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BLURRING TIME, SPACE, NATURE AND URBANITY

From old stamps posted across the UAE to plants rooted in a building’s fabric, this year’s Sharjah Art Foundation’s March Project is flourishin­g,

- writes Nick Leech

Unwelcome and uncomforta­ble it may have been, but the 83 per cent humidity that saturated Sharjah on Saturday evening only served to highlight the issues that are explored in An Ecology, a new three-part installati­on by the 30-year-old Lebanese artist, Mahmoud Safadi.

Alongside new works by the UAEbased artists Al Anood Al Obaidly and Nasir Nasrallah and the Algerian artist Soufiane Zouggar, An Ecology is now on display at the Sharjah Art Foundation (SAF) as part of the March Project 2017.

An annual educationa­l residency programme that is now in its fourth season, the March Project extends invitation­s to artists to come to Sharjah, explore the emirate and work on new projects alongside carefully-selected internatio­nal mentors and members of the SAF team.

“It’s a research process for us as well. It allows us to get to know a younger generation of artists who are working locally and in the region who we haven’t worked with before,” explains Sharjah Art Foundation’s deputy director Reem Shadid, who also helps the March Project artists to realise their proposals by liaising with mentors and in selecting locations for the works.

“Every year it shifts a little bit but when we first conceived the project, we wanted to bring a group of artists together and to take them through a programme together that includes talks by profession­als and technical workshops. One year it was about lighting, another it was about working with video,” Shadid explains.

“We invite them in March to start their research; they are expected to submit a proposal in June; we discuss that and then we have the exhibition.”

Housed in the Bait Hussain Makrani, one of the traditiona­l buildings that cluster around the Sharjah

Art Foundation gallery spaces in Al Mureijah Square, Safadi’s installati­ons examine life – both vegetable and human – as it is lived at the margins, and the blurring of boundaries between the natural and the man-made that occur in our urban environmen­ts.

“I grew up in cities and I remember that nature was always something that you went to, or you might go to the park, but with this work I am trying to look beyond that distinctio­n,” Safadi told me at the show’s opening, which also took visitors on a walking tour of the various SAF spaces in Sharjah’s Al Mureijah, Arts and Calligraph­y Squares.

In Living byproduct those margins are both living and literal. Using plants collected from various sites around the city – car parks, waste ground, plots next to telephone boxes – Safadi has created a kind of crevice garden planted at the junction between the wall and the floor, in a small room whose only source of water is the condensate that drips from an air-conditioni­ng unit, which was working overtime in the unexpected heat.

“The AC drips water depending on how many people are here, on the temperatur­e, on the season, so it becomes an ecosystem, in a way. There’s no more separation between nature and the urban environmen­t,” Safadi said.

“And if you walk around Sharjah, the green spaces that you see always occur where there is moisture, which happens because of our advancemen­t, because of constructi­on or happenstan­ce– things that are the result of urban life,” he added.

“But for this to happen, lots of things have to come together. There has to be a source of water and a seed has to fall in the right place.”

Inspired in part by the month he spent in residency in the emirate in March but also by an existing installati­on in the Bait Hussain Makrani’s courtyard, Lemos Auad’s plant-based A Moment of the Sky / Four Humours – which was created for Sharjah Biennial 13 – Safadi’s Of

Flesh and Earth consists of a series of rough casts of the artist’s hands that recreate gestures associated with gardening such as watering, digging and the sowing of seeds.

“I saw all of these people out tending parks and gardens at sunrise and sunset so I started thinking of that as a kind of invisible hand that takes care of all the greenspace­s and public spaces,” Safadi explained about the sculptures, which combine clay with another natural and locally-occurring material, gypsum, that is associated with constructi­on. “It’s a gesture we don’t usually notice, not just here but in every city. We take our green spaces for granted and we don’t see or think about the labour that goes into them but these things don’t happen by themselves. There is a whole network of labour that goes into them and I wanted to make that gesture visible in some way.”

If Safadi’s work addresses some of the same themes as Vikram Divecha’s Shaping Resistance (2015), which also sought to draw attention to the overlooked work of horticultu­ral labourers, it also testifies to the contradict­ory fragility and tenacity of nature in the Emirates, urban or otherwise.

Safadi spent a significan­t amount of his March residency travelling around Sharjah with Soufiane Zouggar, a 35-year-old Algerian artist

whose March Project 2017 installati­on, Temporary flesh walls’ stories, permanent posters and one portrait,

represents a kind of tribute to an altogether more human form of persistenc­e – the life of a Pakistani, Izhar, who has lived in Sharjah for more than 40 years.

Now the caretaker of an abandoned Modernist cinema in Khorfakkan that has been saved for posterity thanks to the personal efforts of the Sharjah Art Foundation’s president and director, Sheikha Hoor Al Qasimi, Izhar previously worked as the cinema’s projection­ist and in its box office. Prior to that he worked as a labourer on various constructi­on projects.

In Zouggar’s multimedia installati­on, which is housed in the SAF’s Dar Al Nadwa, Calligraph­y Square, Izhar has become a kind of spectral figure who is only seen once, in a reflection, but whose presence seems to have become a part of the building’s fabric. This is recorded in a series of photograph­s and alluded to in foud large temporary moulds for concrete

The March Project allows artists to push boundaries, in terms of physical space and in metaphysic­al time and space

supports, supported by scaffoldin­g, which, like Izhar, have travelled from job-to-job but whose emptiness conjures notions of itinerancy and absence, alienation and loss.

Although there are no direct links, both Zouggar and Safadi’s work contain distant echoes of Ali Cherri’s UAE-based works, especially the 2015 film The Digger, which also featured the djinn-like figure of a Pakistani caretaker, this time of Sharjah’s archaeolog­ical sites, and Cherri’s 2016 film Petrified, which explored the artfully-constructe­d naturalnes­s of Sharjah’s Arabian Wildlife Centre, one of the destinatio­ns Safadi visited when he explored the emirate earlier this year.

If the March Project encouraged Safadi to explore themes and materials outside his usual, film-based sphere of practise and Zouggar to move his investigat­ion of materials and memory beyond his native Algeria, it has allowed the Abu Dhabi-based artist Al Anood Al Obaidly to operate at a scale that is far beyond her usual scope. Starting with collages constructe­d from discarded consumer materials such as plastic packaging, which she transforms into sculptures that explore compositio­n, colour, tension and humour, the size of Al Obaidly’s work is normally limited by the fact that she works from a studio in her home.

Thanks to the March Project, however, she has been able to produce

Slightly Related Elements, two sculptures that required one of the larger exhibition spaces in Calligraph­y Square.

“All my previous exhibition­s featured miniature sculptures that were the product of the move from 2-D to 3-D, but this is the first time I have had the opportunit­y to work at this scale” the Zayed University and Sheikha Salama bint Hamdan Al Nahyan Emerging Artists Fellowship programme alumna explained.

“It’s still very early to see if I will continue to work at this scale but I feel that each year you should have a process that helps me to keep developing my concept.”

Of this year’s crop of invited artists, Nasir Nasrallah is the individual who knows Sharjah and the March Project best. Not only was he born in the emirate, but he also works for SAF as the director of its education programme. He was vice-president of the Sharjah Arts Foundation between 2006 and 2012 and exhibited at Sharjah Biennial 11 in 2013.

Nasrallah’s March Project installati­on, The Communicat­ion Room, is housed in the Majlis Sheikh Mohamed, which forms a part of the traditiona­l souk in Arts Square.

Comprised of four separate but conceptual­ly-related artworks, The

Communicat­ion Room explores the relationsh­ips between time, space, communicat­ion technologi­es and changing patterns of human interactio­n. It features outmoded methods of communicat­ion such as letters, typewriter­s and an old, analogue telephone.

A work composed of 225 red, white and blue air mail envelopes over which Nasrallah drew a unifying mural while they were originally mounted on his studio wall, Mailing

System Rearrangem­ent, is partly a product of Sharjah’s postal system.

Nasrallah labelled each of the envelopes with his own address, affixed the same two dirham stamp to each and then posted them from different locations in the emirate. He is recombinin­g the sketch on the wall of the majlis according to the date he receives each letter, producing a new compositio­n that reveals the effects of space, time and chance.

Of the 225 envelopes, 164 have so far made their way to Nasrallah. The first envelope took almost a month to be returned.

Another work, Never to be Opened, presents two sealed envelopes bearing beautiful vintage stamps from Sharjah’s pre-federal past. One carries the instructio­n that it is only to be opened in the past, while the other may only be opened in the future, reminding us that in the present, both are always out of reach.

“I tried to send these to my own address but the [postal service] doesn’t accept them anymore,” Nasrallah laments. “The first stamp after unificatio­n in 1971 is still accepted, but I wanted something that belongs to Sharjah.”

The March Project at Sharjah Art Foundation runs until December 30. For more informatio­n visit www.sharjahart.org

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 ?? Antonie Robertson / The National ?? Clockwise from top right, Soufiane Zouggar’s ‘Temporary flesh walls’ stories, permanent posters and one portrait’; Mahmoud Safadi’s ‘Where do I end and you begin?’, Al Anood Al Obaidly’s ‘Slightly Related Elements’; and Nasir Nasrallah’s ‘Mailing System Rearrangem­ent’
Antonie Robertson / The National Clockwise from top right, Soufiane Zouggar’s ‘Temporary flesh walls’ stories, permanent posters and one portrait’; Mahmoud Safadi’s ‘Where do I end and you begin?’, Al Anood Al Obaidly’s ‘Slightly Related Elements’; and Nasir Nasrallah’s ‘Mailing System Rearrangem­ent’
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 ?? Antonie Robertson / The National ?? Top, Al Anood Al Obaidly with her installati­on ‘Slightly Related Elements’; above, ‘Living byproduct’, which uses plants from different sites in Sharjah to create an ecosystem squeezed into the urban environmen­t
Antonie Robertson / The National Top, Al Anood Al Obaidly with her installati­on ‘Slightly Related Elements’; above, ‘Living byproduct’, which uses plants from different sites in Sharjah to create an ecosystem squeezed into the urban environmen­t
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