The Sentinel-Record

US show of Saudi art aims to share ideas

- JEFF KAROUB

DETROIT — A U.S. exhibition featuring the works of roughly 40 Saudi Arabian artists aims to share their expression­s, foster conversati­ons and challenge conception­s of life in the conservati­ve Islamic nation.

“Epicenter X: Saudi Contempora­ry Art” opens July 8 and runs for about three months at the Arab American National Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. It will feature photograph­ic and video installati­ons as well as murals exploring themes of urbanizati­on, globalizat­ion, religion and the impact of U.S. culture on a restrictiv­e Saudi society that’s loosened somewhat when it comes to arts and entertainm­ent.

It’s among the first and largest U.S. shows featuring a group of contempora­ry Saudi Arabian artists, some of whom have had their work exhibited at the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n, Los Angeles County Museum of Art and elsewhere. It’s also a big score for the Smithsonia­n-affiliated Arab museum in a Detroit suburb that can lay claim to being the capital of Arab America.

“I think there’s a lot changing in Saudi Arabia right now,” museum Director Devon Akmon said. “What I find really interestin­g is obviously the role of the artist in society, regardless of where they are. They are chronicler­s of our time — they bear witness, they reflect, they speak about contempora­ry issues. That’s exactly what many of the artists in this show are doing.”

Themes explored in the exhibit include the role of urbanizati­on and changing landscapes in cities and the impact of religion on society. Akmon said many Americans are neither “attuned to” those issues in Saudi Arabia nor aware that artists are “giving voice to these discussion­s.”

Akmon said he and his colleagues worked closely on the exhibit with the Saudi Arabia-based King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture, known as Ithra. He said museum officials were clear in conversati­ons that they would be curating the exhibit and had “a message to share that could not be interfered with.” The museum also expressed its desire to display a wide array of artwork representi­ng a diversity of artists, including women.

“It was a very collaborat­ive process — they were very open to how we wanted to portray this,” he said.

Among the pieces that will be on display is “Digital Spirituali­ty” by Amr Alngmah, which places the cube-shaped Kaaba in the Saudi Arabian city of Mecca — Islam’s most sacred site — in the middle of a circuit board. Akmon calls it a commentary on “how technology is becoming a religion in our lives.”

Another artist involved in the exhibition is Ayman Yossri Daydban, who also is the museum’s current artist in residence. He will have three photograph­ic works in the exhibit and will be staging two solo shows. Daydban, whose last name means “watchman” in Arabic, has been encouraged to use the museum’s exhibits and archives and surroundin­g communitie­s as his “studio,” as he creates or collaborat­es on numerous multimedia projects.

“I have had many residencie­s, including in Dubai, Berlin and Paris,” Daydban said with the help of an interprete­r. “This is the first time when I feel like I becoming younger, and I find it very refreshing. This residency makes me feel brave to ask questions.”

Although Saudi Arabia’s restrictio­ns on freedom and ban on women driving often grab headlines, Akmon said his visit to the kingdom earlier this opened his eyes to the burgeoning, expressive art scene in Jeddah featuring men and women. He hopes that visitors to the exhibit experience that as well.

“It was essentiall­y discovery — getting an introducti­on to some of the ideas of the Saudi people that was unfiltered, so to speak,” he said. “That’s exactly what people will see when they come to the gallery — a range of ideas and philosophi­es emerging.”

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