
Firetti Contemporary show connects winter of despair with spring of hope
Firetti Contemporary @ Alserkal Avenue is presenting The Unseen Presence, a collective exhibition featuring the works of Ahmad Tallaa, Bassam Kyrillos, Besher Koushaji, Eyad Jouda, Hikmat Naeem, Ibrahim Hamid, Kamal Al Zoubi, Mahmood Al Daoud and Suheil Baddor (Feb. 12 – Apr. 12). Through painting, sculpture, and mixed media, the show examines the invisible forces that shape history and identity by exploring themes of memory, migration, resilience, and cultural transformation.
Inspired by Nizar Qabbani's poem Balqis, it interrogates subjects such as exile, war, and the irreversible shifts wrought by displacement. Qabbani's verses, which mourn not only a loved one but also a homeland, sets the mood: 'The sweetest homeland,/One can't stand,/Living in such a homeland./One can't stand,/Dying in such a homeland.' The words indicate the paradox of memory — how displacement coexists with longing and how a place remains deeply cherished, though terribly transformed. But The Unseen Presence explores the idea further, not content just to portray individual experiences. It moves beyond personal mourning and nostalgia to look at larger histories existing as fractured realities, shifting identities, and evolving landscapes.
Some works embrace nostalgia, while others question its fragility. Some reconstruct the remnants of a vanished past, while others examine the tension between survival and erasure. Ahmad Tallaa and Suheil Baddor investigate the landscapes of migration and the caravan of emotions it generates. Tallaa captures the unseen presence of comfort even in dire circumstances, depicting sanctuary as a cherished place, though delicate and fleeting, where existence is lived in spaces between nostalgia for the past and the uncertainty of the future.
The muffled palette reflects the emotional burden of displacement, while moments of warmth even in that condition, suggest hope. In contrast, Baddor explores the unseen presence of waiting, portraying figures suspended in time, their identities in flux between what was and what is to be. The layered, abstracted compositions evoke exile as an unresolved state — where bodies are dispersed, and the search for belonging never ends. Similarly, Ibrahim Hamid and Baddor focus on the experiences of displaced women. Baddor's figures mirror the shifting nature of identity and memory, while Hamid preserves figuration, using bold brushstrokes to emphasise the emotional toll of displacement.
Eyes in both cases serve as portals to silent narratives, revealing grief and the will to overcome it. While Baddor leans to abstraction, Hamid balances it with realism, emphasising the endurance of those who carry not just personal loss, but the load of collective displacement. The instability of memory — both individual and collective — forms the foundation of Besher Koushaji and Hikmat Naeem's works. Koushaji examines the unseen presence of memory, constructing portraits where faces appear and dissolve, representing the way memories swing between clarity and fade-out.
The compositions speak of the fragility of identity in times of turmoil. Naeem expands the theme, taking it beyond the human figure, exploring the unseen presence of lost cities, where architecture dissolves into abstraction. His compositions depict urban spaces on the verge of disappearance, with fading structures that evoke painful stories of war, migration, and elimination. While Koushaji focuses on how individuals carry history within them, Naeem reveals how cities too, are affected by the passage of time and loss.
Eyad Jouda and Bassam Kyrillos examine physical and psychological endurance. Jouda's wire-bound sculptures embody the presence of a silence which screams. His precariously poised figures, living or dying in worlds falling between vulnerability and safety, speak of the price of migration, where survival is a brittle equilibrium between resistance and surrender. Kyrillos delves into the unseen presence of sacrifice, merging human forms and architectural decay. His haunting imagery presents figures that appear to emerge from — and disband into — eroded buildings, embodying suffering and survival.
While Jouda's sculptures symbolise dissent through balance and motion, Kyrillos's works depict destruction, displacement and transformation through decay and fragmentation. Mahmood Al Daoud also engages with loss and renewal with his work reflecting the unseen presence of transfiguration, depicting cycles of death and rebirth. He reimagines memory as something that both disintegrates and yet lives in different forms; ruination is not absolute, but rather an essential part of remaking. While Kyrillos anchors his work in the decay of built environments, Al Daoud evokes the movement of time through abstraction, revealing how history leaves imprints long after physical markers have faded.
Unlike the other artists, Kamal Al Zoubi approaches nostalgia playfully, engaging with it in a way that bridges past and present. His LEGO-Inspired Arabic Tower transforms childhood memories and linguistic traditions into sculptural forms, reinterpreting Arabic calligraphy through a contemporary lens. Where other artists explore remembrances through decay, exile and struggle, Al Zoubi captures it through joyful abstraction. He maintains a connection to the past, where heritage is not something mourned, but is something continuously reimagined.
Through these different yet interconnected perspectives, The Unseen Presence invites audiences to engage with broken realities, the detritus of identity, and histories that refuse to fade – now very common occurrences. It asks: What does it mean to face ruination and rebuild from ruins? How do we carry the unseen weight of history? Can a homeland be reconstructed — not just physically, but with the original content of cultural and emotional memory? The exhibition is not just about loss — it is about resilience too. Even in destruction, something remains - a trace, a shadow or an unseen presence, that shapes the way we live in this world.
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The National
12-07-2025
- The National
Ten cool art exhibitions to breeze through the UAE summer heat
The reputation of UAE summer as a time when life comes to a sweltering standstill, is a thing of the past – particularly on the arts scene. Galleries have begun embracing the season, with some new exhibitions rolling out and others being extended well into the hottest months. From photography as a medium of reckoning to an exhibition that brings streets into a gallery setting and another that champions farmers, there is a lot to see across the UAE. Here are 10 to get you started. No Trespassing at Ishara Art Foundation Curated by Priyanka Mehra, No Trespassing is Ishara Art Foundation 's first summer exhibition. The show brings street aesthetics into the gallery, with six artists engaging with urban materials as both subject and medium. Works by Fatspatrol (Fathima Mohiuddin), H11235 (Kiran Maharjan), Khaled Esguerra, Rami Farook, Salma Dib and Sara Alahbabi turn building materials, pavements, signage and surfaces into acts of mark-making. Rather than define what the street is, the exhibition reflects how it's used, as a space that's chaotic, curated, lived-in and constantly rewritten. Monday to Saturday, 10am-7pm; until August 30, Alserkal Avenue, Dubai Cartographies, Revised at Manarat Al Saadiyat This exhibition is the culmination of a four-month residency at The Photography Studio at Manarat Al Saadiyat. Seven emerging artists from across the world take a cartographer's approach to image-making, using it to chart personal histories and narratives. Aman Ali's photographs, for instance, trace maternal love through worn hands. Reem Hamid projects shifting rhythms of stillness and movement via sand and performance. Fares Al Kaabi mourns demolished homes and a bygone time through windows and doorways. Monday to Sunday, 10am-8pm; until September 1; Manarat Al Saadiyat, Abu Dhabi Upside Down, by Morteza Khazaie at Leila Heller Gallery In Upside Down, Morteza Khazaie uses wood to make tall, curved forms inspired by trees bending to wind and storms. The sculptures show how trees endure without breaking by adapting to the elements. The works evoke a powerful metaphor for individual and societal change, transforming under pressure but nonetheless enduring. The use of wood in this context is also interesting. The material carries a sense of growth and history, while underscoring the resilience found in nature. It embodies the juxtaposition between pliability and strength. As curator Farshad Mahoutforoush said: 'Through these works, I wanted to explore how softness can be strength, and how being 'upside down' might simply mean seeing things differently.' Monday to Friday, 10am-7pm; Saturday, 11am- 7pm; until September 15, Alserkal Avenue, Dubai Architectures of the In-Between at Aisha Alabbar Gallery The three artists featured in this exhibition all identify architecture as a bedrock to their practice. Yet, they have gone on to reinterpret the discipline in new and diverse ways. Atefeh Majidi Nezhad hangs lace like memory in her Zero-G series. Nevine Hamza gives form to nebulous metaphysical ideas through photography, digital art, collage and painting. Finally, Layla Juma renders social structures into minimalist geometries, revealing coded systems through drawing, installation and sculpture. Monday to Saturday, 10am-6pm; until August 23; Aisha Alabbar Gallery, Dubai Between Sunrise and Sunset, by Mohamed Ahmed Ibrahim at Maraya Art Centre A seminal work by important Emirati artist Mohamed Ahmed Ibrahim, Between Sunrise and Sunset was commissioned by the National Pavilion UAE and featured at the 2022 Venice Biennale. The work is now on display at Maraya Art Centre in Sharjah. The exhibition, which is in its final month, has been organised with the support of Lawrie Shabibi and the National Pavilion UAE. The exhibition features three paintings by Ibrahim, but the titular installation is the centrepiece, taking the entirety of the second-floor gallery space. The installation features 128 sculptural forms, each unique in shape, size and colour. The sculptures are arranged in a gradient, ranging from more vivid hues to the dulled and monochrome palettes that allude to nighttime. For Ibrahim, the work is meant to reflect the diversity of the UAE, both environmentally and culturally, while also evoking the metaphorical breadth of night and day. Saturday to Thursday, 10am-7pm; Friday, 4pm-7pm; until August 1; Al Qasba, Sharjah New acquisitions and a VR experience at Louvre Abu Dhabi While Louvre Abu Dhabi is not holding a special exhibition this summer, there are plenty of new attractions to make it a worthwhile visit – no matter how many times you've gone before. The museum has introduced a new rotation of loans and acquisitions across its permanent galleries. The additions range from Roman portraiture and South Asian courtly art to modernist works. Highlights include a finely carved Roman cameo thought to depict Agrippa Postumus, mounted in an 18th-century British setting; a luminous ivory-and-gold casket from 16th-century Sri Lanka; Juan Luna's enigmatic Una Bulaquena (1895), on loan from the National Museum of the Philippines; and Kandinsky 's White Oval (1921), which marks a moment of transition for the legendary artist. Louvre Abu Dhabi has also launched a virtual reality experience. The Quantum Dome Project is a VR installation that unfolds over 25 minutes. It immerses participants in digitally reconstructed environments from three disparate and historic corners of the globe: ancient Rome, medieval Baghdad and Mughal-era India. Tuesday to Thursday, 10am-6.30pm; Friday to Sunday, 10am-8.30pm; Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi Everyman's Mountain, by Omar Al Gurg at Lawrie Shabibi Emirati photographer and designer Omar Al Gurg is presenting his first solo show with Everyman's Mountain. The exhibition at Lawrie Shabibi features 24 archival prints from a six-day trek up Kilimanjaro in 2021. From misty forests and regenerating moorlands to the fragile icy summit, Al Gurg's work shows the mountain as a shifting ecosystem, shaped by nature and human activity. The exhibition is as much a personal odyssey as it is a broader environmental mediation, a tribute to nature's quiet transformations and our collective duty to preserve them. Monday to Saturday, 10am-6pm; until September 12; Alserkal Avenue, Dubai The Peasant, the Scholar and the Engineer, by Asuncion Molinos Gordo at Jameel Arts Centre Spanish artist-researcher Asuncion Molinos Gordo's first major retrospective in West Asia surveys 15 years of her work on rural knowledge, land use and food systems. Gordo's work draws on anthropology and cultural studies. It reframes farmers as not only food producers, but also intellectuals and engineers. Their vernacular practices, she points out, may hold keys to sustainability. Works that are being featured in the exhibition include her famous World Agriculture Museum, which was first staged in Cairo in 2010 and won the Sharjah Biennial Prize in 2015. Another highlight is Como Soliamos, a 2020 rammed-earth installation echoing Andalusian and falaj irrigation techniques. Saturday to Monday, Wednesday to Thursday, 10am-8pm; Friday; noon-8pm; until September 28; Jaddaf Waterfront, Dubai Unstable Grounds at 421 Arts Campus Unstable Grounds, the MFA graduate exhibition from NYU Abu Dhabi at 421, is a layered constellation of practices that reveal not just what is shown, but also what resists visibility. The exhibition features the works of eight artists, exploring themes of environment, displacement, memory and human connection, through installation, performance, video, sculpture and print. Highlights include Consequences of Circumstance by Hala El Abora, where images of birds, neither definitely dead nor alive, are carved on slabs of stone, disrupting the historical trope of the bird as a symbol of beauty and freedom. In The Sea is a Body which Moves, Adele Bea Cipste explores her evolving relationship to Abu Dhabi's shoreline across several works. In Gridlines, Jude Maharmeh presents hand-cut and incised clay-tiles that draw from the capital's urban aspect. Other installations question the limitations of materials, form and meaning. Danute Vaitekunaite, Mowen Li and Bao all examine their personal histories while experimenting with materials. Tuesday to Sunday, 10am-8pm; until September 7; Zayed Port, Abu Dhabi Time Heals, Just Not Quick Enough… at Efie Gallery Time Heals, Just Not Quick Enough… is a group exhibition curated by Ose Ekore. It features works by five contemporary artists: Samuel Fosso, Aida Muluneh, Kelani Abass, Abeer Sultan and Sumayah Fallatah. The artists come from different generations and use film and photography to reflect upon themes of growth and healing, while also showing how the mediums are barometers of change. Fallatah, for instance, reflects on experiences of the African diaspora in the Arab world by examining personal and family narratives. Sultan uses imagery of marine life to re-examine her family's migration from West Africa to Saudi Arabia in the 1930s. Abass, inspired by his father's letterpress printing company, layers images, texts and found objects to explore the passage of time. Fosso's self-portraits challenge identity and representation by embodying stylised personas. These are inspired by African-American fashion and West African pop culture, and draw on the magazine images that were brought to the Central African Republic by Peace Corps volunteers. Finally, Muluneh's surreal photographs show face paint, masks and Ethiopian motifs to subvert stereotypical representations of African women.


The National
03-07-2025
- The National
Weekly UAE museum and gallery guide: Last chance to see 128-piece installation by pioneering Emirati artist
Trees bent by time, still standing as resilient metaphors of transformation. Photography as a measure of healing. Papier-mache tracing the arc from night to day. This week's exhibitions explore how people and places weather change. The transformations are sometimes painful and forced, but they reveal a pliability that pushes us forward. Here are three exhibitions to see in the UAE this weekend. Upside Down by Morteza Khazaie at Leila Heller Gallery In Upside Down, Morteza Khazaie uses wood to make tall, curved forms inspired by trees bending to wind and storms. The sculptures show how trees endure without breaking by adapting to the elements. The works evoke a powerful metaphor for individual and societal change, transforming under pressure but nonetheless enduring. The use of wood in this context is also interesting. The material carries a sense of growth and history, while underscoring the resilience found in nature. It embodies the juxtaposition between pliability and strength. As curator Farshad Mahoutforoush says in his statement about the exhibition: 'Through these works, I wanted to explore how softness can be strength, and how being 'upside down' might simply mean seeing things differently.' Monday to Friday, 10am-7pm; Saturday, 11am- 7pm; Alserkal Avenue, Dubai Time Heals, Just Not Quick Enough… at Efie Gallery Time Heals, Just Not Quick Enough… is a group exhibition curated by Ose Ekore. It features work by five contemporary artists: Samuel Fosso, Aida Muluneh, Kelani Abass, Abeer Sultan and Sumayah Fallatah. The artists come from different generations and use film and photography to reflect upon themes of growth and healing, while also showing how the mediums are barometers of change. Fallatah, for instance, reflects on experiences of the African diaspora in the Arab world by examining personal and family narratives. Sultan uses imagery of marine life to re-examine her family's migration from West Africa to Saudi Arabia in the 1930s. Abass, inspired by his father's letterpress printing company, layers images, texts and found objects to explore the passage of time. Fosso's self-portraits challenge identity and representation by embodying stylised personas. These are inspired by African-American fashion and West African pop culture, and draw on the magazine images that were brought to the Central African Republic by Peace Corps volunteers. Finally, Muluneh's surreal photographs show face paint, masks and Ethiopian motifs to subvert stereotypical representations of African women. Monday to Saturday, 11am-7pm; Alserkal Avenue, Dubai Between Sunrise and Sunset by Mohamed Ahmed Ibrahim at Maraya Art Centre A seminal work by important Emirati artist Mohamed Ahmed Ibrahim, Between Sunrise and Sunset was commissioned by the National Pavilion UAE and featured at the 2022 Venice Biennale. The work is now on display at Maraya Art Centre in Sharjah. The exhibition, which is in its final month, has been organised with the support of Lawrie Shabibi and the National Pavilion UAE. The exhibition features three paintings by Ibrahim, but the titular installation is the centrepiece, taking the entirety of the second-floor gallery space. The installation features 128 sculptural forms, each unique in shape, size and colour. The sculptures are arranged in a gradient, ranging from more vivid hues to the dulled and monochrome palettes that allude to nighttime. For Ibrahim, the work is meant to reflect the diversity of the UAE, both environmentally and culturally, while also evoking the metaphorical breadth of night and day.


Gulf Today
15-06-2025
- Gulf Today
Ihab Ahmad pauses to rewind at Firetti Contemporary exhibition
Firetti Contemporary is inaugurating I Put My Brain On Pause!, a solo exhibition by Lebanese artist Ihab Ahmad, on June 20. The body of work to be displayed marks a bold turning point in the artist's career — a shift toward emotional freedom, instinctive creation, and joyful surrender. For the first time in his practice, Ihab introduces smiling faces into his paintings — representations of moments, people and memories, that have left an unforgettable imprint on his life. They are not just aesthetic choices to fill up a space, but deeply personal portraits of human connection. The artist explores the emotional terrain through a new approach, working with oil on linen and spray paint, to blur the lines between abstraction and figuration. He has also gone so far as to paint several works using his non-dominant left hand, thus releasing control and allowing instinct to take over. The result is a series of vibrant, unfiltered compositions — raw, playful, and somehow, intimate. 'Creating this show was a way for me to understand and express myself more honestly,' Ihab says. 'I let go of technical perfection and gave in to what I was feeling. Each work is an emotional record of my experience with people — real or imagined.' Abracadabra, in acrylic and oil on linen. Alongside the paintings, a series of totem-like wooden sculptures brings his cast of surreal characters into three-dimensional space. The sculptural forms extend Ihab's whimsical universe beyond the canvas, transforming the gallery into a living, breathing expression of his inner world. As part of an ongoing collaboration between Firetti Contemporary and Lamborghini Dubai, I Put My Brain On Pause! will feature the exclusive unveiling of a Lamborghini, transformed by Ihab Ahmad into a vibrant, mobile artwork. The artistic mediation marks an audacious interlink between contemporary art and iconic automotive design — where Ihab's emotionally charged visual language spills outside the canvas and onto the body of a Lamborghini. Inspired by the characters in his paintings and sculptures, the vehicle becomes a moving extension of the artist's universe — surreal, joyful, and unrestrained. The work challenges perceptions of luxury, performance and identity, asking: what happens when an object of speed and control becomes a vessel for spontaneity and emotional expression? 'The collaboration represents Firetti Contemporary's commitment to fostering cross-disciplinary dialogue between art, culture, and innovation — bringing the artist's vision into unexpected public realms, and continuing to redefine where and how contemporary art lives,' says Celine Azem, curator. 'I Put My Brain On Pause! is more than an exhibition — it is a moment of creative release. It is a space where intellect or rationality steps aside and emotion paves the way. Ihab Ahmad invites us not only to see, but to feel — to witness what happens when the artist hands the brush over to the heart.' Composition titled Inside a Blackhole. Born in Beirut in 1983, Ihab studied Visual Communication Art from the Lebanese University. He expanded his artistic journey by participating in various art workshops focusing on silkscreen printing, painting, and drawing. He enjoys exploring unconventional techniques and materials in his artistic practice, prompting him to go outside the canvas and explore the realm of metal and wood sculptures. In his paintings, Ihab transforms ordinary images into joyful shapes and vibrant patterns. He describes the majority of his pieces as exploring concepts relating to universal harmony, as well as the connection between nature and humanity. 'I draw what my imagination carries from childhood: memory and beauty. I hold a message of hope in my paintings,' he says. The vivid works often feature recurring symbols such as fish, eyes, and trees, which are interwoven with bold patterns and geometric forms. He has developed a symbiotic relationship with these familiar yet imaginary symbols, all of which emerge as intense and bright abstraction. In his art, Ihab invites viewers into an imaginative world, an escape from reality into a vibrant and mystical one, where each viewer becomes a storyteller, crafting and interpreting their own narratives. The artwork celebrates life — joyous, uplifting and energetic - with distinguishable abstract, contemporary, and pop-art elements. They characterise pristine childish joy, juxtaposed with the difficulties of youth. His subject matter is inspired by his childhood memories and his artworks feature creatures he plays with, by connecting various figures in a harmonised and vivid ambience, in a land free of fear, worry, or malice. Everything that is alive during childhood is grist for his art mill. Me by Ihab Ahmad. Ihab's message of hope in his artworks is a gift for the people of his generation, who want to move forward and live in a better Lebanon and, naturally, a better world. His formula is to use painting to marginalise frustrations and focus on dreaming. He believes if we do not have the resources to make change, we can all at least dream of it. He is influenced by Paul Klee and has exhibited his works in Beirut, Miami, China, Italy, the United Arab Emirates, France among other countries. Firetti Contemporary aligns art and creative concepts from the region and beyond. It encourages global engagement and strives to create sustainable collections. Representing both established and emerging artists from all over the world, the gallery is engaged in evolving a multidisciplinary art space, with a strong identity to an international platform. It supports a network of collaborations and has become an integral part of the local community. The gallery's mandate includes being a vehicle for sustainability and social change, reinforcing values through the inspirational power of art.