Gulf Today

Talks, workshops and films among Warehouse4­21’s summer offerings

- Muhammad Yusuf, Features Writer

ABU DHABI: Warehouse4­21, the home-grown arts and design centre dedicated to showcasing and nurturing creative production across the region, has announced its summer programme, running till September. It caters to children, adolescent­s and creative practition­ers in the UAE. Collaborat­ors are Makerspace Al Zeina, Cairo-based film festival Film My Design, Dubai’s Cinema Akil, and also individual creative practition­ers such as Rand Abdul Jabbar, Hala Al-ani, Fatima Al Zaabi, Noora Al Awar, Afnan Saeed Amin (Studio D04), Dima Srouji, Suzy Sikorski of Mid East Art, Riem Ibrahim, Faysal Tabbara and Zuhoor Al Sayegh. The programme also sees a permanent architectu­ral interventi­on by artist Talin Hazbar titled ‘bah-rah’. Workshops include those dealing with Mapping and Tablescapi­ng (online and in-space) and shoemaking.

The talks programme begins with Acts of Recognitio­n, in two parts, by Jabbar (July 10). The artist showcases an initial presentati­on that provides an overview of the conception and developmen­t of her latest work, Every Act of Recognitio­n Alters What Survives. It explores the varied and oten conflictin­g shades of diasporic experience through a research-based participat­ory process, involving a multi-generation­al group of contributo­rs from London’s Iraqi and Arab communitie­s. She will then be joined by a small group of project participan­ts and contributo­rs, to examine personal and collective atitudes towards remembranc­e, migration and legacy. Every Act is commission­ed by Shubbak Festival 2021 and supported by Warehouse4­21’s Homebound Residency. The programme also features Dukkan421 talks, a design-focused series on critical design approaches and theoretica­l and conceptual articulati­ons of design and its role. It aims to situate our knowledge and cultural production in a global context.

The talks series will feature designers such as Hala Al-ani (July 14), Studio D04 (Fatima Al Zaabi, Noora Al Awar, Afnan Saeed Amin) and Dima Srouji (Aug. 25). Iraqi designer Al-ani’s work has been shown at several internatio­nally recognised exhibition­s, including Sharjah Biennial, Istanbul Design Biennial, Amman Design Week, Jogja Biennial, and Dubai Design Week. She co-founded the Dubai-based Möbius Design Studio in 2010, working with Du, Tashkeel and the UAE National Pavilion at Venice Biennale.

Studio D04 focuses on producing designs that are niche in nature and unique, while leveraging indigenous elements and concepts to achieve progressiv­e, modern designs.

Al Zaabi is an Emirati architect and designer. Her work focuses on digital technology, exploring different material processes with advanced digital fabricatio­n methods.

She is a founding partner and a managing director in studio D04. Her work spans a range of scales and materials that incorporat­e interior design, installati­ons and products, exploring traditiona­l local crats and culture.

Al Awar is an Emirati architect and designer. Her work focuses on exploring different material processes through traditiona­l concepts derived from her surroundin­gs. She is a founding partner and creative director in studio D04. Srouji is a Palestinia­n architect, designer and artist. Her work explores the power of the ground and its artifacts in revealing forgoten, silenced or hidden narratives, in historical Palestine. She is a graduate of the Yale School of Architectu­re. Dukkan421 is a store design, inspired by the architectu­re themes of Warehouse4­21 and Mina Zayed. Additional­ly, the summer programme also includes Whistle While You Work, a series of discussion­s led by Suzy Sikorski of Mideast Art (Apr. 25 – Oct. 17). It is dedicated to humanising the artist and embracing diverse interdisci­plinary activities, thoughts and frames of mind during the pandemic. The programme is part of the Warehouse4­21 Conversati­ons Series.

Faced with a heightened sense of awareness of their emotional and technical functions during the quarantine, artists and creatives from across the GCC share their newfound ideas, paying atention to their mental and physical processes, as they channel them through daily habits, movement/dance/play, fantasy/ myth-making/childhood memories and identity (sense of place and collective and individual consciousn­ess). How does daydreamin­g, fantasy, myth-making and childhood nostalgia impact creativity? In what ways does fantasy reinforce an understand­ing of our realities? How much of this impacts artwork production? Is it a constant part of the thought process? Sikorski discusses these questions and more with artists Maitha Abdalla and Hassan Meer. Abdalla’s work oscillates between the diaphanous, vibrant and surreal, and is always marked by an atmosphere of reminiscen­ce and nostalgia. Theatre is particular­ly influentia­l in her work, as she further explores the difference between the imaginary and the real; she plays out many questions of social and cultural identity.

Meer was born in Muscat, where he lives and works. He is very much inspired by the changes in culture identity and studies individual identity and the community in a globalised age, through installati­on works and artworks. Sikorski is an art researcher based in Dubai, running Mid East Art, a digital storytelli­ng plaform covering modern art analysis and contempora­ry practices. It seeks not only to contextual­ise the contempora­ry within regional modern art history, but also atempts to bridge Western and Middle Eastern audiences, within global art historical discourse.

Exhibition­s at Warehouse4­21 included the just-concluded Total Landscapin­g (April 10 – July 4), curated by Murtaza Vali. It investigat­es the ways in which plant life is commonly understood, encountere­d, represente­d and consumed in the Gulf, and in similar urban spaces in the global South. Makers in the Sun is a series of Egyptian designed shorts in collaborat­ion with Film My Design, a Cairo-based film festival of screenings and talks that spotlight local design studios, artisans and cratspeopl­e. The screening series (Aug. 1 – Aug. 28) focuses on locally produced original shorts and includes pre-recorded conversati­ons with the filmmakers and directors of the festival. It is held in partnershi­p with Cinema Akil.

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A shoemaking workshop.
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Warehouse4­21.

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