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‘WE CAN’T BUILD A FUTURE WITHOUT LOOKING BACK AT THE PAST’

▶ Nabu Museum brings age-old artefacts to the Lebanese shore. Lizzie Porter finds out how from co-founder Jawad Adra and curator Pascal Odille

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Beside crumbling buildings, olive groves and pine trees, rusting train tracks grace Lebanon’s coastline. The erstwhile service once ran from Haifa to Homs in modern-day Syria, but Lebanon’s railways haven’t been used since the 19751990 civil war.

However, something much newer stands alongside the ageing train line in the seaside hamlet of El Heri, some 60 kilometres north of the capital Beirut. The Nabu Museum is set right on the Mediterran­ean shore, a striking cuboid building made from weathering steel. The museum, named after the Mesopotami­an god of literacy, opened late last month and the permanent collection combines hundreds of early Bronze and Iron Age artefacts, with objects from the Roman, Greek, Byzantine and Islamic periods.

Such a set-up sounds fairly standard for the region’s museums. What makes the Nabu collection stand out is that 2,000-year-old alabaster statues from south Arabia and Babylonian tablets displaying some of the earliest forms of writing are exhibited alongside 20th-century artworks by Lebanese, Iraqi and Palestinia­n artists.

Paintings and sculptures by artists Saliba Douaihy, Shakir Hassan Al Said and Asad Azi are among the 400 objects on display over the museum’s two floors for its first exhibition, Millenia of Creativity, curated by Pascal Odille. He shows me glass display cases of oil lamps, some dating back several thousands of years. They are a fine example of how globalisat­ion is anything but a new concept. “The idea here is to show the developmen­t over time, from the most basic object – a piece of clay that has been folded – to something more sophistica­ted over time, with motifs,” Odille explains. “Each region begins to have its own form.”

Odille is keen to emphasise the notion of confrontat­ion between different ages, through the juxtaposit­ion of modern paintings and ancient artefacts. “We cannot build a future without looking back at what happened in the past,” he says.

Bronze figurines from Persia contrast with 20th century sketches by Lebanise artist Douaihy, disrupting the idea that Greek-Roman statue work is the sole reference when it comes to life drawing.

There are 2,000-year-old alabaster statues from south Arabia exhibited alongside 20th-century Lebanese works

“The idea is that, for a long time in the West, references in sculpture have been Greek and Roman,” Odille says. “But other things existed during or before these periods.”

The objects on display are mostly taken from museum co-founder Jawad Adra’s private collection. An interest in archaeolog­y spurred him to make purchases over time from Christie’s in New York, Bonhams in London and from Parisian auction houses, too. Wealth earned in the property constructi­on business in the Gulf provided him with the means to do so. He leads me to three eye-catching statuettes that were discovered near the coastal city with which the museum shares its name, in south Lebanon. They are fashioned from red terracotta and date back to the 7th century BC. One has lost an arm, but they still stand sentinel.

By presenting objects that pre-date the modern Middle East’s state boundaries, Adra hopes to defuse intercommu­nity tensions. He believes that the “stigma that we inherit and consider as fact” can be challenged through the collection. “If it is well explained, and we engage people through [the museum] and they learn that there was someone in Saida or Sur doing this terracotta thing, and there was someone else in Mexico or Peru doing something similar, there was this connection between them without the internet,” he says. “If we learn this, and we learn it as children, we become less violent. I think that’s the message.”

Nabu Museum’s location might seem a little odd: the lion’s share of Lebanon’s galleries and art spaces are located in Beirut. So why did Adra and his co-founders Badr El Hage and Fida Jdeed – all childhood friends – choose to open the museum here?

“Why not?” comes Adra’s reply. “Why the idea of having all these horrible ugly buildings on the Lebanese coast? Why this infringeme­nt on public property and denying people access to the beach?” he says, referring to the notorious over-developmen­t of Lebanon’s coast with private, expensive beach clubs. Two such resorts sandwich the museum on either side. “This is a place on the Mediterran­ean that is different from other places on the Lebanese and Syrian coast. For some reason people exclude the coast from cultural activities,” he says. It is also a familiar place to the businessma­n, who learnt to swim on the beachfront at El Heri and has a house nearby.

Nabu Museum is due to open a rooftop cafe next month. Diners will sit in the shadow of Ford 71, an installati­on by Iraqi-Canadian artist Mahmoud Obaidi. Inspired by the 2003 United States invasion of Iraq, a military vehicle in bronze and corten steel is topped with a Mesopotami­an statuette and its trunk is filled with ancient columns. It’s a wry comment on occupation. On the ground-floor terrace, a rather lovely jetty reaches out into the turquoise Mediterran­ean, and a garden full of olive and palm trees is dotted with sculptures.

Adra admits that he has not always known the exact provenance of objects purchased, but he thinks putting collection­s on public display is one of the best ways to tackle the theft and smuggling of antiquitie­s. “If everyone did what we have done, smuggling and illicit trading would become much more difficult, because you become accountabl­e for every object.”

He wants the museum to be accessible to all: entry is free, workshops for schools are in the pipeline and staff are planning residencie­s for artists who might otherwise find access to Lebanon’s exclusive gallery scene tough.

Still, the space has a little way to go on the access front. Rather intimidati­ng metal railings front the building and an ugly red-and-white-striped traffic barrier blocks the entrance. Not all labelling is in Arabic, making it difficult for those who don’t speak English or French.

The museum is making efforts in the right direction, and visitor numbers currently come in at 100 to 150 a day. When I mention that being questioned by the security guard at the entrance is rather intimidati­ng, Adra goes to have a word. “We don’t want to alienate anyone – the ultimate aim is to reach people who cannot go to [Beirut institutio­ns] the Sursock Museum or the American University of Beirut,” Adra says, pensively. “If we make access only possible for those who have already been to Paris and Rome and seen these things, we will not have done much.”

Aiming to differenti­ate itself from the elitism of Lebanon’s art scene, and introducin­g a wider audience to designs both ancient and modern, Nabu Museum could really be onto something.

Nabu Museum is open Wednesday to Sunday, 10am to 7pm. The museum is closed on Monday and Tuesday. For more informatio­n, visit www.nabumuseum.com.

 ??  ?? The entrance to the Nabu Museum, main, and its collection which features millenia-old statues retrieved from the seabed, below
The entrance to the Nabu Museum, main, and its collection which features millenia-old statues retrieved from the seabed, below
 ??  ?? Clay cones bearing Mesopotami­an writing, left, and head of a male worshipper in gypsum from the Early Dynastic period in Mesopotami­a, 2550 to 2250 BC, above left
Clay cones bearing Mesopotami­an writing, left, and head of a male worshipper in gypsum from the Early Dynastic period in Mesopotami­a, 2550 to 2250 BC, above left
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 ?? Photos AFP; nabumuseum­2018 ?? Clockwise from top: a view from the museum overlookin­g the Mediterran­ean; the museum’s cofounder, Jawad Adra, left, and curator Pascal Odille; visitors perusing works on display; a cross-section inside the space; a statue of a Phoenician deity
Photos AFP; nabumuseum­2018 Clockwise from top: a view from the museum overlookin­g the Mediterran­ean; the museum’s cofounder, Jawad Adra, left, and curator Pascal Odille; visitors perusing works on display; a cross-section inside the space; a statue of a Phoenician deity
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