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RIYADH EXHIBITION INVITES VIEWERS TO CONTEMPLAT­E QUESTIONS OF IDENTITY

▶ Nada Alturki visits the show Here, Now at Misk Art Institute, which is showing different mediums by 10 artists from around the world

- Nada Alturki is currently the writer-in-residence at Misk Art Institute Masaha Residency

Two bold and dark figures guard the entrance of Here, Now, the exhibition at Riyadh’s Prince Faisal bin Fahd Arts Hall, now known as Masaha after Misk Art Institute’s renovation of the 1980s structure, in Saudi Arabia.

Saudi artist Filwa Nazer’s evocative figures shield a tapestry of grand colour and size, while Sheila Hicks’s gorgeous palm tree fronds cascade in marvellous colours. And you leave with the same question you came in with: “Why here, why now?”

Here, Now is the third in the series of Misk Art Institute’s annual exhibition­s and, for this, British writer and curator Sacha Craddock curates the show alongside Misk’s assistant curators, Alia Ahmad Al Saud and Nora Algosaibi.

“As a show, there’s no line to it, there’s no narrative,” explains Craddock. “It allows people to feel that they have complete choice in terms of the way they went and started off thinking about identity in the most open and generous way,” she says.

While most of the works were loaned from the artists’ private collection­s, some were sourced from galleries including Athr Gallery and Hafez Gallery in Jeddah. The curators paired works by Saudi artists alongside those from a diverse set of nations including Sudan, India, the US, Thailand and South Korea. Altogether, 10 artists present works ranging from painting and textile to video and installati­on, all of which are on show until January 15 next year.

It is precisely this mix of artists – and media – that gives Here, Now a novel feel in Riyadh, whose cultural programmin­g has, historical­ly, unlike its sister city Jeddah, not staged exhibition­s of this blend, scale and theme.

“Here, Now explores notions of identity, and my work questions the emotional and psychologi­cal identity in relation to spatial and social contexts,” says Nazer of her works, which are exhibited indoors for the first time following their debut at Sharjah Art Foundation’s 2019 residency programme.

Interestin­gly, Hicks’s work of a large-size tapestry woven between 1984-1985 (one of two on show) was commission­ed by Mansour Al Turki, thenrector at King Saud University in the 1980s, when Hicks was invited to Riyadh to design an art programme at the school. She had fallen asleep under a palm tree and her tapestry represents what she saw when she awoke.

Easing past Nazer’s guards, the contrast of practices is demonstrat­ed beautifull­y by South Korean Young In Hong’s pieces facing Saudi artist Yousef Jaha’s. Young’s Flower Drawing clearly states its intention: to create structure for oneself through a series of embroidere­d flower works that indicate the location where she acquired them and the time it took to complete. The 10 delicate pieces face Jaha’s charged abstract paintings, which, upon closer inspection, address nature’s mysterious cohesivene­ss.

Hot on the heels of her solo show in Dubai at Gallery Isabelle van den Eynde is Manal Al Dowayan, whose interactiv­e installati­on I Am Here invites viewers to stamp the words “I am here” in Arabic on a white wall, allowing the imprints to blend into darkness. “I chose work that would bounce off each other, that would set up a kind of process where audiences became a very important component in this exhibition,” says Craddock.

Among the highlights – and new discoverie­s – in Here, Now is the work of Saudi painter Sami Ali AlHossein, whose surreal paintings are dominated by the theme of nature with sitting ducks and coastal plains. His painting, Whisper of Silence, presents a flock of eye-less birds bracing themselves for the heat they’re about to endure – or, maybe, already have against deep shades of red that insinuate pain and sorrow.

Nearby is Thai artist Piyarat Piyapongwi­wa’s three vibrant tapestries that frame a 19-minute documentar­y piece on the politics behind the fabric industry in Thailand. None of the fabric shown in the video is hung in the gallery, however, and the original story of the actual pieces is left to the imaginatio­n. In that way, the connection falters. “Was the video made during the piece’s production in 2017?” wondered one visitor. “If it’s not the original fabric, then why is it there?” chimed in another.

Here, Now’s concept prompts the audience to strip the artist of their past and focus on the art at hand – the idea that art can still be made for the sake of being made. That idea is innovative and should be encouraged, but one wonders if it is possible in this day and age to separate one’s cultural background and ethnicity from their work.

One major takeaway from the exhibition is: can art be separated from the artist? No doubt that is among the most controvers­ial questions orbiting the art world. For Misk Art Institute, this show provides a platform to raise questions, prompt community discussion, and support its goal to further the discourse around art locally and internatio­nally.

It allows people to feel that they have complete choice in terms of the way they started thinking about identity SACHA CRADDOCK Curator

 ?? ?? Saudi artist Filwa Nazer with her work ‘The Other Is Another Body 2’ (2019)
Saudi artist Filwa Nazer with her work ‘The Other Is Another Body 2’ (2019)
 ?? Photos: Misk Art Institute ?? Thai artist Piyarat Piyapongwi­wa’s tapestry work ‘Fabric’ (2017)
Photos: Misk Art Institute Thai artist Piyarat Piyapongwi­wa’s tapestry work ‘Fabric’ (2017)

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