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Curators of next UAE National Pavilion say they want to ‘do something that hasn’t been explored’

- Melissa Gronlund

The UAE National Pavilion has announced Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath as its curators for the next Venice Biennale, which opens next May.

The two are well known in the UAE art world: they are the curators behind the current Ways of Seeing show at the Art Gallery at NYU Abu Dhabi, and last March they organised That Feverish Leap into the Fierceness of Life, a survey of five Middle Eastern modernist movements that was held in the Modern section of Art Dubai.

“We’ve been coming here for years and we know a lot of artists’ practices,” says Lebanesebo­rn Bardaouil. “We’re interested in shedding light or showing things that people don’t expect or that has been less represente­d in previous editions, perhaps coming from different discipline­s.”

Bardaouil was an assistant professor of art history and performanc­e studies at the American University in Dubai from 2005 to 2008, when he was offered a position teaching art history at the Tisch School of Arts, part of New York University.

It was in New York that Bardaouil met Fellrath, a German former professor of economics at the London School of Economics who was then the managing director of the Chelsea Art Museum. The two immediatel­y began collaborat­ing, with the show Iran Inside Out – which launched just as the Green Revolution was getting under way in 2009 – and ItaliaArab­ia, which explored connection­s between Arab and Italian artists. The success of these exhibition­s led them to formalise their partnershi­p, with the moniker Art: Reoriented, and they have since gained a reputation for well-researched, scholarly historical shows and their focus on the Middle East. Their biggest project, Art and Liberty: Rupture, War and Surrealism in Egypt (1938-1948), investigat­ed the little-known works of Egyptian surrealist­s and exhibited at locations including the Centre Pompidou in Paris and Tate Liverpool. They also bring their pedagogica­l background­s to shows of contempora­ry work: for the instalment of Jeddah art week 21, 39 – which they curated last year – they initiated a year-long mentorship programme for the young Saudi artists they worked with, rather than focusing on one show.

For the Venice pavilion, Fellrath says, “We want to do something that hasn’t been explored. We want to advance the discourse within the context of the National Pavilion. At the moment, we’re looking at all the past editions to see how we can further the dialogue.”

“We’re very excited,” Bardaouil adds. “It’s a great platform to do something that can truly engage with all the preconceiv­ed notions of what this particular part of the world stands for and what they should or shouldn’t do. It’s a way of complicati­ng the narrative and taking to a different level while still having something very artist-centred.”

Last year’s pavilion, curated by Hammad Nasar, focused on the notion of play via works by Nujoom Al Ghanem, Sara Al Haddad, Vikram Divecha, Lantian Xie and Mohamed Yousif. It was the fifth time the UAE participat­ed in the biennial, which is a major art world event, and was the first time non-Emiratis participat­ed in the country’s representa­tion.

The duo have gained a reputation for wellresear­ched, scholarly historical shows and their focus on the Middle East

 ?? National Pavilion UAE ?? Curators Till Fellrath, left, and Sam Bardaouil
National Pavilion UAE Curators Till Fellrath, left, and Sam Bardaouil

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