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MEMORABLE MOMENTS IN ART

It’s been a year for remarkable happenings and new institutio­ns taking root. Melissa Gronlund picks her favourites ▶

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The year 2018 started as one of anniversar­ies across the art field of the UAE, as a kind of deferred stardom of 2008: the studio spaces and exhibition site Tashkeel, in Dubai, turned 10, as did a number of the galleries in Dubai’s Alserkal Avenue and even that old rag, The National. But as the year went on, it became clear that it was also one of new beginnings, with a new site for contempora­ry art in Dubai, the Jameel Arts Centre; a semi-permanent display of Arab modernism in Sharjah (sadly still a rarity anywhere), in the Barjeel Art Foundation’s exhibition at the Sharjah Art Museum; and an artists-run space, Bait 15, in the capital. Some projects were relaunched – such as Abu Dhabi’s cherished Culture Foundation – and others announced new ventures, like the Africa Institute in Sharjah. It was the first year, too, for Louvre Abu Dhabi: even though it technicall­y opened in 2017, we’re only now feeling its effects, with the breadth of art that we can return to again and again, like spoiled children gulping for more.

There’s a solidifyin­g afoot in the UAE’s rapidly changing art world. Here are some of the moments that defined the year.

The night there were waves in the sky: the opening of Jameel Arts Centre, Dubai Creek

On November 11, a year to date after Louvre Abu Dhabi opened, Dubai responded with the opening of the first non-commercial, non-government­al arts institutio­n in the emirate: the Jameel Arts Centre. Emphasisin­g community, it struck a note of rootedness from the beginning: from the Gulf artists proudly, pretend-casually, standing by their works in the opening show to the organisati­on’s decision to list on its wall the names of the builders next to those of the curatorial team and sponsors. The first exhibition is one of charitable self-examinatio­n: titled, simply, Crude, it looks at the history of petroleum through art. On opening night, the installati­on Waterlicht by Dutch artist Daan Roosegaard­e created an effect of waves moving through smoke in the sky, and the fake trees of Alia Farid and Aseel Al Yaqoub’s garden turned the building pink and purple: a night of a beauty for a new place of criticalit­y and ambition.

The evening Sultan Sooud Al Qassemi threw down the gauntlet (then bent over and picked it up himself)

“Raise your hand if you know who painted this!” Sultan Sooud Al Qassemi challenged the room at a talk at Alserkal Avenue in January.

He was bemoaning the lack of knowledge about Arab Modernism among the audience assembled that day – for only a few hands went up. Al Qassemi proclaimed that there needed to be Arab artworks on permanent view and by June, he had made good on his call: he and Manal Ataya, director-general of the Sharjah Museums Authority, opened a wing of major works from his Barjeel Art Foundation collection, on free and semi-permanent view (they will be up for the next five years). The exhibition, A Century in Flux: Highlights from the Barjeel Art Collection, curated by Salwa Mikdadi and on show at the Sharjah Art Museum, is exquisite, from the anguished artists of mid-century Iraq to the luminous Lebanese abstractio­nists, and the peerless testimonie­s of others in between.

Back to the future: Lucinda Childs performs in ‘Dance’ In an extraordin­ary presentati­on, Lucinda Childs’ Dance came to Abu Dhabi. At 40 years old, its age makes the work sweeter, because this one is all about time. It is both a live performanc­e by dancers and a film of the original dance, shot in a New York studio by Sol LeWitt in 1979. The film appears on a scrim that hangs in front of and behind the performers, such that as the company goes through its steps, they echo the dancers of the film – in this case, Childs danced with a Childs of long ago. Much written about, the NYUAD Arts Centre offered a chance for the audiences to see it in the flesh, which differed from known descriptio­ns in unexpected ways: from the presence of the grid on the floor that the dancers performed upon – that hallmark of Modernism – to the awesome majesty of the conceit itself, a pas de deux between past and present.

The wild and weird world of M A Ibrahim at Sharjah Art Foundation In March, Sharjah Art Foundation opened Elements, a joyous show of Mohamed Ahmed Ibrahim’s painting, sculpture and al fresco graffiti: scuttling sandy figures, brightly striped robots, prehistori­c forms splashed across the courtyard. Ibrahim has always worked in his native Khor Fakkan, and there is a hint of the outsider artist about him, in the sheer wildness of his imaginatio­n. But this show also underlined his mastery over his material, in the inventive pursuit of world-making that he nails every time.

The return of the Cultural Foundation

This month the Cultural Foundation reopened in the centre of Abu Dhabi, after having been closed for 10 years. An integral part of city life, it provided the first exposure to art, theatre and cinema for most of those who grew up here, either by exposing them to

it or as a place of debut exhibition­s – a legacy beautifull­y borne out in Artists and the Cultural Foundation:

The Early Years, the show curated by Maya Allison and Alia Zaal Lootah. The Foundation’s famed openness and community spirit found its way unexpected­ly into the opening festivitie­s at a moment when things went wrong. As the Algerian folksinger Souad Massi was performing, the electricit­y suddenly cut out. She paused briefly, then kept on singing. She and her two co-performers, percussion­ist Rabah Khalfa and guitarist Mehdi Dalil, moved closer to the edge of the stage and the audience followed suit, streaming down from the stands to sit on the ground in front of her. With no mic, and no lights except those of the buildings around the Qasr Al Hosn square, everyone came together: a magical start for the new Cultural Foundation.

One is outing oneself as an irrepressi­ble nerd here, but some of the most thrilling moments this year were three lectures delivered courtesy of a single man: Cornell University professor Salah M Hassan. During the Sharjah Art Foundation’s annual March Meetings he appeared as the affable, but probing, interlocut­or to the Malian filmmaker Manthia Diawara, drawing out personal stories from Diawara as well as the larger story of black cinema in the United States. In April he filled in at the last minute for Sudanese artist Ibrahim El-Salahi at a lecture at Louvre Abu Dhabi (organised by its confrere, Guggenheim Abu Dhabi) and left a crowd stunned by the history of an artist – a traveller, activist, and Sudanese intellectu­al – whom many only knew in passing. And then in September, the UAE gave up and simply handed him the stage – what else are you going to do with passion like that? He co-led a conference at Sharjah Art Foundation reconsider­ing black abstractio­n, and is rumoured to be the future director of the new Africa Institute, which will open in 2020 in Sharjah, under the auspices of Sheikha Hoor Al Qasimi.

 ??  ?? A year to the date after Louvre Abu Dhabi opened, Jameel Arts Centre flung open its doors in Dubai
A year to the date after Louvre Abu Dhabi opened, Jameel Arts Centre flung open its doors in Dubai
 ?? The Arts Centre NYUAD ?? Lucinda Childs’ extraordin­ary presentati­on of ‘Dance’ at New York University Abu Dhabi, showing the past dancing with the present
The Arts Centre NYUAD Lucinda Childs’ extraordin­ary presentati­on of ‘Dance’ at New York University Abu Dhabi, showing the past dancing with the present
 ?? Sharjah Art Foundation ?? Mohamed Ahmed Ibrahim’s ‘Bait Al Hurma’ 2018, part of his Elements exhibition at Sharjah Art Foundation
Sharjah Art Foundation Mohamed Ahmed Ibrahim’s ‘Bait Al Hurma’ 2018, part of his Elements exhibition at Sharjah Art Foundation
 ??  ?? Salah M Hassan hat trick: Sharjah March Meetings, Louvre Abu Dhabi, and the Africa Institute
Salah M Hassan hat trick: Sharjah March Meetings, Louvre Abu Dhabi, and the Africa Institute
 ?? Khushnum Bhandari for The National ?? Souad Massi’s Cultural Foundation show
Khushnum Bhandari for The National Souad Massi’s Cultural Foundation show

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