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Inside Asmaa Al-Shabibi's Dubai Home: A Personal Tour of Regional and Diasporic Art
Inside Asmaa Al-Shabibi's Dubai Home: A Personal Tour of Regional and Diasporic Art

Vogue Arabia

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Vogue Arabia

Inside Asmaa Al-Shabibi's Dubai Home: A Personal Tour of Regional and Diasporic Art

This family painting is one of the tens of artworks that are elegantly distributed in the gallerist's modern villa, where the majority of the displayed artists are affiliated with Lawrie Shabibi Gallery. The talents include emerging Arab names such as Palestinian architect-artist Dima Srouji, Emirati sculptor Shaikha Al Mazrou, and Malaysian-Palestinian artist Mandy El-Sayegh, as well as established artists, such as Lebanese mixed-media artist Nabil Nahas. 'We're interested in artists who work with material, social and political ideas but not in a very obvious way, rather in a much more subtle way,' says Al-Shabibi. A major artist that Al-Shabibi represents is the Emirati painter and sculptor Mohammed Ahmed Ibrahim, who represented his country at the Venice Biennale in 2022. The colourful painting is Ibrahim's take on an aerial view of roads and trees, atypically expressed through bold geometric symbols. Elsewhere, in the living room of the house hangs a fiery, orange and yellow toned painting by the late Moroccan pioneer Mohammed Melehi, who famously filled his canvases with waves, inspired by Berber jewellery and crafts. 'It's such a heart-opener. It's like the sun is emerging from your wall. It gives me joy every day I look at it,' says Al-Shabibi about the work, which was produced during the Covid-19 pandemic when Melehi sadly passed away. Standing opposite Melehi's work is a more sombre yet nevertheless charged painting by the Iraqi artist Ahmed Alsoudani. This charcoal artwork was the first major piece Al-Shabibi purchased back in 2007. 'I could never not live with this painting. I could never sell it… It's violent but it's also beautiful,' comments Al-Shabibi. A large work, featuring scattered figurative elements, it depicts an explosive moment of impact, based on the political chaos that unfolded in Iraq nearly twenty years ago. Politics and war are indeed common themes quietly sensed through some of the artworks, reminding us again of one of the key roles of an artist: Reflecting the times we live in. 'Some people say, 'all art is political,' and I think that's right,' says Al-Shabibi. 'I think art could give meaning to what's going on around us. Artists, from their own perspective, are telling a story of what we're seeing.'

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