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JAMEEL ARTS SCENE OILS THE WORKS WITH A DEBUT EXHIBITION ABOUT BLACK GOLD

▶ The new Dubai Creek space will open with a subject close to the UAE’s heart,

- writes Melissa Gronlund

Jameel Arts Centre, the contempora­ry art institutio­n opening at Dubai Creek on November 11, will begin with a major exhibition about a substance near and dear to the UAE: oil.

Regional artists will explore how oil ushered in modernity across the Middle East, as four solo presentati­ons focus on more establishe­d artists.

New commission­s and a film programme will present a range of artworks, from a movie to a grove of plastic trees in the centre’s outdoor garden.

Antonia Carver, director of Art Jameel, which is launching the centre, says that with Crude, which traces the history of oil, “we were trying to think of an exhibition that would set a discursive tone for the centre and would show how art encompasse­s history and exchange and society.

“The idea came from a conversati­on with [writer] Murtaza [Vali]. One of the driving factors – if not the driving factor – in the way the Gulf has interacted with the rest of the world has been through this slippery substance of oil.”

Crude also points to the Gulf’s inclusion in histories of Middle Eastern modernity, which were previously kept separate. Rather than the Gulf being seen as “Middle East Lite”, the focus on oil underlines the continuiti­es in the region’s history, as well as the links among the younger Khaleeji art scenes and those in Egypt, Lebanon and elsewhere.

The exhibition showcases work from across the region. This includes Iraqi artist Latif Al Ani, whose 1960s photograph­s tracked the country’s first flush of oil wealth, Khaleeji artists such as the GCC art collective who explore oil wealth and luxury consumeris­m, and contempora­ry artists working in Jordan and Lebanon.

Carver and Vali are veterans of the UAE art scene, and their selections give the opening a home-team feel as they include artists such as Vikram Divecha, Lantian Xie, Raja’a Khalid, and Shaikha Al Mazrou. And at a time when Sharjah, Abu Dhabi and Dubai are developing their own art identities, Jameel Arts Centre displays one that is uniquely of Dubai and its mix of nationalit­ies who are based here.

Carver, who was appointed head of Saudi-based Art Jameel in 2016, says the mix of local-but-internatio­nal artists was a specific reaction to the city. The foundation also has initiative­s in Jeddah and Cairo, and in each they have sought to respond to the local scene’s needs and character.

“We asked ourselves: how can we be relevant in a microgeogr­aphy – we’re next to the Jadaf boatyard we’re on the water of the Creek – and how do you square that with a more macro approach where the UAE is this point of exchange?” asks Carver. “The UAE looks out towards the rest of the world via the Middle East, East Africa and South Asia. Those two vantage points don’t counter each other, they’re two sides of the same coin. As a port city, Dubai has always balanced local and global.”

As a non-profit art space in a city dominated by commercial galleries, the centre will offer artists the opportunit­y to develop ideas with curators on a more internatio­nal platform, and, with its library, provide tools for a historicis­ation of the burgeoning scene.

Smaller solo shows will give what Carver calls “capsule” presentati­ons of artists, starting with four women: Maha Malluh, Lala Rukh, Mounira Al Solh, and Chiharu Shiota, a Japanese artist who is taking the centre’s proximity to the Al Jadaf Shipyard, as more than a metaphor – she’ll use one of the dhows made there within her installati­on.

The centre will also feature educationa­l spaces, a writer’s room – up at the top of the building, like a glossy modern-day garret – a shop and restaurant. One of the galleries will be devoted to artists’ film, traditiona­lly an under-represente­d area in contempora­ry art in the UAE. It will host a Crudelinke­d programme of films made by oil companies as well as films about oil, which will run in November and March.

Overall, the model is that of a kunsthalle. Art Jameel will not show its collection in permanent hang but instead as a resource for curators to draw on for temporary shows. About one-third of Crude, for example, is from the Art Jameel collection. The makeup of the centre’s programmin­g will constantly change, with the rooms now given over to solo presentati­ons being used later for largescale group shows.

“The beauty of the space is that it’s really flexible,” says Carver. “We’ll be introducin­g new ideas and new shows in a staggered way, as well as symposia and film screenings pretty much every two weeks.” She pauses for a moment. “I’ll have no social life!”

The beauty of the space is that it’s flexible. We’ll be introducin­g new ideas and new shows in a staggered way, as well as symposia and film screenings

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 ?? Jameel Arts Centre ?? Clockwise from main: Latif Al Ani’s 1961 image of an oil pipeline being built in Iraq will be part of ‘Crude’; Antonia Carver, director of Art Jameel; a rendering of Jameel Arts Centre
Jameel Arts Centre Clockwise from main: Latif Al Ani’s 1961 image of an oil pipeline being built in Iraq will be part of ‘Crude’; Antonia Carver, director of Art Jameel; a rendering of Jameel Arts Centre

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