizzy Vartanian Collier, writer and curator.

Shaima Al-Tamimi, So Close Yet So Far Away (2019) Archival pigment print

Arsheef Gallery: Turning the Light On Yemen’s first contemporary art gallery opens In November 2019, Arsheef, Yemen’s first

depiction—the only artist living outside of the

contemporary art gallery, opened its doors in

country—of children walking in front of a sign

Sana’a. When the gallery’s lights were switched

heading towards Yemen.

on, the works of five emerging artists became visible, illuminating the lives of a generation of

“What impacts me the most to create

Yemenis that you won’t see on the news.

photographs is the need within me to tell the truth and reality of my surroundings,” explains

Arsheef’s inaugural show Turning The Light

Abdulaziz, “Life in Yemen is rich of senses that

On, quite literally sought to bring a new

unfortunately have been out of sight for the past

narrative into the light. Operating primarily

years. As a Yemeni photographer it became my

via direct messaging on Instagram, the gallery

duty to change the stereotypes that Yemen is

that also has a physical space, acknowledges

flooded with recently. Even though Yemen is

that there is a powerful light telling us about

going through a tough time, there are a lot of

the world, through the backlit screens of our

interesting details and hidden beauty that we

smartphones. Acknowledging that yes, there

as photographers need to show to the world.”

is a war in Yemen, Asim Abdulaziz, Somaya

Mohsen agrees, adding: “I have this urgent

Abdualla, Ammar Baras, Bashayer Mohsen

feel to share a different narrative… to influence

and Shaima al-Tamimi remind their audience

others along the way to always be able to tell

that they are still young people, utilising art to

their side of the story.”

express their own emotions and feelings, fears and aspirations and even mental issues.

Through the medium of photography, Arsheef used their first exhibition to draw on the

The show covers a lot of ground, from Abdualla’s

photographic tradition of reflecting light to

tender photographs of children and family

create an image. The young gallery spun this

celebrations, to Mohsen’s images taken on the

into a metaphor for making the invisible visible

road between Yemen and Saudi Arabia, which

in Yemen, and subsequently, presenting a new

comment on a complicated dual identity few

art space and an emerging art scene to the

of us could comprehend. In a display of just a

wider world. Reminding us that the media’s

handful of artists work, Arsheef also comments

portrayal of the country is simplistic and

on a breadth of experiences, presenting artists

reductive, Arsheef introduces another narrative.

working from across Yemen. This is particularly

Al-Tamimi explains: “We all need to create work

powerful in Abdulaziz’s depiction of a man

that comes from the heart,” and Arsheef shines

peeling potatoes in the middle of destroyed

a light onto that heart.

buildings in Aden, and through Al-Tamimi’s

November - December 2019

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Somaya Abdualla, Fatima (2019) Archival pigment print

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Asim Abdulaziz, Untitled (2019) Archival pigment print

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Bashayer Mohsen, Home From Home (2019) Archival pigment print

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Amma Baras, Untitled (2019) Archival pigment print

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REVIEW Images - Courtesy of the artist. Writer - Katrina Weber Ashour, arts strategy and communication specialist.

Kani Kamil, Blue Blanket (2018) Mixed media, artist’s hair embroidered on printed fabric. Dimensions variable

Speaking Across Mountains: Kurdish Artists in Dialogue An evolving conversation across a cultural landscape For its second exhibition since it opened in

childhood memories of seeing a suspicious caravan

True to the Middle East Institute’s commitment to

Washington, DC this past September, the Middle

to describe the infamous Red Jail in northern Iraq,

informed discourse, the exhibition is paired with

East Institute (MEI) Art Gallery has stepped into

where scores of Kurdish dissidents were imprisoned,

panel discussions and film screenings expanding

a space until now rarely considered by US arts

tortured and killed during the Saddam era.

on Kurdish contemporary art and regional

institutions, with an exhibition of contemporary

politics. The show succeeds in its evocation of

Kurdish artists. Curated by the NYC-Cairo based

The personal narrative that Iraqi-Kurdish artist

an absence and hunger for more. Speaking Across

Heba Elkayal under the title Speaking Across

Kani Kamil explores in Blue Blanket (2018) likewise

Mountains leaves visitors with the surety that—just

Mountains: Kurdish Artists in Dialogue, the show

uses a manipulated photograph to evoke a larger

as the fragmented documentation in many of the

offers an intimate selection of work by ten artists.

story. Photos of female family members printed on

featured artists’ work is inherently incomplete—

Their approaches to form and material—film,

fabric are obscured by embroidery using the artist’s

there is more to the picture of contemporary

photography, painting, embroidery, sculpture,

own hair and hung under a generic advertisement

Kurdish art than that which is in their immediate

documentary, found object assemblages, etc—are

depicting a smiling blonde boy; instead of his

field of view.

as varied as their life stories. The featured artists

actual female family members her grandfather

come from or have roots in Kurdish communities

displayed an image of this anonymous white

across Iraq, Syria and Turkey. Together, they reflect

child at the family business. By defacing these

the inherently transnational Kurdish reality, at times

photographs with a physical intervention the artist

living as refugees, immigrants, and/or members of

critiques the alienation of women in society.

the diaspora in Lebanon, Canada, Italy, Sweden, the USA, the UK and Germany.

The Turkish-Kurdish artist Savas Boyraz documents sites of clashes between Kurdish rebels and the Turkish

Framed as a symbolic conversation across the

army in 2015-2016 in his series The State We Are In

prominent mountain ranges that dominate the

(2016-2019). Sweeping mountainous landscapes are

Kurdish cultural landscape, the experience is less

punctuated by discarded objects or buildings that

a matter of direct dialogue between artists than

bear silent witness to the state-sanctioned violence

that of an evolving, transnational conversation

that took the lives of over 300 civilians. The power of

between the artists and their ethnic identities,

a seemingly benign photograph to viscerally connect

their family histories, and their memories, as

audiences to historic violence against civilians is also

well as with the geopolitical boarders, conflicts,

reflected in the work of Turkish-Kurdish artist Şener

displacements and gendered expectations that

Özmen. In The Photograph (2018) he describes a

constrain the region and with the audience itself.

childhood photograph—the only remaining visual

6 December 2019 - 26 February 2020

The show succeeds in its evocation of an absence of contemporary work by Kurdish artists and hunger for more

imagery remaining from his early years—and the Iraqi-Kurdish artist Sherko Abbas’ mixed-media

impact the destruction of his personal history by

installation The Phantom Museum (2019) juxtaposes

Turkish governmental forces had on his memory

archival materials and photographs with ephemera and

and sense of self.

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REVIEW Images - Courtesy of the artist. Writer - Woodman Taylor, art historian and ethnomusicologist.

Devourless 04 (2008) Digital C print (series of 4), 40 x 60 cm Kharareef - The Seven Jinnat of Trucial States (2011) Digital C print (series of 7),150 x 125 cm each The Face (2009/2019) Digital video projection on gypson coated styrofoam, 200 x 130 cm

Alaa Edris: Unreal. Unseen. Untouched. Probing the ethereal in cultural narratives Ever since encountering Alaa Edris in her multiple

challenging boundaries, taking her own image

transformations into Seven Jinnat of the Trucial

and voice to where it was not meant to be present

States (2011), the artist’s ability to navigate

nor seen.

between realities interwoven with mythologies and other cultural narratives became visually

In her two-channel video The Consumer – The

visceral in her practice. How can an artist envision

Consumed (2014) Edris critiques the act of

herself as a creative composite, manipulating

consumption, with images of her cutting up

her own face to morph with an owl’s, thereby

dried bread mirrored with a video showing her

referencing an Emirati folktale about a woman

painfully eating pieces of bread until on the verge

becoming a jinn-owl upon the death of her son,

of tears. For the 14th Sharjah Biennial (2019) Edris

after which she haunts neighbourhoods with fly-

created Black Boxes of Observational Activities

bys searching for him? It is her ability to transcend

where, through a small hole viewers, as would

and manipulate realities that gives Edris’s

be voyeurs, witness mundane activities taking

projects an uncanny presence of the unseen,

place within Sharjah’s old city.

It is her ability to transcend and manipulate realities that gives Edris’s projects an uncanny presence of the unseen

the possibilities of envisioning a manipulated future while also excavating foundational beliefs

Current urban constructions as well as possible

in Emirati society.

future metropolitan configurations are the subject of Edris’ two large photographic projects. In

Unreal. Unseen. Untouched. Alaa Edris’ first solo

Reem Dream X Edris snuck into the subterranean

exhibition, at 1X1 Gallery in Dubai’s Alserkal

foundations of new projects being built on

Avenue, included a range of her projects from

Reem Island in Abu Dhabi. Her black and white

the 14 years since graduating in Fine Arts from

photographs reveal the not-so-beautiful and ever

the University of Sharjah. The exhibition includes

more revealing mooring on which the dreamlike

her work in photography, video and installation.

structures above are being built.

If to start at her beginnings, you will need to visit the washroom. In her installation The Great Puzzle

The most monumental work in the exhibition,

washroom users see an image of Edris reciting

The Face, takes Edris’ presence into three

from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as soon

dimensions. Using projections upon a huge

as they close their stall, on a mirror LCD mounted

wall mounted sculpture of the front part of her

on the door. This is the most recent iteration of

face, Edris comes alive, with her eyes gazing out

her very first art act while in arts school, where

and moving around the gallery. Moving between

she took mirrors with pasted text from Alice’s

real and unreal, seen and unseen worlds, Edris’

Adventures, placing them in both the men and

work inhabits the ethereal, touching us by not

women’s washroom stalls. In this, Idris was already

touching. 19 September - 31 October 2019

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REVIEW Images - Courtesy of the artists. Writer - Reem Farah, writer.

Mohamed Mahdy, Childhood, Alexandria, Egypt Next page: Ebrahim Elmoly, We Work, Eat and Swim Together, Egypt

Gulf Photo Plus: The Arab Street, Vol. II A closer look at al-shari in a compilation of images The Arab Street, Vol. II at Gulf Photo Plus 2019

the distance to the inaccessible but approximate,

Community Exhibition raises the fundamental

the exhibit highlights how street photography

question: what is the Arab street, anyway? As the

provides access to the inaccessible. It further raises

exhibition designer Raz Hansrod explained, the

the question of access explicitly by questioning the

primary curatorial definition came from more than

photographers’ positionality in a given environment.

700 photographic submissions to the open call before

Two contrasting photos highlight the photographer’s

selection process was made. As an educational space,

perspective in the subject’s presence. In the first, a

the exhibition was curated based on subgenres of

seemingly headless man, his back hunched over and

street photography with accompanying texts that

neck bowed, leaves you wondering if he was staged

speak to the content and compilation of the photos.

or in a solitary meditative state. In the second, a boy

It pays careful attention to each photo’s significance

who holds a vulnerable but bold gaze, as if to test the

within the genre of street photography as well as

photographer’s gaze, begs the question of whether

their unlikely links to one another. For example, along

the photographer and the subject know one another.

one wall of the exhibit, the horizon stretches from the coast of the Arabian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea.

While the discussion of access is relevant to

On an adjacent wall, a closer look reveals the studied

street photography, it is pertinent to present-day

and serendipitous ‘rule of thirds’ across photos from

conversations about the Arab street. In the Arabic

Alexandria, Egypt to Rabat, Morocco.

language ‘the street’ or al-shari has become synonymous with spaces of revolt, remembering,

While the exhibit does not attempt to propose

reclamation and relearning. Street photography lifts

a definition of ‘The Arab Street,’ the collective

the curtain, inviting us to do so. As a post-colonial

compilation of photos reveal truths about the gender,

space, the Arab street is in conversation with a

race and class of the Arab street. Street photographs

contentious history of access, and of who sees and

from across the Gulf make visible the migrant labor

tells its stories. Residents and visitors are held to

demographic and their intimate relationship with

acknowledge the orientalist gaze and its framing

the street as early and daily commuters, or buyers

narratives so that the scenes we observe and stories

and sellers of chai.

we tell can counter these narratives. One photo in the exhibit does so by challenging notions of masculinity

Featuring photos taken from amateur and

in the region through a group of male friends dancing

professional photographers using any device from

in their spirit of collective elation. The Arab Street, Vol.

the iPhone to medium format studio cameras, the

II successfully reminds us of this space of imagination,

exhibit showcases the accessibility of photography

possibility and reality at our fingertips.

as an art medium. More generally, as a photo from the besieged Gaza brings visual insights and bridges

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18 September 2019 – 20 January 2020

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‘the street’ or al-shari has become synonymous with spaces of revolt, remembering, reclamation and relearning

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REVIEW Images - Courtesy of the artists and Sharjah Art Foundation. Writer - Cecilia Ruggeri, art historian and curator.

Farah Al Qasimi, Dream Soup (2019) HD video, colour, sound, 7 min 26 sec, video still 00002

Sharjah Art Foundation: March Project 2019 Rethinking cultural significance and architectural heritage In 2019, the sixth annual March Project, the

Qasimi worked with perfumers in Sharjah to

Sharjah Art Foundation’s annual series of

develop unisex scents that are diffused into the

commissions, culminated in a group exhibition

room during the film. The artist composed the

of works by Emirati artists Asma Belhamar, Farah

film’s soundtrack specifically for the video, which

Al Qasimi, May Rashed and Saeed Almadani, as

highlights the selection of perfume as a sensual

well as Saudi artist Filwa Nazer and Colombian

and profoundly personal experience, further

artist Mario Santanilla.

revealing how our choice of scents is linked to our desires and intended presentation of self.

Spanning contemporary topics from the West Asian cultural and social fabric to the

In her installation, The Edifice of Sba, Belhamar

relationships between architecture, modern

juxtaposes the concepts of compressing

construction and the body, the exhibition gives a

time and prolonging visual memory from the

broad sketch of Emirati history and an argument

perspective of a moving car. Rooted in the

for thinking about objects as storytellers and

tradition of the moving image reminiscent of

links to the past. Particularly, it emphasises

Bill Viola’s works, Belhamar contrasts painterly

video art and features two installations by

images of the shimmering mountain landscape

Emirati women artists Farah Al Qasimi and

against the sharp façade of the iconic Toyota

Asma Belhamar.

building, one of Dubai’s first residential towers. Barely audible in the film is Khaliji music, typical

In her site-specific film Dream Soup, Al Qasimi

of the Gulf region, which pays homage to time,

pays homage to Sharjah as the location of

as well as to personal and collective memory,

the majority of United Arab Emirates-based

while questioning the notion of afterimages and

perfume distilleries. As a recurring topos in the

expressing how ephemeral human memories can

artist’s practice, perfume is associated with her

be. Belhamar conveys this idea by experimenting

fascination with consumer culture. In the same

with light and moving images that give her film

manner as her stage-set photographs, which lure

a transcendent quality.

the viewer with sensuous, almost voluptuous

The film, which follows the life cycle of a fragrance, is far from mere reportage and focuses on playful elements such as the clichéd names of fragrances

exploring the conflicting appearances of natural

palettes and patterns, that reveal emotions with

For Belhamar, belonging to the UAE is like ‘living

landscapes and architecture. Belhamar’s work

an ingenuous directness, Dream Soup bears

in a time lapse;’ the passage of time and the

incorporates the conceptual metaphors of the

witness to the historical importance of perfumes

sprawl of development are intensely surreal.

medium and the perceptions of the ancient and

and scented oils in the UAE. The film, which

‘Next to the crowded industrial spectacle, the

modern, the Eastern and Western, which has

follows the life cycle of a fragrance, is far from

natural landscape has still kept its emptiness,’

informed her life.

mere reportage and focuses on playful elements

she states. She began investigating the

such as the clichéd names of fragrances. Al

geological and cultural tectonics of her country,

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Asma Belhamar, The Edifice of Sba (2019) Wood structure, video projection. Dimensions variable


REVIEW Images - Courtesy of the artists and King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture. Writer - Kevin Jones, writer and educator.

Taysir Batniji, GH0809 (2011) 20 C-prints (Duratrans) on translucent glossy paper, plexiglass, lighted frames, 30 x 38 cm (each)

Ithra: Mara’ina (Our Mirrors) Triggering reflections in this group exhibition at Funoon Gallery Every mirror, like every image, is interpretive.

In the former camp, works like Bahrain-born Faisal

gauge how their own experiences reflect back

As mounds of theoretical literature expound,

Samra’s People in Context (2019), one of three

from those of their photographic counterparts.

‘reality’ is consistently distorted in any gesture to

Ithra-commissioned bodies of work for Mara’ina,

‘represent’ it. And rarely are such representations

memorialises the quotidian of Al-Hasa residents,

While many works explore the emotional

innocent: even the ‘purest’ of documentary

a town in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province. The

contours of ‘home’—Monica Fritz’s Yemen

gestures smacks of a position, an inclination, an

documentary impulse feels imbued with both

Interiors (1994), Héla Ammar’s Family Portraits

intended effect. The mirror, like the photographic

ingenuous nostalgia (the artist’s family originated

(2012), Hicham Benohoud’s 30 Families (2002)

image, is wound up in an endless feedback loop:

there) and pointed promotion. Samra tenderly

and, to a degree Taysir Batniji’s GH0809

we plot and (re)assess the gap between our lived

trumpets the cultural, commercial and humanistic

(2011)—few match the emotional blows

reality and its allegedly faithful projection.

importance of the place—in one shot, an inter-

levelled by Hrair Sarkissian’s two-channel video

generational pair of traditional bisht tailors smile

Homesick (2014). In the gap between the artist

In its role as the unmistakable metaphor of

from their shop floor—snaring the Eastern Province

exhaustingly sledgehammering an off-screen

Mara’ina (Our Mirrors)—the third exhibition to

audience in his double-barrelled embrace.

object, on one channel, and the steady yet

inhabit the King Abdulaziz Center for World

invisible destruction of a scale-model replicating

Culture’s Funoon Gallery since the institution’s

Another documenter of the urban landscape,

his parents’ Damascene apartment building, on

opening—the mirror abounds. On the walls,

Canadian-American photographer Robert Polidori,

the other, resides the anguish of absence and

the catalogue, even on guest passes—at every

one of three Western artists in the show, engages

diasporic disconnection.

marketing-inflected turn we are invited to reflect.

in a more formal practice of portraiture: alongside

Yet the complexity of reflection resides precisely

‘denominational’ family portraits from the mid-

Amidst these strategies of identification

in its link to agency.

1990s like Muslim Family, Damascus, Syria (1994)

and empathy-building stand two works

and Christian Family, Damascus, Syria (1994),

foregrounding the very display of the self

Reflection in Mara’ina seems to travel two distinct

hangs the canny Saudi Tourists in Jerash, Jordan

for the camera. Akram Zaatari’s The Script

routes. One is in lockstep with the show’s subtitle,

(1996). Countering Samra’s gesture of Saudi

(2018) shows a Muslim father praying as

Our People, Our Society, Our Homes, designating

looking within, Polidori captures Saudis abroad. A

his two feisty sons clamber all over him,

at once the documentary gaze interpreting these

trio of self-conscious men striking stiff poses—an

attempting to break his devout concentration.

subjects, and the built-in gesture of first-person-

outstretched arm clumsily poised on a Roman ruin

Re-enacting a supposed sub-genre of YouTube

“Everything today exists to end in a photograph,” goes the often

Mara’ina has a challenging task: introduce contemporary art to a

plural inclusion: the works’ intent is tethered

here, a camera dangling knee-level there—is joined

videos in which the spiritual salah moment is

quoted remark by Susan Sontag in her On Photography (1977), and

society not necessarily fluent in appreciating it, while exhibiting the

to outcomes of viewer identification, affinity

by an animated woman sporting abaya and niqab.

documented amid the everyday collisions of

how aptly it applies to Michealangelo Pistoletto’s triptych Persone

intellectual and curatorial standards of an internationally prominent

and empathy. Indeed, in the words of Mara’ina

the domestic space, the work’s final minutes

in communicazione (2019), one the artist’s so-called mirror paintings

cultural institution. Grounded largely in strategies of inclusion and

curator Candida Pestana, the exhibition strives

Similarly, Tasneem Alsultan’s series Saudi Love

transpose the characters to a stage, acting

(actually silkscreen on mirror-finished stainless steel) commissioned

identification, the show succeeds less in flatly mirroring a society (in

to ‘trigger memories.’ The second is a more

Stories (2019) navigates the gulf between viewer

to rows of empty seats. Delivering a critical

for Mara’ina. Absorbed in their phones or preoccupied with snapping

its widest sense), than in leading viewers to fathom the gap between

critical zoom-out, sidestepping outcomes of

and subject: women watching women grappling

swipe at such modes of performance, the

selfies, the Saudi nationals represented in the work become the

themselves and their own projections.

viewer identification in favour of a more analytical

with the imposed reliance on men, the fanfare

work seems to imply that the self is ultimately

immaterial companions of viewers who document not only the work

problematizing of self-representation.

of weddings, the collapse of ill-made marriages

unvaryingly scripted.

but, involuntarily or not, themselves in the work.

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17 December, 2019 – 4 April, 2020

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Hicham Benohoud, from the series 30 Families (2002) Analog photography, 50 x 60 cm

Héla Ammar, Family Portrait I, II, III, IV (2012) Digital photography, 40 x 60 cm

Courtesy of the artist and Loft Art Gallery, Morocco

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REVIEW Images - Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Tanit, Beirut. Writer - Stella N. Peisch, researcher and consultant.

Charlotte at 11, from the series Becoming (2012) Beirut, Lebanon Alia, 9, from the series L’Enfant Femme (2011) Bourj El Barajneh Refugee Camp, Beirut, Lebanon

Rania Matar: An Image and Her Woman Complex dynamics of evolving feminine identities In January 2020, an exhibition opened at the

her, staring off into the future, unaware of the

American University of Beirut (AUB) of Rania

daughter she would one day have and pose in

Matar’s photography. The exhibit, entitled

front of this photograph of her. Another image is

An Image and Her Woman, is comprised of

of Alia, photographed in Bourj El Barajneh refugee

photographs from five different series that Matar

camp in Lebanon. Alia is photographed in front

has been working on over the years. The images,

of a pink door, dressed in a cartoon tank-top.

all of females ranging from pre-puberty to mature

While she is a slight girl of nine years old, etched

women, call into focus complex relationships of

across her face is an expression of calm agency

intimacy, privacy and space.

and confidence that seems to extend past her age.

Matar, a Lebanese mother of daughters who is

The images in the exhibit all remind the viewer

raising her family in the United States, photographs

of the multifaceted nature of girl-/woman-hood:

her subjects in both the United States and

as a daughter, mother, child, adult all at once.

Lebanon. The images acutely capture privacy and

Matar wordlessly manages to capture the immense

intimacy simultaneously, calling into question the

power and potential of the transition from girl to

dichotomy between the two. As the photographer,

woman, and her ability to capture such moments

Matar has been invited into spaces where these

of transformation through a medium that usually

two exist in unison—not only as she photographs

conveys stillness is emblematic of her talent.

girls at their homes and in their bedrooms, but also as she captures dynamics between daughters

20 January - 15 February 2020

and mothers, as well as between girls and their changing relationship to their bodies. The photograph of a girl named Charlotte in Beirut captures this in a particularly powerful way. In the photo, Charlotte at 11, she is sitting perched between two large maroon pillows in a striped tank top. Behind her there is a black-and-white photograph of a woman resting in profile in a similarly-striped bathing suit. This black-and-white photograph is of Charlotte’s mother, taken years before. The photograph captures a temporal

The images acutely capture privacy and intimacy simultaneously, calling into question the dichotomy between the two

transition: of a young girl, with her mother as not-yet-a-mother captured in an image behind

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IN CONVERSATION Images - Courtesy of TINTERA. Writer - Yasmine El Rashidi, writer.

Attaya Gaddis, Untitled (n.d.), from silver gelatin negative

Zein Khalifa and Heba Farid: TINTERA Gallery The photography scene in Cairo TINTERA is a newly opened photographic

Zein, who is based in London, has worked as

consultancy with a gallery space in Cairo and an

an independent consultant and handled sales

office in London. Its aim is to raise the profile of

at HackelBury Fine Art. A few years ago we

both contemporary and historical photography in

began talking about ways in which we could

and of Egypt through curated exhibitions, events

safeguard what we saw as a haemorrhaging of

and research projects. It represents artists from

our photographic heritage. We were hearing

Egypt and elsewhere, emerging and established,

stories of families throwing away family photos for

with Egypt being the common inspiration in their

lack of an appropriate institution to deposit them

work, while also managing significant private

in or even an understanding of their importance.

photograph collections and advising on the

ZK: In many other countries there are important

acquisition and sales of photographic art.

museums dedicated to photography and our

Egyptian novelist and writer Yasmine El Rashidi

initial goal was to set one up in Egypt. Travellers

spoke with co-founders Zein Khalifa and Heba

and photographers documented this country

Farid, both photographers and artists in their own

from the moment the camera was invented so

with the structure of the space at all. Just a

right, asking them about their insights on the space

imagine a museum that offers you entrée to that

year ago this was a family home so I think

and the vision they have for it.

particular history of the medium. But that’s the

the first thing you notice is that this is not

‘big dream’ and in order to get there we first need

a typical gallery set up. We hope it feels

Yasmine El Rashidi (YR): Am I correct in saying this

to start with developing a deeper understanding

inviting.

is the first fine-art gallery in Cairo dedicated to

and appreciation of the role of photography in

HB: We’re constantly receiving young and

photography? How did this come to be?

Egypt, hence Tintera.

established artists with bodies of work that

Zein Khalifa (ZK): As far as we know we’re the only

A few years ago we began talking about ways in which we could safeguard what we saw as a hemorrhaging of our photographic heritage

have rarely been seen. Without this kind

to work on older collections and it’s also where we carry all our artists’

the power relations in the construct of masculinity. Bryony Dunne spent

gallery in Egypt at the moment that focuses solely

Y R : T h a t e x p l a i n s a l o t ; i t d o e s n ’t f e e l

of space, an inspiring space, that wouldn’t

portfolios.

several years living in Egypt exploring the legacies of colonialism. Nabil

on photography. Of course there are galleries

l i k e a t r a d i t i o n a l g a l l e r y, a n d c e r t a i n l y

have happened. We didn’t want a traditional

HF: Also, in the ‘preservation room’ we have a cabinet with many of

Boutros has widely exhibited abroad but is hardly recognised in Egypt

that showcase photographers and artists working

not a ‘photographic consultancy,’ as per

white cube per se and yet the display of

the historical photographs and negatives we hold and preserve. I am

even though his work predominantly deals with his relationship to his

with photography but they also show painting,

your website.

photography demands a certain quality of

grateful for the training in preservation and collection management I

country. On display here are works from Boutros’ Nocturnes series. It’s

sculpture etc. We’re interested in elevating the

HF: We hesitated a lot with that description.

light and precision.

have received over the years, that began in 2005 but became more

been wonderful seeing people react to these images. They are nostalgic

status of photography in Egypt and encouraging

We’ve been told it feels more like an atelier,

technically focused through regional initiatives like MEPPI (Middle East

and capture everyday scenes that perhaps are overlooked by others.

an appreciation of the medium. We’re also keen

which is how we maybe think of it too.

ZK: The ‘gallery’ space is what welcomes the

Photograph Preservation Initiative). That exposure to best practices has

Xenia Nikolskaya, a Cairo-based Russian/Swedish artist who spent six

visitor and where we hold our exhibitions.

guided our own practices in our care and handling of both historical and

years photographing the neglected ‘cosmopolitan architecture’ of Egypt

on developing an archive of works made here. Heba Farid (HF): We’re both photographers

YR: Atelier! Precisely. A place where things

This current show includes work by over

contemporary photographs, in creating our displays and in preserving

in her series Dust (2006-2012). Many of the buildings Nikolskaya has

ourselves and have been working in various

are made, ideas are born, rather than just

13 photographers. Some have shown

collections we safeguard.

beautifully captured tell a rich history of the country but are now sadly

aspects of the field for over 20 years. In Cairo,

finished works displayed. Can you elaborate

internationally and some have never shown

I participated in setting up CiC (Contemporary

a little on the different aspects of Tintera.

before. We also have two other rooms; what

YR: Can you tell us a little about some of the artists in your current show.

Image Collective) in 2004 and worked for CultNat

ZK: We set up Tintera in an apartment of a

we call the ‘preservation room’ and an office

ZK: Ibrahim Ahmed is a young Egyptian mixed media artist. Through

YR: It is transformative, to walk into here. Once you enter, its breath-

(Bibliotheca Alexandrina) from 2008 until 2016.

residential building and have not interfered

space. In the preservation room we are able

staged, studio self-portraits Ahmed works on photo collages that examine

taking, bright, expansive and meticulously curated.

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being demolished so this is really quite an important body of work.

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Nabil Boutros, 6th October Brigade, from the series Egyptian Nocturnes (2003) Silver gelatin print, 33 x 47 cm Barry Iverson, Afternoon at the Museum, from the series The Tour (2014-19) Hand painted archival pigment print

Ibrahim Ahmed, Untitled, from the series You Don’t Recognize What You Don’t Know (2018) Unique chromogenic photographic collage and mixed media, 49 x 29 cm

ZK: I think people have been excited about seeing different representations of familiar places and ideas. Barry Iverson’s exhibition The Tour, really challenged viewers’ expectations of photography and the representation of Egypt in a very fun way. HF: Exactly. Part of building an appreciation for the medium as ‘art’ is about re-contextualizing it, introducing multiple ways to see, and to enculture people to photographic art practices. YR: Your current exhibition has archival works, which aren’t for sale? ZK: Yes, some of the archival works you see here come from the Attaya Gaddis collection. Gaddis was a photographer who apprenticed under Antonio Beato in the very late 19th century. He is considered one of the earliest Egyptian photographers and we are working on making his relatively unknown story and archive of photographs more accessible to a larger public. YR: Is there a market for photography in Egypt? ZK: Egypt was once an important center and source for the commercial photography market. At the moment mostly people from abroad are collecting this work, although we are starting to build a local collectors’ base. Most of the work has rarely been seen and is very affordable to collect. So, for those in the know, there’s a sense of being at the beginning of something exciting.

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IN CONVERSATION Images - Courtesy of the artist and Ayyam Gallery, Dubai. Writer - Dr. Effat Fadag, curator and educator.

Performance #19, Triptych #1 from the series Distorted Reality (2007) Lamda print, 100 x 133.33 cm

Faisal Samra: Distorted Reality Improvising performative intermediation—interview excerpts In his artistic process, Faisal Samra allows his

FS: I am always interacting with the events that

experimentive interactions with various media

surround me in one way or another. This is in

determine the ultimate final form of his work. In

addition to my pure artistic emotions, which guide

many ways it is his mediation through media that

me to work on various artistic projects with social,

determines the resulting visual message. Effat Fadag

critical, political and geopolitical statements.

interviews Samra, who discusses his use of different

These works depend mainly on the event; it may

media within his artistic process.

be in a specific event that had an effect on me to produce an artwork or start working on a project

Effat Fadag (EF): Can you tell us more about yourself

such as Distorted Reality (2005). During that time,

and your artistic background?

I was interested in the distortion in the media as a

Faisal Samra (FS): My mother is Bahraini and my father

topic—the political propaganda in everything we

is Saudi. In the 80s, I acquired my Bachelor’s degree

see in the media, the distorted reality that affects

from the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts

our lives—and I wanted to address this issue in my

in Paris and have been practicing art since 1992.

work. I started working with digital photography,

For me, studying in Paris was very important and

video and performance. This included various

influenced me a lot. Merging yourself in a different

media and led to my second project: CDR,

culture, coexisting with a culture different than

Construction Distraction Re-construction.

yours adds to your experience and practice which I

During that time, I was interested in the distortion in the media as a topic—the political propaganda in everything we see in the media, the distorted reality that affects our lives—and I wanted to address this issue in my work

benefited from. Since the 70s I have advocated that

EF: What are the references, ideas and your own

fine art colleges in Saudi Arabia should address our

concepts that evolve around your work?

culture and historical background. So, if we want to

FS: All of my projects have political, critical, or

time, your artistic execution is subtly sophisticated and

affected by the loss of the used medium, this means that it does not need

This new body of work is related to emotions—in its most innocent

establish fine art colleges we need to have a balance

other dimensions. As a visual artist, I rely on

not forced. How do you explain this?

that extra burden of an additional medium. Therefore, the project dictates

condition—and passion specifically. In order to allow these emotions

between our historical background and our civilization

visual pleasure which is my goal in ever project. I

FS: I always say that it is not the media that defines

the media and the media does not dictate the theme of the project.

to flourish, it is necessary to use the cognitive process moving from the

in parallel with the history of European art practices.

always start with a visual experimentation which

the project, but the project that determines the

The colleges need to graduate artists with identities

then develops into other layers and additional

type of media that you use. I started using the

I always work with this simple method. With the Reality of a Warrior, I saw that

experimented with abstract emotions—unlike joy or sadness—they are

that are distinct from European artists. I started to

dimensions regardless if it is social, or has political

video long before the digital era, during the end

the work required a more complex use of media, so, I used digital, performance,

emotions that relate to the form of the medium being worked with. It is

make art when I was a child, and first opened my

dimensions, etc. Sometimes the projects choose

of the 90s. When my idea is ready I ask myself

video, etc. However, in the project that I am working on right now, I started

an improvisation process that creates the relationship between you and

eyes! I was drawing everywhere, on the walls and

you, you don’t choose the project.

how will I execute it? Or what is the best way to

with drawing, sketching and moved to painting, sculpting and photography.

the medium, such as charcoal or colour. I improvise with these materials

present this project? What are the media that I

Artists should allow their projects to dictate the medium that they work with.

without thinking. The material is purely emotional, until the process of

during school and I still draw now.

clarity. When you see a work of art and the idea is there, you can isolate the

painting and sculpting and photography.

medium used in that project, and if the project stands alone and was not

unconscious to the conscious, a process of thinking through the mind. I

EF: Faisal, you are considered an artist who breaks

can use which are crisp, clear and to the point?

EF: What are the topics you’re interested in working

traditional boundaries and artistic classifications,

In my work I love to be austere as much as

EF: Can you further describe the latest project you are working on?

interact with charcoal in the painting, drawing to embody movement. I

on,—references and concepts that evolve around

using various media as arbiter for your own artistic

possible, and this means the medium has to help

FS: The Thriving Emotions project is my most recent body of work and is

then use colour to embody the air and sculpted forms. In the resulting

your work? And what are the topics that provoke

experimentation. This gives your work and the subject

present my idea. In my opinion, when you work

a purely experimental project that depends on actual experience. I started

images, the layout embodies movement while the oil painting embodies

your art which distinguish yourself from other artists?

you are addressing different perspectives. At the same

on a project or you see an artwork, you expect

the process sketching with charcoal, then I was propelled to work with oil

the emptiness of a void.

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consciousness starts to form which is refined from escaped emotions. I

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Performance #19, Triptych #2 from the series Distorted Reality (2007) Lamda print, 100 x 133 cm;

From top row: Performance #13,Triptych #1 from the series Distorted Reality (2007) Lambda print, 40 x 53.5 cm; Performance #11, Triptych #2 from the series Distorted Reality (2007) Lambda print, 80 x 107 cm; Performance #19, Triptych #2 from the series Distorted Reality (2007) Lamda print, 100 x 133 cm; Performance #17, Triptych #1 from the series Distorted Reality (2007) Lamda print, 40 x 53.5 cm

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Distorted Reality #3 (2007) Digital photograph, 107 x 82 cm

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Distorted Reality #3 (2007) Digital photograph, 107 x 82 cm

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IN CONVERSATION Images - Courtesy of the artist. Writer - Veeranganakumari Solanki, curator and writer.

Between Illusion and reality…is where I stand, from the series Mood Diary (2012) Digital photograph

Marwah AlMugait: Process and Practice Tracing motion while exploring the lens Marwah AlMugait and I met at the Delfina

authority of the voice. It taught me the importance

Foundation in London, over the summer of 2019,

of revisiting and responsibility.

when our residencies overlapped. AlMugait was there for a one month residency, and I was half-way

VS: This is the time you made Mood Diary (2012),

through my six month term as the International

the work that won you an award during your

Brooks Fellow at Tate Modern in the curatorial

Masters programme.

and photography department. While days were

MA: I wanted to move beyond border-defined

spent on the ground, working and researching

dialogues, into a narrative we all identify with in

for our individual practice, the evenings and

personal spaces, but never speak about as global

weekends were usually at the Delfina Foundation,

citizens. Mood Diary broadly relates to the increase

our home in London that nurtured family ties

in mental health patients, with a focus on bipolar

and conversations between the team and fellow

disorders through the narrative of Mona, who

residents. It was during these times, that we

braved sharing her personal space with me for this

found ourselves immersed in conversations on

project. Empty spaces recur here and in my other

our merging research of the expanding nature of

works, leaving subliminal messages for the viewer

photography through practice and text. The ways

to interpret as nostalgia, intimacy or as personal

in which AlMugait has explored the lens alongside

narratives. Encountering the ‘topic’ for the first

photography, video and performance has been

time, I struggled with translating the topic into

almost revolutionary.

the visual, with the imagery holding more than just identity. It drew me to move beyond comfort

Veeranganakumari Solanki (VS): As an

and into the representation of the unseen and

independent artist, practicing in Riyadh, how did

making the familiar unfamiliar.

a Masters in Photojournalism (2012) expand your practice of exploring the medium and rawness of

VS: Temporality, performance, residues of live-

photography with your subject matter. Marwah AlMugait (MA): It was a quantum leap, and

While days were spent on the ground, working and researching for our individual practice, the evenings and weekends were usually at the Delfina Foundation, our home in London that nurtured family ties and conversations between the team and fellow residents

VS: This brings me to the idea of merging disciplines and media

VS: This act of arrival and departure resonates with Albunt (2019). Could

in your work, that undo expected ways of thinking.

you talk about this work that appears remarkably different from the rest of

MA: It is so important to have the freedom to experiment without limiting

your practice and how it connects with your most recent video installation

your artistic language to a singular medium. This allows one to push all

I Lived Once (2020).

other boundaries without hesitation. With the idea of space, there is the

MA: Both these works were commissioned by the Saudi Arts Council. Albunt,

notion of symbology, where I am trying to provide, rather than provoke.

my first public art and 3D mapping project, I wanted to highlight the history and structure of the Ottoman Empire that carried with it stories of the sea and Haj

VS: You also performed twice in 2017—once alone during a residency

pilgrims. The idea of collectivity and performance could be looked at as a link

theatre are crucial when experiencing your work.

in New York, the second time with a group of performers for We Were.

between the two works. 3D mapping is performative in terms of layering stories

MA: After a pause in my work in 2014, I started

This has in a way given you the sense of freedom to know what to expect

and progressing narratives. In, I Lived Once, a work that responds to biomimicry,

turning point for me to have more substance for the

experimenting with ways to explore myself and

and feel with your performers. It is an awareness of space and emotion

the tree becomes the lens for the viewer, and eventually the viewer through the

image itself, compared to my earlier experience

the camera with the limited resources available

that translates into the experience for the viewer as well.

camera becomes the attacker. The response of performers instantly becomes

with commercial photography. My perceptions on

then for my solo show, Sigh (2015). Oudah (2015),

MA: Photography and the camera is a pure medium that becomes the

a psychological and emotional collective to manifest connections with nature.

the media of photography changed as research

is an attempt to visualise a healing process that

spoken words. The lens, for me, is a tool to trace

eye of the viewer. I needed to feel this collectiveness and energy-field

and awareness became the core of my work with

is layered with an invisible emotional journey,

motion in ways that make the viewer inseparable

with my performers, which I could only do by pushing boundaries and

VS: You are a perfectionist by nature, and while you do allow for ‘immaculate

a consciousness and responsibility of my subject

childhood memories and unanswered questions.

from the camera. I work with the idea of pushing

putting myself in new territories. It was an intense but required moment

risk,’ you also like to be in complete control of the result. Now that you feel

and our surrounding environments. Documentary

Dance and theatre, to which I have been

the angle and eye of the lens, even today, where

of being in front of the camera myself in We Were. The stories of arrival

you have exhausted every possible way of exploring the lens, what is next?

photography is a very long and intimate process

attracted for years, found their way into my work

it is performance that best captures the essence

and departure from members of this performance make their way to

MA: Maybe back to a single angle video, as a reflex that goes back to the

that involves building relationships and a mutual

as expressions and body language, rather than

of the crucial emotional intimacy.

me even today.

stillness of my constructed frame as a photographer.

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I Lived Once (2020) Video installation. Video stills

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I Lived Once (2020) Video installation; Video stills

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PORTFOLIO Images - Courtesy of the artist. Writer - Suzy Sikorski, art historian and writer.

The Broken Dream II (2017) Next page: The Broken Dream (2017) Page 66-67: From the series RUGLIFE (2016) Photo paper encased in plexiglass, 160cm x 130 cm

Ali Cha’aban: Staging ‘Satellite Culture’ Forging new Arab identities and aesthetics ‘The contemporary art scene has raised the bar for

photoshoot; instead they focus on elements of

emerging artists and designers to create tributes

culture rather than just pleasing aesthetic visuals.

to their culture with an evolving state of mind. I always say that I’m super-proud of my generation.

Well known for his comic strip scenes of

Young Arabs have been creating and producing

bruised Stan Lee superheroes superimposed

things that have seriously put us on the map. We

onto rugs, with kitschy artwork titles derived

have been able to forge an identity for ourselves

from famous rap lyrics, Ali is also involved

and an ever-growing aesthetic that defines us.

in collaborative fashion and conceptual

The Arab art scene is slowly generating its own

photography including Saudi photographers

notion of the Arab Renaissance, paving a visual

Abdullah Al Shehri and Rayan Nawawi along

identity that will be discoursed in decades to come

with designer Mohammed Khoje. Seemingly

both academically and historically.’ Ali Cha’aban.

quotidian, confident everyday poses turn into a bit unusual, multi-layered compositions,

Cha’aban has also channeled his interdisciplinary work into collaborating with international brands such as Nike and Vogue Arabia in fashion campaigns and advertisements that have had a global impact

Ali Cha’aban is an emerging conceptual artists

reflecting on the timeless qualities of

and collaborative photographer from the GCC

Arabs along with the fetishisms of the new

who is capturing a 1980s and 90s Arab ‘satellite

generation; a man in a thobe is crouched

culture’ generation that is exploring how to

within a fridge (Nike x Vice Satellite Culture

cultivate an Arab identity caught between

Campaign, 2017) or a model riding on a

global pop culture and the traditional cultural

retro-scooter behind a graffiti embellished

sphere. He has been exposed to change and

carpet in the middle of a street (The Arabic

Striking in composition and staging, The

up-rootedness since childhood, as a Kuwaiti-

Dream, 2017).

Arabic Dream series is a dynamic collaboration

raised, Lebanese growing up during the Iraqi

between photographer Rayan Nawawi and

invasion of Kuwait who is now living in Jeddah

Ringing in his debut show Technicolor at La

Mohammed Khoje of Hindamme featuring

that now is a burgeoning artistic scene for young

Cantine du Faubourg in 2017, the title lays

Khoje’s Fall 2017 collection that readily

creatives. Studying anthropology, Cha’aban and

the groundwork for the themes he chose

showcases Arab culture motifs such as the sadu

defiance and confidence. In his RUGLIFE series (2016) the model

In 2007, during Nike and Vice Magazine Summer of White campaign,

his works live in a state of permanent nostalgia and

to explore. These are found within the rug

print—the geometric design embroidered by

Sofiane Si Merabet, commonly known as the ‘The Confused Arab’, is

Nike approached the artist and Rayan Nawawi who produced the

cultural reverie for a glorified past. He incorporates

and then in his rough and highly saturated

Bedouins. Simultaneously within this chaotic

blinded by a rug over his face; behind a backdrop of a dilapidated

Satellite Culture campaign using the Airmax97 model. They revisited

research into his cultural observations, including

aesthetics that resonates with a millennial,

scenes, we are transported to this dystopic

wall painted in deep pastels. Immediately we are drawn to the textiles

the past with the model wearing a thobe, connecting the past with the

semiotics and Islamic principles, on works that

TV generation plugged into dreamy nights of

Arabian Disneyland, The Arabic Dream is

and patterns of the rug, but at the same time become blinded by and

future in a minimalist approach harkening back to the 90s era. In light

trigger new debates relevant to global politics

timeless vintage movies from the repetiore of

written in Arabic on the carpets, a melange

constricted by its traditions.

of this shoot, Cha’aban did a photoshoot of social media influencer

and social realities. These are explored through

Arab golden cinema. Cha’aban later exhibited

of three creative minds in different fields

his interactive installations, street and fashion

in the Sharjah Islamic Arts Festival, Abu Dhabi

reflecting on their own version of how to

Cha’aban has also channeled his interdisciplinary work into

photography and bespoke clothing pieces. His

Art Fair, Beirut Art Fair, 21,39 in Jeddah, Hafez

incorporate the traditional with timelessness,

collaborating with international brands such as Nike and Vogue in

photographs are much deeper than a look-book

Gallery, Jeddah and H Gallery, Paris.

while models embody a mix between absence,

fashion campaigns and advertisements that have had a global impact.

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Amy Roko in a niqab through a collaboration with Abdullah Al Shehri, creating a mockup campaign for Nike.

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From the series RUGLIFE (2016) Photo paper encased in plexiglass, 160cm x 130 cm

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Hindamme 2 (2017)

Photography “mock-campaign” for Nike (2018) Page 70-71: Photography for Vogue Arabia (2018)

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B_WR 1

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PORTFOLIO Images - Courtesy of the artist. Writer - Woodman Taylor, art historian and ethnomusicologist.

Mā Lam Tabkī (Unless weeping) from the series Silsila (2014) Archival print, 70 X 100 cm Following page: Fatnis al-Jazirah (Fantasy Island), from the series Silsila (2014) Archival print, 70 x 100 cm

Sama Alshaibi: Reorienting Our Gaze Choreographies of an art practice

Alshaibi becomes an activist advocating for a reorientation of her viewers’ gaze while creating new resonance generated through images of her staged performances

Through exposing her own subjectivity, both in terms

North Africa and West Asia. These then become the

of her multiple points-of-view as an Iraqi-Palestinian

staging for her own performative acts, from lyrically

woman practicing in the United States but also in her

connecting and later disconnecting hands with her

enactments as the subject in her own image-based

double to opening a pomegranate and then distributing

work, Sama Alshaibi aims to reorient her audiences’

its seeds on fertile ground. There are also juxtapositions

gaze. Born in Basra, raised in West Asia and educated

of seascapes with dried out stream beds, raising

in the arts first at Columbia College in Chicago and

ecological concerns which were cued to the project’s

then at the University of Colorado in Boulder, Alshaibi

initial installation for the Maldives Pavilion at the 55th

has negotiated her identity across divergent cultural

Venice Biennale in 2013. The Arabic titles for work in this

and national constructs. This familiarity with both sides

project often have Sufi or philosophical resonance, such

of the usual East / West dichotomy allows Alshaibi

as mandala like Al-Manatiq al-Khaas bi-Wijhat Nazarinaa

to visually critique, up-end and then reconfigure the

that translates as ‘the logic of our gaze’ which becomes

mostly male-centered and Orientalist framings of West

a critique of the very act of viewing. The most striking

Asia and particularly of Arab women. By literally taking

images from the series capture Alshaibi half submersed

ownership of the image through her own body, while

in water with a prayer like gesture. Taken from behind—

of water, or purveyor with stacks of food vessels, or a

arranging the setting and framing of her photographs

at times with palm trees at the distant shore perfectly

selection of beverages, or carrying fishing nets and

and videos, Alshaibi becomes an activist advocating for

reflected on a mirror-like pool, it is as if we are witness

even baggage. Yet the Arab women she activates

a reorientation of her viewers’ gaze while creating new

to her act of praying. By giving us the subject position

are not submissive as those depicted in Orientalist

resonance generated through images of her staged

of a rear view, not only does she negate nor engage our

modes, Alshaibi shows them as strong workers who

performances.

gaze, she perhaps invites us to join in her supplication.

resist their oppressors with their resolute return gazes. The resistance of these strong Arab women is

Alshaibi highlights this importance of performance

Alshaibi’s Staging the Imagined, which premiered at

brought into the realm of contemporary politics with

in her practice within an interview:

Ayyam Gallery Dubai in September 2019, is her most

Alshaibi’s monumental color silkscreen of herself as

recent project, which again took many years for its

the legendary Palestinian revolutionary Leila Khaled,

I think what I really am, is a performer. I started off in

development and final realization. In her project, not

with red keffiyeh and an ever-ready AK-47. Through

drama and music: singing opera, acting and dancing…

only does Alshaibi deconstruct the Orientalist framing

her Staging the Imagined Alshaibi confronts us with

when I started studying photography and video, I was

of Arab women as exotic objects in the harem created

the need for us to reorient our viewing and framings

able to examine my own story, my own family and the

by Western painters and then photographers, she

of not only Arab women but of the entire West Asia

political conditions of the world that intersected my own

actually learned the historic photographic processes

region as well as of any previously orientalized ‘others.’

life. (Sand Rushes In, 2015: 104)

of albumen and photogravure with copper plates used

In her initial multi-year project Silsila which was exhibited

by colonial cameramen to create her own alternative

Reference:

widely as an installation with photographs and video,

images projecting her own counter narrative. In the

Sand Rushes In (New York: Aperture, 2015), edited and

Alshaibi activates her own silsila, or lineage, connecting

series of sepia prints, Alshaibi takes the subject position

with an interview by Isabelle Ellaheh Hughes, foreward

the arid geographies of Arizona with desertscapes from

of an Arab woman, where she performs as if a carrier

by Salwa Mikdadi and essay by Alfredo Cramerotti.

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Sabkhat al-Milh (Salt flats) (2014) Diasec print, 120 cm in diameter

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Rub al Khali, from the series Silsila (2014) Diasec print, 120 cm in diameter

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Water Bearer II (2019) Albumen print on Somerset satin white 100% rag, 53.34 x 35.56 cm

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Gamer (2019) Albumen print on Somerset satin white 100% rag, 53.34 x 35.56 cm

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Marjanah (2019) Albumen print on Somerset satin white 100% rag, 53.34 x 35.56 cm

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The Harvest (2019) Albumen print on Somerset satin white 100% rag, 53.34 x 35.56 cm

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Generation after Generation (2019) Digital print, 2362 x 584 cm


Of Someone’s Memory (2019) Digital print, 152.4 x 101.6 cm

Even After (2019) Digital print, 152.4 x 101.6 cm

You Who Are Body, Vessel (2019) Digital print, 152.4 x 101.6 cm

I Am, She I, (2019) Digital print, 152.4 x 101.6 cm

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PROFILE Images - Courtesy of the artist and the Sharjah Art Foundation. Writer - Sabrina DeTurk, art historian, curator, writer and educator.

Akram Zaatari, On Photography, Dispossession and Times of Struggle (2017) HD video, colour, sound; 37 minutes. Installation view Courtesy of the artist, kurimanzutto, Sfeir-Semler and Thomas Dane Galleries. Photo: Sharjah Art Foundation

Akram Zaatari: Against Photography Re-envisioning photography’s history through archive, artistic practice and curation While most photographers consider the archive

of the material evidence of that history. Over the

individual artists expressed the desire to create

as an eventual repository for their work, if they

years, however, his interest shifted to see the

a collection and work on it, with it. … If it is an

consider it at all, for Lebanese photographer

images collected by the AIF as a lens through

archive, it is more of an archive of research and

Akram Zaatari, the archive is the driving force

which to re-read, curate and construct a history

collecting practices than an archive of photographic

behind his research-based practice. Along with

of the region; a project not antithetical to, but

practices.” (Zaatari, 2013: 60)

Fouad Elkoury and Samer Mohdad, he founded

certainly different than, that of constructing a

the Arab Image Foundation (AIF) in 1997 and

history of photography in the region.

his recent solo exhibition at the Sharjah Art

This understanding of the AIF as, ideally, as a living, malleable archive, subject to the artistic and

Foundation (SAF) focused on the critical role that

The title of the exhibition, Against Photography, is

curatorial interventions of those who contribute to

the AIF has played in his multifaceted practice as

a phrase that Zaatari himself coined and discussed

and work with it, was evident in the SAF exhibition.

artist, archivist and curator.

in a 2013 interview in Aperture magazine: “On

Zaatari’s installations combined and recombined

the surface, it is a statement in opposition to the

images from various settings and time periods to

Against Photography: An Annotated History of the

paths that photography institutions have taken.

continually interrogate the role of the photographer

Arab Image Foundation featured a variety of works

But, indeed, ‘against photography’ also means

in constructing visual, national and social histories.

by Zaatari, including photographic prints, mixed

leaning against photography’s history in order to

The role of the curator was also at play, as he

media installations and videos, offering a reflection

move elsewhere, where we can save photography

selected images from collections already curated

on the evolution of the AIF specifically through an

from its fate.” (Zaatari, 2013: 62)

by himself and other artists at the AIF while the

analysis of his contributions to its collections and

exhibition curators in each venue lent their expertise

Zaatari’s interest shifted to see the images collected by the AIF as a lens through which to re-read, curate and construct a history of the region

at the heart of his founding of the AIF and the

It is precisely this kind of radical re-envisioning

foundation’s current direction:

of photography’s history and potential

development. Zaatari’s relationship with the AIF

As a title, Against Photography reflects, then,

and vision to the overall project of curating AIF’s

over the past 20 years has been complex, with

both Zaatari’s antagonism toward the direction

history through Zaatari’s projects.

the organization serving as the vehicle for the

towards preservation that the AIF has taken in

development of his own projects and interests as a

recent years as well as his continued fascination

The materiality of photographs is an aspect of

photographer. At the same time he participated in

with photography as a means to excavate the past,

their identity that greatly interests Zaatari. While

wider debates within and around the AIF on issues

to participate in a kind of archaeology of images

the AIF has during its evolution established the

such as provenance, preservation and authorship.

that informs his artistic practice. The exhibition,

conservation of physical photographs as a primary

which was shown also in South Korea, Spain and

responsibility for the organization, he has pushed

Zaatari describes his early work with the AIF as

Germany, is described as “An Annotated History of

back against that priority, at one point even

focused on researching details of photographers’

the Arab Image Foundation” and presents, rather

proposing a radical repatriation of the photographs

practice as they impacted the modernist project

than a linear account of the AIF, an interrogation,

in the AIF collections to the families that donated

As an artist who has always viewed his practice

and discourse of the 19th and early 20th centuries.

through the perspective of his artistic practice,

them. He sees the existence of high-quality digital

as analogous to archaeology, Zaatari viewed the

References:

The role of the foundation was to collect evidence

of the foundation’s priorities and program. He

reproductions and online image repositories as

returning of the photographs to their families of origin

Adami, E. (2019) “History and photographic memory:

of these practices, to contribute to the construction

emphasized the important role of artists and

the practical impetus for such a gesture, but it is

as a kind of metaphorical equivalent of leaving the

Akram Zaatari.” Journal of Visual Culture 2: 169-186.

of a history of photography in the Middle East

research-based artistic practice on the founding

his philosophical argument that sheds light on the

archaeological past unburied, returning the material

Zaatari, A. and Westmoreland, M. (2013) “Against

region and to provide for the care and preservation

of AIF: “AIF did not exist as an archive before

split between the artistic, research-based impulse

object to its origin.

photography.” Aperture 210: 60-65.

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that made the creation of the Arab Image …I did not believe any more in detaching images

Foundation by Zaatari and his colleagues

from a living tissue for the sake of their preservation.

such an inventive model, a synergy between

We (at the AIF) have always told families that our

archive, artistic practice and curation. The SAF

interest in originals came from our interest in their

exhibition captured both the possibility and

conservation. But archaeologists know very well that

impossibility of this approach, by highlighting

the ultimate way to conserve archaeology is to keep

the visual and intellectual creativity of Zaatari’s

it buried under earth, which contradicts the very idea

work with images from a foundation with which

of the excavation. (Adami, 2019: 173)

he no longer finds a connection. 27 September 2019 - 10 January 2020

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Akram Zaatari, various works. Mixed media installations. Dimensions variable. Installation view. Photo: Sharjah Art Foundation

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Akram Zaatari, various works. Mixed media installations. Dimensions variable. Installation view. Photo: Sharjah Art Foundation

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Akram Zaatari, The Body of Film (detail) (2017) 14 pigment inkjet prints on backlit UV cloth; 100 x 150 cm each. Photo: Sharjah Art Foundation

Akram Zaatari, Men Posing While Crossing Ainel Helweh Bridge (2007) 36 gelatin silverprints; 29 x 19 cm each (frame size). Installation view: Courtesy of Sfeir-Semler Gallery. Photo: Sharjah Art Foundation

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PROFILE Images - Courtesy of the artist. Writer - Valerie Behiery, arts writer.

Abu Samir from the series Faces From Erased Places (2015) Sepia print, 112 x 213 cm

John Halaka: Faces of Erased Places Photography, memory and the dispossessed Abu Samir does not look at us. His mournful

will die and the young will forget.” The triptych’s

lived peacefully together in Palestine or

eyes stare off into space somewhere over our

central mandala-like photograph references the

that the studious Hussein Lubani, forced to

right shoulders. His hands, framed by a striped

land, while the double exposures on either side

flee El Damoun, Palestine as a young boy,

shirt and clasped at the waist, also appear lost

narrate the transmission of cultural memory from

had to guide his blind grandmother during

in thought. A landscape of rubble figures in lieu

the elders to the youth. In both photographs, a

the harrowing escape. Umm Aziz lost two

of his chest. The mound of destroyed houses

significant object is passed on; on the left, a set

infants after Israeli army gunfire chased her

topped by a lone minaret illuminates the pain

of keys from a lost or confiscated house promises

from her native village and, then much later,

etched across his creased face. Unfurled at the

return and, on the right, prayer beads signal

her four sons during the Sabra and Shatila

level of his heart, the image deciphers a life

the faith of hope and the hope of faith. Halaka

massacre. Abu Ibrahim’s story offers some

built around the burden of exile and loss. Umm

masters the use of the multiple exposure as an

reprieve as he continues to live in the West

Aziz’s gaze is also oblique. In the central image,

aesthetic strategy to meld person and place,

Bank village where he was born, carrying on

the elderly woman holds a poster carrying

past and present, as well as dream and reality.

the farming tradition of his ancestors, despite

the faces of four men. Her facial expression

much adversity.

and downcast eyes convey that the men are

Faces of Erased Places reveals photography’s

dead or missing. In the image on the right, her

capacity to act as a witness to human

If the texts are difficult to read, they secure

fingers are clutching a small piece of earth, a

experience and history. The series, forming

a place in history for Palestinian lives that

treasured, tangible memory of her homeland,

part of the much larger Portraits of Denial

mainstream history ignores, denies or

long left behind.

& Desire project on Palestine involving not

dehumanizes. Like all indigenous peoples

only photography, but also drawing, film, an

facing annihilation, Palestinians require an

Like all of the works in John Halaka’s Faces

oral history archive, and writing, effectively

archive to ensure that the memory of their

of Erased Places addressing the issues of

possesses a documentary dimension.

suffering and resilience be preserved. John

Palestinian displacement and occupation, the

Contesting the erasure of Palestinians from

Halaka has devoted thirty years of travel,

two photographic triptychs visually communicate

media, political, and public discourses, Faces

discussions and artmaking to creating such

the centrality of memory in contemporary

of Erased Places records the experiences of

an archive. Identifying with the philosophy of

Palestinian lives. Palestinians have not only

individual Palestinians, mapping, in particular,

‘the artist as public servant,’ the University of

been dispossessed of their land; their history and

the deep existential scars that the Nakba

San Diego professor strives relentlessly in his

culture, along with the tragic effects of the Nakba

inflicted. While the multipart portraits

life and work to be on the right side of history.

have equally undergone endless attempts of

function as autonomous visual documents,

As he explains, “Recording the narratives of

obliteration. Because memory often remains the

all are accompanied by texts that succinctly

Palestinian survivors and presenting them

Palestinians’ sole connection to their motherland,

recount the life stories of those represented.

through art, literature and films is part of a

its survival constitutes an act of resistance. In Will

We learn, for example, that Abu Samir, who

critical effort to make the unseen seen, and

the Young Forget?, the Palestinian-American artist

became a refugee at age eleven, remembers

the unheard heard, so no one can ever say,

consciously counters the Israeli adage “The old

a time when Muslims, Jews and Christians

“I didn’t know.”

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Like all indigenous peoples facing annihilation, Palestinians require an archive to ensure that the memory of their suffering and resilience be preserved. John Halaka has devoted thirty years of travel, discussions, and artmaking to creating such an archive

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Hands of Time from the series Faces From Erased Places (2015) Sepia print, 112 x 289.5 cm Sabra and Shatila from the series Faces From Erased Places (2018) Sepia print, 112 x 366 cm


Will the Young Forget from the series Faces From Erased Places (2018) Sepia print, 112 x 279 cm Abu Ibrahim from the series Faces From Erased Places (2018) Sepia print, 112 x 256.5 cm


ON THE GROUND Images - Thawra contributors. Writer - Aimee Dawson, editor and writer.

Fadia Ahmed ffadiaahmadphotography

Thawra: The Lebanese Revolution

More than a hundred days. That’s a moment in

Revolutionising photography through social media

where, no matter who, we are different today. Our

history that will forever be remembered. No matter hearts feel differently. Our brains think differently. Our being is walking towards the unknown, true; but

The latest Lebanese uprisings have been swift,

cacophony of action. “I’ve never considered

urgent and unyielding. The first screams of

photography to be a medium in my artistic

protest rang out on the evening of 17 October

practice before,” says Al Kadiri. “In the revolution

2019, and ever since people began taking to

I found myself—like many other protestors and

the streets to demand economic and political

artists—taking photos using my mobile.” Fellow

reform. Within days, thousands of people

Beiruti artist Shawki Youssef agrees that the

occupied Beirut and other parts of the country.

instantaneous nature of photography and its

On 29 October, the prime minister Saad Hariri

ability to be quickly shared has led him to use it

resigned. But over 100 days later, they are not

more than ever. The proliferation of photographs

done yet.

led the non-profit Beirut Center of Photography to create an open-air exhibition of images back

Amidst these events, photography has

in November called REVOLT. More than 20 giant

been used as a dynamic medium to capture

photos by 11 photographers, including Emilie

revolutionary fervour, the spirit of unity, and

Madi, Jack Seikaly, Lara Tabet and Omar Sfeir,

the trials of liberation. It has acted as a way to

were hung on the railings outside the city’s

document the vast numbers of people marching,

symbolic Egg building.

the newly liberated spaces of the city, as well as the brutal beatings and violence on the

These shared photographs—and those that

streets. The images attest to a reality that is

remain hidden on various devices—are fast

being quashed by state media. Instagram and

becoming a vast archive of personal testimonies

other social media platforms have played an

and national memories in what is a critical

important role as a quick way to disseminate

moment in Lebanon’s history. Al Kadiri hopes

their images. “Seeing the traffic that comes from

that one day his photographs and videos of

these photos on social media gives me a motive

the revolution will form part of a work or an

to take more photos to share online,” says the

installation. “But for now,” he says, “they are

Lebanese artist Abed Al Kadiri. “They can have

all stored on my memory card—safe and out

a powerful impact to raise awareness about what

of reach.”

These shared photographs—and those that remain hidden on various devices—are fast becoming a vast archive of personal testimonies and national memories in what is a critical moment in Lebanon’s history

the walk is worth it. Hope, tears, laughter, fear just to name a few sentiments, are daily companions. Every person down in the streets, these ordinary people, are somehow, undercover heroes. That’s the Lebanon I dreamed of when I flew back in 1991. That’s the Lebanon I have been feeling during the 10,452 steps I’ve been walking daily for the past seven years. Today Lebanon speaks up. Today Lebanon dares. Today we can say, proudly, we are Lebanese! Today we are not only witnessing a revolution; today we are living an EVOLUTION. ffadiaahmadphotography

is happening here.” Here, we look at photographers and other It is in this way that not only photographers

creatives from a variety of ages and backgrounds

but all kinds of people—including artists and

who have used photography and their own

creatives—cling to the medium of photography

unique aesthetic to capture the protests in

as an immediate way to record events in a

Lebanon that, as of yet, show no signs of abating.

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Jack Seikaly fjrseikaly

Just as I had decided to move from Lebanon to

Myriam Boulos fmyriamboulos

Monday, 20 January 2020

Los Angeles because of the lack of opportunities, a

Beirut, Lebanon

revolution ignited back home in protest of just that.

Tonight, in the tear gas, I took all my pictures with

So ten days later, I found myself on a flight back

eyes closed.

to Beirut with the goal of capturing the revolution

They say the moment of a picture is a black out.

and spreading the fight through my photography.

I wonder whether, if I don’t look at these emotions,

Less than a month later, I was asked to be a part of

will they disappear?

the REVOLT photography exhibition at the Egg, a dream I never knew I had. To have my work at such a great symbol of Beirut made me proud. Just a few weeks later the picture was burned by those spreading fear, and their decision to destroy my shot made me feel even prouder.

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Gaby Maamary fgabymaamary

Richard Sammour frichardsammour

These days changed everything. My eternal quest

This is our first true revolution since the Lebanese

for light against the dark forged my images of the

Civil War started 45 years ago. Politicians have used

Lebanese Revolution. The actions of happenings

us to steal our money. Now all the people, regardless

reminded me of the images from art history: Old

of religion and party, are participating in protests to

Masters, Baroque, Romantic, Impressionism, and

say no and enough. Women and men, adults and

Abstract Expressionism. Women and children,

children. I’m trying to show people’s reactions after

omnipresent in the field, centred my composition,

waking up from the last war.

while my eyes went on searching for the tear drops of the old and the high expectations of the young. Using photographic techniques to explode the actions, unchain the people, free their expressions, and magnify their power, I discovered that by releasing the light I unleashed the beast within.

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Shawki Youssef fshawkiyoussef

Tarek Moukaddem ftarekmoukaddem

This revolt is, above all, a movement of self-

In a region where traditional media is often politically

independence against a rotten, overwhelming

bias and belongs to political parties, and where

socio-politico-financial system. For me, these

the international press is only interested in the

images can be split into three parts. My images of

violent and the exotic, I felt the need to showcase

“the jokers”–the people in masks—are a reflection

the real face of the Lebanese revolution: the angry

on a certain prise de conscience in the citizen and

and violent, but also the pacifist, the intimate, the

their responsibilities. Secondly, the photos “the

women, and the different.

space” reflect the revolt against a constant loss of the public realm. The city has been reoccupied and recreated, and discussions, activities and meetings have bloomed. Lastly, the photos of “the women” show the revolt against a patriarchal system that still relegates women into a secondary role. I’m happily living this revolution as an independent Lebanese citizen, but as a father and a husband I am worried about my family like many others. As an active artist and a university teacher who uses multiple mediums, the instant ability of photography to grasp these precious moments and to share them, has pushed me to use it more than ever.

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Nat Muller onat_muller

Abed Al Kadri fabedalkadiri

This was not my first time in Beirut during upheaval.

This is the first time I have taken part in such acts—

On my first visit in 2005, days after Prime Minister

since leaving Beirut when I was 21, I have never

Rafiq Hariri was assassinated, I joined artists and

physically stood with the Lebanese people through

cultural practitioners in demonstrations. In 2019

any social or political activities. Since day one of the

when in Beirut for Ashkal Alwan’s Home Works 8,

revolution I felt the need to photograph these first

I found myself in the streets again, joining friends

moments as I wanted to properly document the

in their demand for basic services, social justice,

events for my own memory and visual archive. I

and an end to corruption. Once again, I was struck

later decided to choose a photo every day and turn

by the resilience, ingenuity and resolve of the

it into a drawing at night. These photos reflect my

Lebanese people who came out across sects and

own artistic aesthetic and I consider them a visual

classes to voice their anger. This young masked man

reference for my painterly practice.

symbolises all of this defiantly.

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NEW MEDIA Images - Courtesy of the artist. Writer - Anna Seaman, independent arts writer.

Delicate (2019) Paper, screens, projector, acrylic, wood, felt, canvas, wire, 600 x 600 cm

Daniah Al Saleh: Delicate Exploring a fusion of traditional and new media arts Daniah Al Saleh has an uncanny ability to

an animated digital circle moved according

turn the ordinary into the poetic. In her

to a computational formula. The contrast

own words, Al Saleh tackles notions of the

between the hand-painted and digitally-made

unobtrusive, the ordinary and the common.

circles created a space of tension. Inspired by

By deconstructing and rearranging familiar

a psychological study of human behaviour—An

objects and ideas, she makes the invisible

Experimental Study of Apparent Behaviour by

visible, manifesting a space for reflection that

Fritz Heider & Marianne Simmel (1944)—there

prompts new perspectives and ways of seeing.

were also anthropomorphic questions at play.

Born and raised in Riyadh but currently

These circles were almost identical yet unique.

based in London, where she is pursuing a

They were geometric constructions; yet their

Master of Fine Art in Computational Art at

conformist grids were microcosms for society

Goldsmiths, University of London, Al Saleh

and the expected social norms that communities

of nature to call for radical social change asking

has a multimedia practice that pivots around

rely on in order to function. The digital circle

for systems to consider the individual and the

aspects of life that are hidden in plain sight.

therefore, encapsulated the complexity of the

greater good rather than power and hierarchy.

Delicate addresses inequalities of class, religion and race within our highly striated contemporary cultures

piece. Emancipated from the rigidity of the static In 2019, she won the Ithra Art Prize for Sawtam,

and perceived perfectionism of its surroundings,

By merging disciplines and exploring different

an audio-visual presentation based on the

the digital circle was free to express itself. But to

mediums, Al Saleh offers new emphasis upon

phonemes of the Arabic language, that was

what extent was it really free? The social norms

everyday life with the involvement of generative

dubbed a digital windchime. Conceptually, this

expected of any individual in a liberated society

processes with code and data visualization. Hers

piece was based on the—deconstruction of

are almost always tied to the constraints of the

is a practice to watch as it evolves.

the most common human act – talking – into

world it functions in.

sounds, which were each assigned a digital code or sketch that vibrated onto a screen.

A few weeks later at 21,39 Jeddah Arts, an

The interactive piece consisted of 28 screens,

installation named Delicate captured the

arranged in a 4x7 grid that was presented at

imagination of audiences. Through a network

Art Dubai last year.

of hanging fabric sculptures, Delicate addresses inequalities of class, religion and race within

Earlier this year, in January 2020, Al Saleh

our highly striated contemporary cultures. The

unveiled two of her most recent projects,

installation uses the infinite perfection of fractal

cleverly fusing both traditional and new media.

patterns found in nature to explore potential

The first, Disobedient Affects comprised five

structures for harmony and positive change.

canvas panels filled with grids of painted circles

Inspired by the work of Adrienne Maree Brown,

in various shades of white. Within each canvas,

who coined the term ‘emergent strategy,’ this

she placed a seven-inch monitor upon which

work uses a philosophy based on observations

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NEW MEDIA Images - Courtesy of the artist. Writer - Rebecca Anne Proctor, writer.

1 The Fifth Sun (2017) Mixed media installation of Ink on hemp fabric 2.2 meter diameter artwork, video projection with sound. 9 minutes 44 seconds Next page: 6 The Fifth Sun (2017) Mixed media installation of Ink on hemp fabric 2.2 meter diameter artwork, video projection with sound. 9 minutes 44 seconds

Muhannad Shono: The Fifth Sun and Al Mars Saudi Arabian artist explores new realms and imagined states of being A large circle scintillates in a dark room. Its white

The ink, which fades and explodes in and out,

surface is filled with anamorphous markings,

refers to the “markings left by our actions

resembling those that define the craters on the

upon our planet, causing it to shake and

naked moon. Big black splotches then start to

reverberate across an illustrated landscape,”

be revealed on its exterior, one after the other,

says Shono.

as if made from gunshots—ink explodes onto

The power of his work lives in its multidimensional marriage of art and new media

the moon’s face to the sound of big electronic

The power of his work lives in its

thuds—and its circular, enchanting exterior

multidimensional marriage of art and new

then mutates again as we become transfixed

media. It’s the combination of media that

with its ever-changing state. Titled The Fifth

endow Shono’s art with its unique electricity.

Sun (2017), the installation by multimedia artist

“Whatever I am doing in terms of playfulness

Muhannad Shono, refers to the many creation

and experimentation, in terms of materials and

There was no degree in fine art when Shono

myths that frame mankind’s existence. It speaks

technology, it is all part of telling a story and

was at university, which led him to graduate

to how the universe operates in great cycles,

conveying that idea,” says Shono. “Whether

in Environmental Design at King Fahd

just like the cycles of the moon. It is currently

it is movements or interactivity, it is all part of

University of Petroleum and Minerals with

on view in Durational Portrait: A Brief Overview

whatever serves the story—whatever keeps me

a degree in Architecture. After several years

of Video Art in Saudi at Athr Gallery.

surprised, keeps me exploring and not limited

in Australia, Shono returned to Saudi Arabia

to one medium.”

in 2015 to find the country in the midst of

Shono’s work offers new avenues through

In another work titled Al Mars (2019), Shono

to Mars nor land on it so instead I created

Like all of Shono’s work, The Fifth Sun, which

change. He committed himself to his art

new media to tackle some of society’s most

creates a fictional timeline for plotting the race

stories which are engraved in these images

was commissioned by the Saudi Art Council,

When Shono was raised by his Syrian parents

and has had numerous exhibitions at Athr

pressing issues. In his last solo exhibition at

to colonize Mars in the backdrop of the race

and landscapes.” The installation constantly

communicates in various ways—aesthetic and

in Saudi Arabia the Kingdom was at its most

Gallery in Jeddah while also participating

Athr Gallery, titled The Silence Is Still Talking

to colonize the Arab world. “I took the dates

moves its various parts in an interactive way.

conceptual. It illustrates, explains the artist,

conservative. He often felt that he was in the

in residencies throughout Europe including

curated by Rahul Gudipudi, Shono showed a

of the Soviet Union landings on Mars from

When visitors interact with the pieces in the

the coming and going of a people through

wrong place, using his imagination and fiction

at Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin. His work

large installation made in charcoal and ink on

1963-1971 and I looked at what the western

installation they begin to move. “Mars for me

“the rhythm of creation and destruction.”

to better understand what was ‘real.’ Retreating

has been acquired by the British Museum

paper that explored ‘the crisis of the word.’

superpower was doing at that time in terms

is like the Middle East—a desolate rust-like

It specifically refers to the Mesoamerican

into his imagination provided an alternate

and the Art Jameel Foundation. He has also

The papers, with their smudged ink surfaces,

of colonizing the Middle East,” he explains.

blood colored landscape because of these

people who state that there have been four

world. Although comic books were rare in Saudi

recently shown his work The Lost Path, a

were fastened on a large object resembling an

“The same year that the Soviet Union landed

years and years of interference and landings,”

cycles or suns since the dawn of the human

Arabia, Shono used them for inspiration. They

sprawling installation staged around the

old printing press. In order to make each inky

on Mars in 1963 they were using their financial,

he explains.

race and that we now reside within the fifth

would arrive, when they did, with black markings

ancient rock formations of Alula, as part

smudge on the paper, Shono ground hardened

technological and engineering influence and

sun or epoch. The work, created in ink on

censoring figures or an undesired memory. It is

of the inaugural Desert X Alula edition.

charcoal words to dust and then employed

power to interfere in the building of the

The poignancy of Shono’s work lies in its ability

hemp fabric and a video projection with

these black censored markings which inspired

The 984-foot-long sculpture made out of

vibrations from an inaudible spectrum of sound

great dam in Egypt.” The work looks at the

to relay emotion. It is an emotion generated

sound by Mary Rapp, also underlines our

Shono’s signature use of ink. Restrictions on the

65,000 pipes ultimately, says the artist,

that resulted in new undefined ‘words’—as black

timeline of events, mirroring the journey to

through art and technology that transmits new

precarious relationship with the world. Here

visual world forced him to create new drawing

“offers visitors a chance to find their own

pigment forms on paper. The artist explains that

Mars with the continual interference of the

meaning and explores unchartered borders

the moon is depicted as a large suspended

techniques and narratives when self-publishing

path into a meditative space framed by the

the meaning of these ‘words’ cannot be read,

powers that be within the Middle East. “I

and realms through space, time and possibly

drum or daff as it is called in Saudi Arabia.

many comic books.

Alula rock formations.”

it must be ‘experienced.’

did not possess the technical ability to travel

also our unconscious thought processes.

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NEW MEDIA Artist - Courtesy of the artist. Images - Tara Aldughaither, curator and sonic artist.

Stills 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6, from Syria Serenading Dusk at Dawn (2019) all dimensions are aprox 1130 x 640 pixels

Sarah Alagroobi: Syria Serenading Graveyards at Dusk A matriarchal panegyric I’m sorry…

and presence of an individual self. This is a

How do you say it when there’s no one around

figurative motif which runs through many of

to hear?

the artist’s pieces in which the dichotomy of

It’s a tree fallen in an empty wood.

place, language and identity are explored.

A songbird serenading graveyards at dusk,

Always in reaction and relation to her context,

To speak it into the void is to baptize yourself

Alagroobi expresses herself here through the

in regret without end or beginning.

recitation of a poem, in this instance, candidly exposing her voice in performance of an

Text and canvas have been interlacing features

impossible apology. It echoes, for example,

of Sarah Alagroobi’s work over the years,

the impossibility of perfectly pleasing a

mirroring the in-betweenness of a dual identity.

seemingly dual identity and self.

Alagroobi expresses herself here through the recitation of a poem… candidly exposing her voice in performance of an impossible apology. blood but traveling different paths.

With her unique style of carving, distorting canvas and abstracting Arabic letters, Syria

During Alagroobi’s short time in her maternal

She is not on speaking terms with her

Serenading Graveyards at Dusk, presents

homeland, heavily policed public spaces

older self.

a unique treatment of word and image, yet

were recorded in fragments, revealing both

reflects an honest extension of the artists’

empty and crowded spaces. The images

Samt is an independent contemporary art

subject matter and practice.

are sometimes superimposed, echoing the

platform founded by the artist Walid Al Wawi

process of layering and carving reminiscent

and Sargon Latchin in 2016. Samt is mainly

As with all of the past instances in which Samt, a

of her practice as a painter. The moving

an online, research-centered non-profit

non for profit, research-driven creative platform,

images portray remains of familiar interior

initiative tackling five main challenges that

worked independently with artists in the region, a

and exterior spaces, with video depicting

are faced in the context of Middle Eastern

yearlong mentorship and safe space to explore new

a disturbed flow of daily life routines within

creative practices including; censorship and

possibilities outside the accustomed institutional

the city’s post-war condition. With the audio

conservation, geography and accessibility,

framework gave Alagroobi an opportunity to

recording of the artists’ recitation of a poem,

mentorship and research, exposure and

create new work. During this time, Alagroobi

also written in fragments, the work speaks

opportunity and art in urban spaces.

experienced a creative block and distance from

both to the loss of a matriarchal figure and

www.samt.co and @samtsamtsamt

her usual painting practice. With the death of

of an urgent need to reclaim that force,

her great grandmother mid-year, she undertook

inspired by the understanding of safety from

an urgently needed trip with her family, winding

the perspective of a woman:

through Abu Dhabi into Kuwait to Damascus. My first letter is in the soul of the Syria of As half Emirati and half Syrian, while being an avid

my childhood.

reader and writer, Alagroobi’s Syria Serenading

It is superimposed over the Syria of today.

Graveyards at Dusk depicts both the absence

She is two very different women, related by

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BOOKS

BOOKS

Images - Courtesy of the artist.

Eman Ali: Succession

Images - Courtesy of the artist.

Lara Atallah: Edge of Elysium

The political future of Oman Succession is a photo book assembled by the Omani artist Eman Ali, that explores her deep concern about Oman’s uncertain political future. The photographs are taken from the first decade of the past Sultan’s rule. The found images are sourced from a quarterly newsletter titled Oman, published by the Embassy of the Sultanate in the United Kingdom from 1973 to the 1980s. The purpose of this publication was to inform the diplomatic circle about new developments in the country under his rule. It was to promote to the West a view of a country that was modern, stable and economically successful. It was also the time when the previous Sultan established both his rule and was shaping an image of Oman.

Edge of Elysium, is the first part of a two-part journey through time, space and land along Southern European and West Asian coastlines. Damaged Polaroids are interspersed with short texts that navigate the ideas of love, belonging, loss and grief through narratives filled with quiet images. The book reflects on the futility of manmade borders by exploring human experiences tainted by trauma and melancholy. Despite these tribulations, the texts are also imbued with a stubborn hope.

Photography played an integral role in creating the Nation’s identity and conveying an image of the Sultanate of Oman to the world at large. The artist has used and transformed this source material, re-photographing the images using an iPhone, and then digitally altering them. The sequencing of images is intentionally fleeting and has an almost dream-like quality.

Eman Ali is an Omani visual artist whose work interlaces gender, religious and

Lara Atallah is a New York-based artist and writer. Her practice is informed by her

sociopolitical ideologies under the umbrella of sexuality and the performance of

interest in the political nature of landscape, and the power it holds to reshape our

gender in the Arabian Gulf region.

perception of borders.

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SERIES Artist - From Egypt, lives and works in the Hague. Images - Courtesy of the artist.

New Dutch Views #2 The Netherlands 2018, from the series New Dutch Views (2018-2019) Archival pigment print, 165 x 125cm

Marwan Bassiouni: New Dutch Views During a period of two years (2018-2019), Marwan Bassiouni travelled across the Netherlands and photographed the country’s landscape from inside Dutch mosques. Bassiouni physically visited more than seventy mosques to produce a total of 30 New Dutch Views. All his photographs are composites and representations of actual Dutch mosque interiors with their views on the local landscape. Each mosque is depicted in its actual surroundings. He presents his series as large-scale photographic prints in the monographic photobook: New Dutch Views.

Marwan Bassiouni is an artist and photographer. He holds a BA in

first photo book New Dutch Views. His work has been shown at venues

Photography from The Royal Academy of Art and a Photographer CFC

such as Aperture, Paris Photo, Fotostiftung Schweiz, Unseen Photofair,

from the Photography School of Vevey. His work has been written about

Athens Photo Festival, The Humanity House, Le Prix Bayeux Calvados

in the British Journal of Photography, EXIT Imagen Y Cultura, Lens culture,

and Cultuurhuis De Warande. Marwan is the recipient of the W. Eugene

Aperture and various national newspapers. In 2019, Marwan had his first

Smith Student Grant, the Harry Pennings Prize and several other awards

solo exhibition at the Hague Museum of Photography and published his

and nominations.

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New Dutch Views #29, The Netherlands 2019, from the series New Dutch Views (2018-2019) Archival pigment print, 165 x 125cm

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New Dutch Views #7, The Netherlands 2019, from the series New Dutch Views (2018-2019) Archival pigment print, 165 x 125cm

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New Dutch Views #29, The Netherlands 2019, from the series New Dutch Views (2018-2019) Archival pigment print, 165 x 125cm

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New Dutch Views #18, The Netherlands 2019, from the series New Dutch Views (2018-2019) Archival pigment print, 165 x 125cm

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SERIES Artist - From Palestine, lives and works in Amman. Images - Courtesy of the artist.

Untitled 5, from the series 13301 (2019)

Basel Hasan: 13301 Basel Hasan’s series 13301 is a digital and visual exploration of urban cityscapes and objects pertaining to life in these cities, contrasted with images of intimacy or natural landscapes. With photos shot in Cairo and Amman, Hasan depicts the isolation and drab of the modern urban space built on subjugation and hierarchy. This is juxtaposed against the richness of the nature outside the city, or the warmth and intimacy that can be found within and despite it. Contrasting the two explores the potential for an alternative, potentially liberated, mode of being, that can exist outside the bounds of the city sustained by political and economic suppression, while also questioning to what extent can this alternate way of living exist within the city itself.

Hasan is a multidisciplinary Palestinian artist based in Amman, Jordan. His work explores the relation of objects and spaces to wider sociopolitical structures, through visual representations of landscapes, architecture, modern cultural artifacts and the mundanity of everyday life.

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Untitled 6, from the series 13301 (2019)

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Untitled 8, from the series 13301 (2019)

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SERIES Tilila (2019) from the project Among You

Artist - M’hammed Kilito. Images - Courtesy of the artist.

Meryam Tilila has medication induced skin hyperpigmentation. She suffered from harassment in the streets. When you meet her, you quickly realize that she is a bright, determined and very confident young woman. The feedback she has had on her photos since last year on Instagram has made her popular and realize that her skin spots are a “perfect imperfection” and, in a way, her own signature. As a result, many Moroccan and foreign fashion designers and photographers work with her today because of her unique look.

M’hammed Kilito: Among You This project is a reflection on the choice of a personal identity for Moroccan youth based on a selection of portraits of young people who take their destinies into their own hands. These individuals have the courage to choose their own realities, often pushing the limits of society further. Whether through their creative activities, their appearance, or their sexuality, they convey the image of a young Morocco—alert, changing, claiming the right to be different and celebrating diversity. These young people, whose minds embody the resistance of a palm tree—a tree adapted to the harshest Moroccan climatic conditions—defy the conservative and traditional norms of Moroccan society on a daily basis. They cultivate their private oasis despite the obstacles they encounter in a country that they feel is not progressing at the same pace as they are, and they are inspiring others along the way.

The work of the photographer M’hammed Kilito addresses issues relating

accurate view of daily life than what is commonly seen in the media.

to cultural identity and the human condition.

M’hammed’s work has been presented in Sharjah Art Foundation

He is a National Geographic Explorer (2020) and had received the Prize of résidence de la photographie de la Fondation des Treilles (2020). He is an alumni of the Eddie Adams Workshop (2019) and a Magnum Foundation/AFAC/Prince Claus Fund grantee (2018). He is also a member of the African Photojournalism Database - a project of the World Press

(Sharjah), Amman Image Festival, Tate Modern, Addis Foto Fest, PHotoESPAÑA, Rétine Argentique, Fotofilmic Gallery, Beirut Image Festival. His photographs have been published in The Wall Street Journal, World Press Photo, El Pais and the Washington Post, among others.

Photo Foundation and Everyday Africa and contributes to Everyday

He holds a Master of Arts in Political Science from Ottawa University and

Middle East and North Africa, a collection of images that convey a more

a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from the University of Montreal.

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Salma (2019) from the project Among You

Salima (2019) from the project Among You

Born in a working-class neighbourhood and raised by a traditional family, Salma has

Salima’s parents think that weightlifting will deform her body and that she will no longer

always struggled to be herself. She is a Goth and loves the strange, the enigmatic

be able to marry the man they wanted for her. She feels that she no longer corresponds

and the unusual. She presents an ideal of beauty uncommon in Morocco and she

to the stereotypical idea and criteria of feminine beauty as desired by men, yet it does

particularly appreciates what is considered frightening, worrying or ugly under the

not bother her more than that, because it is the body she has always dreamed of. If she

standards of society.

questions the man’s view on women, she also questions women’s view on themselves.

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SERIES Anas (2019) from the project Among You

Shady (2019) from the project Among You

Anas says he has problems with his family at home. They do not call him by his first

Shady defines himself as “a fairy in the land of the Ogre, a maniac of nongendered

name but by saying “the tattooed one”. This qualification, which is pejoratively meant,

fashion, a mixture of pastel, gore and alternative punch bowl”. In his very poetic way

says a lot about the stigmatization of tattooed people in the Moroccan collective

of being, he feels misunderstood in the eyes of a society that considers him a Satanist

imagination, because they are considered criminals, prisoners and dangerous people.

simply by having a metal ring in his nose.

He is a Peter-Pan, in the midst of adults, lost in issues beyond his control.

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PROJECT SPACE Images - Courtesy of artist. Writer - Janet Bellotto, artist and educator

Grandma Ameena Wishes (2019) Video installation, 2 min

Ameena Aljarman: Grandma Ameena Wishes Revisiting memories through hand rituals Artists in the Emirates have been prolific for

grounded in location by the traditional fabric

decades, however few have migrated their use

of the jalabiya, and further journey through a

of imagery from photography to video. This has

narrative of womanhood and of passing on rituals

become a medium of choice for a new generation

to another generation. The narrative is segmented

of artists. New themes are also being explored

like our memories, shifting from seashore to sea.

by these artists, delving into and questioning

Aljarman’s grandmother’s ritual is infused with

issues of gender as well as regional history and

memories from when she first traveled to India

cultural traditions.

in 1949, as she said “with [my] hands, everything is engraved, even my eternal love of the sea.”

Emerging Emirati artist Ameena Aljarman explores

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space and time through personal memories and cultural traditions. She is a graduate of Zayed University, where she studied art and international studies. Subsequently, she completed a Salama Bint Hamdan Emerging Artists Fellowship and recently was selected for Campus Art Dubai 8.0 (CAD). Her new video installation will be shown in the CAD exhibition for the 14th edition of Art Dubai. Her work has been exhibited in various exhibitions locally including SIKKA as well as in the 2019 Emirates Fine Art Society Annual Exhibition held at the Sharjah Art Museum. Aljarman shares the background of her project: ‘I asked my Grandma why she to used dip our hands in goat’s blood during Eid AlAdha celebrations, and it seemed that she believed the ritual will bring our wishes to come true and protect us. And I vividly remember all the colours, smells and sounds, everything that she s during the ritual.’ The dreamy recollection of a ritual waves through the video as henna marked hands wash over one another, with waves collapsing. We are

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