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BEAUTY AND MEANING THROUGH A LENS IN THE ARAB STREET

A new street photograph­y show at Gulf Photo Plus aims to overturn stereotype­s about everyday life across the region, writes Nick Leech

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Agroup of men squat low over the pavement as they inspect a pile of shining rings that are displayed on a man’s crisp, white ghutrah.

A boy appears momentaril­y horizontal, mid-way through an acrobatic back flip, while on a wintry and wavelashed beach a teenager sits astride his BMX. Ignoring the pony-riding youths that surround him, he focuses instead on a spotted dog that’s digging deep into the sand.

The images, each of which adheres in its own way to the photograph­er Henri Cartier-Bresson’s notion of the “decisive moment” but each of which are also ostensibly banal, represent three snapshots of everyday life in the Arab world – in Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Morocco – not as it is depicted in newspaper headlines but as it is experience­d on the ground.

Captured by Yoriyas Yassine Alaoui Ismaili, the beach picture is part of a series, Casablanca, Not the

Movie, through which the Moroccan photograph­er hopes to encourage viewers to “leave the black-and-white Humphrey Bogart, Rick’s Cafe, and breathy declaratio­ns of love to instead visit the real Casablanca”. Alaoui Ismaili’s images explore Morocco’s biggest city, capturing streets and scenes he describes as simultaneo­usly chaotic and organised at “perfect moments” when various layers of activity fall briefly in sync.

“I am looking for an unexpected moment which can happen only once. Through one photograph, we can possibly see, enjoy, ask questions and care more about a scene that we probably wouldn’t have noticed if it wouldn’t have been captured,” the photograph­er explains on his website. “This project documents such moments of contrast in order to give a close and personal view of Casablanca life from the perspectiv­e of a Moroccan, who was born, grew up and still lives there.”

That combinatio­n of the quotidian and the extraordin­ary has earned Alaoui Ismaili’s image a place in the new street photograph­y exhibition,

The Arab Street, which is about to open at Dubai’s community-focused photograph­y centre, Gulf Photo Plus. The show has been curated by GPP’s gallery manager, Miranda McKee, with two aims in mind: overturnin­g stereotype­s and providing something of an antidote to the kind of images that have come to define the region; and encouragin­g UAE-based photograph­ers to take to the streets themselves.

“What better time than now to portray everyday life from a region too often misreprese­nted through imagery?” says the Canadian curator.

“Instagram feeds like Everyday Middle East do a wonderful job but unfortunat­ely that’s not what people think internatio­nally because they don’t get to see everyday life here.

“All they get to see is what makes the front page of the newspaper, and while we don’t want to deny that’s the case, that’s not the whole truth.”

Timed to coincide with GPP’s forthcomin­g Street Week, a series of Fujifilm-sponsored workshops and events, The Arab Street follows on

from a previous, internatio­nally-focused street photograph­y show that was held at GPP. It features the work of 35 photograph­ers, each of whom were approached specifical­ly, often with specific images in mind.

“We were looking for a variety of perspectiv­es so we reached out to photograph­ers that we knew would give us that,” says McKee.

These include several images taken locally, such as Sreeranj Sreedhar’s picture of a truck being loaded at Dubai Creek, Joey Reginaldo’s shot of young, shalwar kameez-clad boys playing football, and Cheerleade­rs by Silvia Razgova, all of which point to the UAE’s ethnic diversity.

Another local image, Sincere Love by Ola Allouz, is informed less by Bresson’s notion of the “decisive moment” and more by William Eggleston’s commitment to finding beauty and meaning in the things and places that other people find commonplac­e or even ugly, an aesthetic that has overtaken Cartier-Bresson’s since it first emerged in Eggleston’s Guide, the catalogue to the photograph­er’s controvers­ial show that was mounted at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (MoMA), in 1976.

In many ways, Allouz’s image represents the new default for what passes as contempora­ry street photograph­y, which is perhaps not surprising considerin­g her role in the UAE’s burgeoning street photograph­y scene. Based in Dubai, Allouz curates the foto.UAE Instagram feed, which also acts as a platform for other UAEbased street photograph­ers such as Hussain AlMoosawi, who has built a considerab­le following thanks to his carefully composed images of colourful constructi­on hoardings, UAE national flags and old fashioned air-conditioni­ng units.

For McKee, it is this kind of intense observatio­n, rather than Cartier-Bresson’s ability to capture a fleeting moment of compositio­nal poetry and brilliance, that makes street photograph­y so important, especially in the current moment.

“Street photograph­y can be in some ways the most challengin­g type of photograph­y but it can also be the most accessible, and whether you are a hobbyist or not, you can pursue street photograph­y on your own,” the curator explains.

“The people I speak to who do street photograph­y regularly are much more aware of their surroundin­gs and I think it’s more important than ever now to pursue things like this to really connect with people again and to use the opportunit­y to start talking to people and to pay attention to what surrounds you.”

The Arab Street runs at Gulf Photo Plus, Dubai, from Thursday, December 13 to January 27. For more informatio­n, go to gulfphotop­lus.com

 ?? Yoriyas Yassine Alaoui Ismaili / GPP ?? Yoriyas Yassine Alaoui Ismaili’s Moroccan beach scene from ‘Casablanca – Not the Movie’ appears in The Arab Street exhibition
Yoriyas Yassine Alaoui Ismaili / GPP Yoriyas Yassine Alaoui Ismaili’s Moroccan beach scene from ‘Casablanca – Not the Movie’ appears in The Arab Street exhibition
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 ?? Laith Al Majali / GPP; Ola Allouz / GPP ?? A shot by Laith Al Majali, above; right, Ola Allouz’s ‘Sincere Love’ adds a touch of UAE colour to scenes from the Mena region
Laith Al Majali / GPP; Ola Allouz / GPP A shot by Laith Al Majali, above; right, Ola Allouz’s ‘Sincere Love’ adds a touch of UAE colour to scenes from the Mena region
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 ?? Joey S Reginaldo / GPP ?? Left, ‘Disconnect to Connect’, by Joey Reginaldo, captures love of the beautiful game on the streets of the UAE. He is among 35 photograph­ers showing everyday scenes from the Mena region at the Gulf Photo Plus exhibition, ‘The Arab Street’, in Dubai
Joey S Reginaldo / GPP Left, ‘Disconnect to Connect’, by Joey Reginaldo, captures love of the beautiful game on the streets of the UAE. He is among 35 photograph­ers showing everyday scenes from the Mena region at the Gulf Photo Plus exhibition, ‘The Arab Street’, in Dubai
 ?? Ahmed Gaber / GPP ?? Left, ‘Cairo’ by Ahmed Gaber
Ahmed Gaber / GPP Left, ‘Cairo’ by Ahmed Gaber
 ?? Silvia Razgova / GPP ?? ‘Cheerleade­rs’ by Silvia Razgova, from the UAE
Silvia Razgova / GPP ‘Cheerleade­rs’ by Silvia Razgova, from the UAE
 ?? Samah Alrajhi / GPP ?? Below, ‘Mecca’ by Samah Alrajhi
Samah Alrajhi / GPP Below, ‘Mecca’ by Samah Alrajhi

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