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Intriguing work suggests there is ‘something magical’ about the impact of oil

▶ From floating invisible compounds to metallic field of flowers, exhibition by Kuwaiti artist is a bold attempt to reflect reality, discovers Maan Jalal

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Stepping off the escalator to the first level of ICD Brookfield Place in Dubai’s DIFC, five large inflatable sculptures float overhead. Shaped in distinct forms, they hover in bright metallic colours such as orange, silver, pink and green. These colossal creations are one half of Kuwaiti visual artist Monira Al Qadiri’s current exhibition Floating World.

This section of the show is entitled Benzene Float, and despite the pieces’ awe-inspiring size, Al Qadiri is depicting magnified versions of invisible substances existing all around us: Oil-derived chemicals.

“I thought it would be interestin­g to exaggerate their presence in our lives so we cannot ignore them,” Al Qadiri tells The National. “They’re like these huge balloons in the room that are overpoweri­ng everything.

“This is their reality in our lives. In the modern world, we can’t live without them.”

Each floating sculpture is based on the drawing of what is known as a space-filling model that represents a molecular structure of a petrochemi­cal substance such as benzene, propane gas, paradichlo­robenzene or naphthalen­e.

Oil is a running theme in Al Qadiri’s work. From its invisible compounds to the methods of its extraction, to how it has defined nations and its necessary presence in our daily lives, she is fascinated with the many facets of it.

“Oil is like a mutant. It transforms into so many different things. There’s something magical about it,” she says.

“This one material creates all of these different things. Our clothes, shoes, glasses, the buildings that we live in, the shampoo we wash our hair with, it’s all full of petrochemi­cals.”

In the gallery space of ICD Brookfield Place, Al Qadiri presents another body of work that grapples with the multifacet­ed presence of oil in modern life.

Entitled Nawa, the space is strewn with 50 two-dimensiona­l metal sculptures of varying shapes and sizes. They are painted in glistening colours, tying in with the hovering pieces from Benzene Float.

The sculptures also have a rainbow shimmer, often seen on the surface of oil. Few stand straight. Some lean, tilt and lie across the ground, while others hang on the wall.

The collection of metallic sculptural forms have a delicate appearance reminiscen­t of the hexagonal prism shapes of snowflakes, and resemble – as Al Qadiri envisioned – a field of flowers.

“My idea was almost like somebody grabbed a bunch of flowers and just threw them in here,” she says gesturing across the gallery space. “I wanted it to look like they were dispersed in a random way.”

The floral shapesare taken directly from an unlikely source. They are the compositio­n of steel rope cables carrying oil from deep in the Earth up to the surface. When the cables are cut in half, they reveal a hyper-visual geometric arrangemen­t reminiscen­t of floral patterns in nature.

“The idea is that it’s a field and the field is beautiful and seductive and looks like flowers,” Al Qadiri says. “But behind it, if you dig into the subject, it’s also about extraction, about pollution, about a lot of different things. My work is always playing on two planes: The positive side and the negative side at the same time because that’s real life, isn’t it?”

Al Qadiri says she works as an observer revealing what already exists. “I’m not criticisin­g, my work is not activism,” she says. “I’m not a political artist, but I’m very interested in reflecting the status quo.”

Through another lens, Al Qadiri’s work speaks to the historical narratives that oil has shaped in the region. She compares oil to pearls, both connected through their rain-bowlike sheen and their reverence as currencies at different times in the Gulf.

“Our whole society was about pearl diving once upon a time,” she says. “My grandfathe­r was a singer on the pearl-diving boats and I’ve also been thinking about how to relate myself to him. How do we create a kind of continuous history in these different industries?”

Similarly to her grandfathe­r, Al Qadiri is a storytelle­r. She reanalyses and contextual­ises the power sources and currencies of culture, where they come from and how they are embedded into our lives.

“There is a beauty in recreating history, even if you do it artificial­ly, even if it’s wrong,” she says. “There is a beauty in this laborious exercise of trying to rediscover your history and your ancestors, and the stories of your people.”

This one material creates all of these different things. Our clothes, shoes, glasses, the buildings that we live in MONIRA AL QADIRI

Visual artist

Monira Al Qadir’s exhibition Floating World at ICD Brookfield Place runs until January 3

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 ?? Antonie Robertson / The National ?? Monira Al Qadiri, left, is exhibiting at ICD Brookfield’s gallery space in Dubai, above
Antonie Robertson / The National Monira Al Qadiri, left, is exhibiting at ICD Brookfield’s gallery space in Dubai, above

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