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World’s first roadside gallery arrives in UAE

The E11 has been turned into a 100km art experience, with billboards showing treasures that await at Louvre Abu Dhabi. Melissa Gronlund tours the world’s first roadside gallery

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The drive along Sheikh Zayed Road between Dubai and Abu Dhabi is an experience that is better lived than described. Bright lights flashing at you from an SUV two metres from your bumper, the strange midway interlude of a green forest. The famous descriptio­n of war – long patches of boredom punctuated by moments of terror – does not seem far off.

The road is indelibly a part of the Abu Dhabi and Dubai experience and now, true to UAE form, it takes its place in the Emirates’ growing list of world firsts: it will be a museum esplanade in itself.

Louvre Abu Dhabi and Abu Dhabi Media have announced the Highway Gallery, in which billboards showing treasures from Louvre Abu Dhabi are placed along 10-kilometre intervals. Cars pass a trigger a few metres before the billboard, and if you are tuned to any of the three radio stations partnering on the project – Radio 1 FM (100.5 FM), Classic FM (91.6 FM) or Emarat FM (95.8 FM) – a short blurb on the artwork, or artefact, plays on the airwaves.

“We thought that for this month of innovation we are going to do something pioneering,” says Saif Ghobash, director general of the Department of Culture and Tourism - Abu Dhabi (DCT). “We decided to launch the first-ever – in the world – roadside gallery. The concept is: you’re on the highway for about an hour and a half and we have a lot of art here, and so we brought the art to you on the road. You can see a piece and listen to a nicely curated explanatio­n of it. It’s entertaini­ng and educating for the driver, and for the children if they’re in the car.”

The 30-second audio discussion­s are written by Louvre Abu Dhabi curators, and cover major Louvre Abu Dhabi works and loans such as Piet Mondrian’s Compositio­n with Blue, Red, Yellow and

Black (1922); the first work by Leonardo da Vinci ever shown in the Emirates, La

Belle Ferronnier­e (1495-1499); and one of the oldest monumental statues still in existence, a haunting sculpture of a two-headed figure from the Neolithic era (about 6500 BCE) that was found in Ain Ghazal, Jordan. (“No, you’re not seeing double!” says the female voice introducin­g this last one.)

The initiative is part of DCT’s and Louvre Abu Dhabi’s broader programme to build an audience for art and increase cultural

engagement in the Emirate. While the Louvre Abu Dhabi is becoming an internatio­nal tourist destinatio­n, the Highway Gallery is aimed more at bringing local audiences and residents into the museum.

“Highway traffic is mainly used by residents,” says Ghobash. “Part of our mandate is not only to build visitor figures but to get people to explore and interact with our message of cultural dialogue and interactio­n with the museum, so we took the message to them.”

The selection of works, consonant with the museum’s universal vision, stretches across time and geographic­al locations, from Egypt – the richly coloured sarcophagu­s of Henuttawy (950-990 BCE) – to the United States. Nestled behind the metal barrier alongside the road is Louvre Abu Dhabi’s iconic portrait of the US’ first president, George Washington, which, you might learn if you are zipping by it, was actually painted 23 years after his death. Other works include Vincent Van Gogh’s 1887 Self Portrait and a 2,000-year-old coin from the United Arab Emirates.

Pairing the billboards with the audio discussion­s allows Highway Gallery to function not only as teasers for the works in Louvre Abu Dhabi, but also as a mode of education. The spots will run in Arabic and English in the direction from Dubai to Abu Dhabi and the experiment will last for four weeks. The transmitte­r on each of the boards is partly powered by solar energy.

“This road is so important, linking the two main cities,” says Manuel Rabate, the director of Louvre Abu Dhabi. “We thought, what can we add with an interestin­g, creative process? Let’s bring the content to the people, if they can learn something, we can change a little bit the monotony of the drive.”

One of the billboards shows the famous Mari-Cha lion (10001200), which stood next to kings and queens in Mediterran­ean palaces, but was made by Arab craftsmen. The bronze statue is one of the earliest known automata – mechanical figures that speak or move on their own – and the Louvre Abu Dhabi curators speculate that the Mari-Cha lion contains a mechanism by which moving its tail causes it to roar.

The radio spot ends with this – the lion’s roar! Hopefully not a new moment of terror for the old Sheikh Zayed Road, but a way to make the drive home a little more special.

You can see a piece and listen to a nicely curated explanatio­n of it. It’s entertaini­ng and educating SAIF GHOBASH Director general of DCT Abu Dhabi ‘Part of our mandate is to get people to explore and interact with our message of cultural dialogue, so we took the message to them’

The Highway Gallery runs until mid-March, and can be seen when driving from Dubai to Abu Dhabi on the E11. The radio stations to tune in to are 100.5 FM, 91.6 FM and 95.8 FM.

 ?? Chris Whiteoak / The National ?? On the E11, the Vincent van Gogh self portrait is part of the motorway gallery
Chris Whiteoak / The National On the E11, the Vincent van Gogh self portrait is part of the motorway gallery
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 ?? Louvre Abu Dhabi / Agence Photo F; Musée du Louvre / Angèle Dequier; Department of Antiquitie­s of Jordan; Al Ain Museum; Musée d’Orsay / Patrice Schmidt; Louvre Abu Dhabi ?? Some of the works from Louvre Abu Dhabi shown on the Highway Gallery. Clockwise from top: ‘Young Emir Studying’, by Osman Hamdy Bey (1878); ‘Portrait of a Woman, called La Belle Ferronnièr­e’, by Leonardo da Vinci (1495-1499); monumental statue with two...
Louvre Abu Dhabi / Agence Photo F; Musée du Louvre / Angèle Dequier; Department of Antiquitie­s of Jordan; Al Ain Museum; Musée d’Orsay / Patrice Schmidt; Louvre Abu Dhabi Some of the works from Louvre Abu Dhabi shown on the Highway Gallery. Clockwise from top: ‘Young Emir Studying’, by Osman Hamdy Bey (1878); ‘Portrait of a Woman, called La Belle Ferronnièr­e’, by Leonardo da Vinci (1495-1499); monumental statue with two...
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