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Weekly UAE museum and gallery guide: Celebration of late Palestinian photographer Majd Arandas
Weekly UAE museum and gallery guide: Celebration of late Palestinian photographer Majd Arandas

The National

time10-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The National

Weekly UAE museum and gallery guide: Celebration of late Palestinian photographer Majd Arandas

Art Dubai is around the corner. The city's premier art event often marks its busiest art season with several galleries rolling out new exhibitions to coincide with the fair. From an exhibition dedicated to Palestinian photographer Majd Arandas to an open studio delving into the artistic process and pathos of Emirati artist Rami Farook, here are a few exhibitions and events to see across the UAE this weekend. Hyderabad-born artist Imran Qureshi is best known for his idiosyncratic take on Persian miniature painting, while also drawing inspiration from Mughal and Sikh architectural traditions. His exhibition at Concrete is curated by Nada Raza, director of Alserkal Arts Foundation and is a highlight of Alserkal Art Week. It surveys contemporary South Asian cityscapes through photography, video, painting, and a site-specific installation. Monday to Sunday, 10am-7pm; April 13 to 20; Concrete, Dubai This exhibition presents a major body of work by Majd Arandas. The Palestinian photographer was killed in November 2023 by an Israeli air strike near his home in Deir al-Balah, Gaza. The works presented in A Memorial in Fragments show Arandas's natural sense of composition and ability to capture a wide gamut of emotions. The photographs were recovered by the photographer's brother after his tragic death. The exhibition also explores the function of photography not just in the documentation of the present but in providing testimony for the future. Monday to Saturday, 10am-7pm; April 13 to August 13; Gulf Photo Plus, Dubai Voices and Visions presents a wide variety of work by Arab women artists. It includes the vibrant canvasses of Hend Rashid, the textured portraits of Fatma Lootah, acrylic works by Mariam Abbas and mixed media paintings by Fatima Al-Nimr that incorporate motifs from UAE heritage. Monday to Thursday, 9am-5pm; Friday, 8am – 3pm; until May 6; Khawla Art and Culture, Abu Dhabi Rami Farook has often found creativity in ugliness. In this open studio session, which comes as part of Alserkal Art Week, the Emirati artist will be presenting a series of works, some of which he began as far back as 2009. The works in the open studio reflect upon subjects such as decay, suffering and inhumanity. Instead of shying away from the grotesque, Farook instead seeks to coax from these topics an emotional experience, even if it comes at the expense of visual appeal. Sunday, 9am- 6pm; April 13; Satellite, Dubai Singaporean artist John Clang is returning to Sharjah to offer another round of his performance series Reading by an Artist. Clang sits with individuals and predicts life events based on several divination systems. These include geomancy, which comes from zi wei dou shu, a traditional Chinese fortunetelling system. The readings, often lasting an hour, result in a unique chart or portrait for each of the sitters. The performances are meant to blur the lines of art and lived experience. Prior registration is required through the Sharjah Art Foundation website. Registration required; April 10 to 23; Al Mureijah Square, Sharjah

Emirati artist Rami Farook on his Jeddah solo show ‘A Muslim Man': ‘This is a living exhibition'
Emirati artist Rami Farook on his Jeddah solo show ‘A Muslim Man': ‘This is a living exhibition'

Arab News

time31-01-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Arab News

Emirati artist Rami Farook on his Jeddah solo show ‘A Muslim Man': ‘This is a living exhibition'

JEDDAH: Rami Farook's solo exhibition 'A Muslim Man,' which runs at Jeddah's ATHR Gallery until March 25, is a deeply personal sequel of sorts to a film he made in 2015, and traces the evolution of his life, identity and creative practice over the past decade. For the latest updates, follow us on Instagram @ The original project, a 64-minute conceptual feature comprising 16 vignettes, has now been reimagined as a labyrinth-like multimedia experience featuring 85 pieces, each of which is based on a scene from that film. The self-taught Emirati artist was 20 in 2001 when he lost his best friend. Four months later, while living in the US, the events of 9/11 drastically altered his life. As a Muslim, Arab-looking man, he recalls: 'I became noticed, vilified… it shifted everything.' These events inspired a deeper exploration of his faith and identity, themes that are central to this show. 'It's about a Muslim man's relationship with God, self, society and family,' he tells Arab News. Following the events of Oct. 7, 2023, and the outbreak of genocidal violence in Palestine, Farook turned to painting as a coping mechanism. 'I painted daily, summarizing the news,' he says. This renewed urgency also shaped the exhibition's tone. The 'Muslim Man' is portrayed as both a victim and a hero. Farook describes the show as 'an immersive, intermedia experience.' It is his first attempt at blending multiple mediums into one cohesive journey. 'For me, this was a fun curatorial process, way more magical than just watching the film,' he says. The 'docufictional' exhibition is structured like a film, however, and unfolds across seven sections: context, protagonist, cause of conflict, conflict, response to conflict, climax, and moral, Farook explains. Here, he talks us through several works from the show. 'Aerial View' This is the poster for the show; the reason I like it as the poster is you can look at it in any of the seven sections I mentioned earlier — context, protagonist, cause of conflict, conflict, response to conflict, climax, and moral — and it could be in any of them. The character is a Muslim man. This shot presents him as a hero — because we've seen the villain side too many times in the last 25 years or more. This show is showing the other side. He's on a ladder that looks like it's not in the greatest shape. The village he's looking at: is it alive? Is it dead? There's the mystery. And whether he is looking to see what's going on to eventually maybe protect it, we don't know. So there's a lot of mystery. 'Caring for His Father' This is a closeup of me holding my dad's hand. He wears white, I wear black. My dad cannot see; he lost around 50 percent of his eyesight in the last 40 years, and then he lost another maybe 40 percent in the last four or five years. He just sees light at this point. So, I care for him, especially recently. And I just felt like I wanted it to be here. This exhibition is docufictional — it can be about me, but it's also general. 'Alone' I made a mattress that's exactly my height, my width and my depth. It literally just fits me. It's the idea that rest, contemplation… it all happens lying down in bed. Later, I thought it also kind of looks like a casket. Originally, it was going to have a fitted sheet or a cover, and a pillow; I made a pillow that's just the size of my head. I try to strip things down as much as possible to just the absolute basics. Maybe I'll add it later. This is a living exhibition; I wouldn't be surprised if I end up adding things later — there are some things here that weren't planned. 'The Siege of Jeddah/A Determined Defense' This captures the moment the Portuguese tried to invade Jeddah. The commander at the time, they put up a determined defense for about 30 to 35 days. It's significant to showcase it here because there's only two works in the show that are Jeddah-specific. So for me, it's beautiful. Jeddah is a city that I love very much. It makes you wonder, if the Portuguese did occupy Jeddah, how everything would be different now. 'Allah So Determined And Did As He Willed' This, honestly, is a (phrase) that is my cure to any worry. We all look back at our lives — especially at the big things that we invested time, money, or whatever, into, and we could always ask: how could we guarantee that things — business, relationships, or anything — would have been better if we changed something? This phrase actually helps me to not live with regrets.

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