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Afra Al Dhaheri's 1st institutional solo exhibition opens at SAF

Afra Al Dhaheri's 1st institutional solo exhibition opens at SAF

Sharjah 2413 hours ago
Working with materials such as cotton rope, fabric, cement and hair, Al Dhaheri emphasises slow gestures, intentional movements and the fatigue that can build from ongoing, repetitive and even invisible labour. Time weaves itself into the artworks as it bends, drifts, loops and circles back, striking a delicate balance between continuity and rupture.
In works such as In absence we forgot (2015) and To Revisit (2016), Al Dhaheri uses techniques like casting, layering and erasure to investigate what remains when material forms begin to fade. With the later works Conditioning the Knot(2022) and To Detangle (2020), she draws attention to the labour of repetitive dismantling, showing that to undo something may be a form of making in itself.
Place factors into the artist's works as well. The series 'Hide and Sew' (2020) reflects on themes of privacy and protection shaped by domestic life in the Gulf. Al Dhaheri also navigates the threshold between public and private spaces in Spiral Staircase (2020), a triptych of acrylic and graphite drawings documenting an architectural feature once common in Abu Dhabi: spiral staircases on the outside of buildings. The work traces not only the rapid architectural shifts but also the lived routines formed around such structures.
The artist's most recent works continue the emphasis on time, considering how repeated gestures can bend, stretch or even disrupt our experience of each passing moment. In Round and Round We Go (2023), cotton rope is coiled around five wooden rings, with bobby pins clipped into the structure almost relentlessly. In Pull, Tie, Release (2024), knotted ropes are stretched across a wooden frame. The title reads like a set of instructions, pointing to the choreography ofits production: the strain, the hold and the letting go.
The exhibition features two new commissions. For I craved a garden, it emerged in the folds (2025), the artist shifts toward a slower, more intuitive mode of making by proposing a mobile structure that can be returned to in multiple settings. The second commission, Restless Circle (2025), draws inspiration from desert plants that etch spiral patterns in the sand as they move with the wind. For the artist, the constant motion—not moving towards a clear destination but simply responding to forces beyond its control—offers a metaphor for mental exhaustion and collective burnout, the sense of being endlessly pushed to produce or perform.
Through Al Dhaheri's subtle manipulations, the exhibition Restless Circle draws our attention to the remains of what was once held together, the knowledge that forms through the process of undoing and the exhaustion that accumulates over the course of repeated tasks. What happens when we stay a while with what is quiet, invisible and unresolved?
Restless Circle is curated by May Alqaydi, Assistant Curator, Sharjah Art Foundation.
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Afra Al Dhaheri's 1st institutional solo exhibition opens at SAF
Afra Al Dhaheri's 1st institutional solo exhibition opens at SAF

Sharjah 24

time13 hours ago

  • Sharjah 24

Afra Al Dhaheri's 1st institutional solo exhibition opens at SAF

Working with materials such as cotton rope, fabric, cement and hair, Al Dhaheri emphasises slow gestures, intentional movements and the fatigue that can build from ongoing, repetitive and even invisible labour. Time weaves itself into the artworks as it bends, drifts, loops and circles back, striking a delicate balance between continuity and rupture. In works such as In absence we forgot (2015) and To Revisit (2016), Al Dhaheri uses techniques like casting, layering and erasure to investigate what remains when material forms begin to fade. With the later works Conditioning the Knot(2022) and To Detangle (2020), she draws attention to the labour of repetitive dismantling, showing that to undo something may be a form of making in itself. Place factors into the artist's works as well. The series 'Hide and Sew' (2020) reflects on themes of privacy and protection shaped by domestic life in the Gulf. Al Dhaheri also navigates the threshold between public and private spaces in Spiral Staircase (2020), a triptych of acrylic and graphite drawings documenting an architectural feature once common in Abu Dhabi: spiral staircases on the outside of buildings. The work traces not only the rapid architectural shifts but also the lived routines formed around such structures. The artist's most recent works continue the emphasis on time, considering how repeated gestures can bend, stretch or even disrupt our experience of each passing moment. In Round and Round We Go (2023), cotton rope is coiled around five wooden rings, with bobby pins clipped into the structure almost relentlessly. In Pull, Tie, Release (2024), knotted ropes are stretched across a wooden frame. The title reads like a set of instructions, pointing to the choreography ofits production: the strain, the hold and the letting go. The exhibition features two new commissions. For I craved a garden, it emerged in the folds (2025), the artist shifts toward a slower, more intuitive mode of making by proposing a mobile structure that can be returned to in multiple settings. The second commission, Restless Circle (2025), draws inspiration from desert plants that etch spiral patterns in the sand as they move with the wind. For the artist, the constant motion—not moving towards a clear destination but simply responding to forces beyond its control—offers a metaphor for mental exhaustion and collective burnout, the sense of being endlessly pushed to produce or perform. Through Al Dhaheri's subtle manipulations, the exhibition Restless Circle draws our attention to the remains of what was once held together, the knowledge that forms through the process of undoing and the exhaustion that accumulates over the course of repeated tasks. What happens when we stay a while with what is quiet, invisible and unresolved? Restless Circle is curated by May Alqaydi, Assistant Curator, Sharjah Art Foundation.

SAF announces curators of Sharjah Biennial 17
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Abu Dhabi's Creative Media Authority (CMA) has partnered with FilmGate, one of the UAE's leading independent, Emirati-owned and operated production houses, to establish a suite of benefits for the wider production industry in Abu Dhabi. FilmGate will produce a minimum of 15 productions in Abu Dhabi over the next five years, which will employ 50 per cent of production talent from within the CMA's ecosystem. The partnership will also provide extensive learning and development benefits for the ecosystem including annual workshops hosted by FilmGate for the industry on specialist production topics, as well as four- to six-month paid internships every year for young Emirati talent – with a view to providing permanent employment opportunities to grow and nurture talent from within the UAE. Mohamed Dobay, Acting Director-General of Creative Media Authority, said, 'Establishing partnerships with local and regional production leaders is a key element of our industry development strategy to make Abu Dhabi a global content hub. Alongside attracting the major Hollywood and Bollywood productions, it is critical that we support and increase the Arab content produced in Abu Dhabi to ensure we are building an ecosystem where Emirati and wider Arab narratives can thrive.' Dobay added, 'The partnerships we are curating are designed to deliver unrivalled opportunities throughout the ecosystem, from employment for our 1000 plus registered freelancers to intern opportunities for our young creatives; these partnerships support on all levels.' Founded by leading Emirati filmmaker Mansoor Al Yahbouni Al Dhaheri, FilmGate will also benefit from the recent update on the rebate offered by Abu Dhabi Film Commission where qualifying productions now can apply for cashback on production and post-production spend starting at 35 per cent up to 50 per cent based on meeting a clear set of criteria. Mansoor Al Yahbouni Al Dhaheri, Chief Executive Officer and Founder of FilmGate, added, 'It is a significant year for Abu Dhabi with the new rebate for production starting January 1 and a partnership of this nature with CMA will allow us to maximise all that Abu Dhabi offers in terms of filming locations, creative infrastructure, talent and financial support to produce more content than ever before.' As a producer, director, writer, and, most notably, philanthropist Al Dhaheri has created content which has been screened at festivals across the world including at Abu Dhabi Film Festival, the Dubai International Film Festival and Gulf Film Festival. Some of his award-winning and nominated projects include Al Biet Metwahid (Unified Home) (2013), ( (2012), Little Sparta (2016) and Swim 62 (2023). Other more recent work includes the documentary Abu Dhabi success story (2024), TV series Dreams Drawn by Dust (2022), House of Life (2022), Scattered Barriers (2021), three seasons of The Platform and feature film The Misfits (2021). As the CEO of FilmGate, Al Dhaheri leads a team of directors, scriptwriters, cameramen, video editors, animators, audio auditors and producers to create engaging and inspiring content from Abu Dhabi. The FilmGate partnership is one of several partnerships CMA is establishing in order to provide further stimulus across the creative industries of Abu Dhabi, of which the production industry is key.

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