Gulf Today

Emirati Burqa given ‘intimate’ audience with museum goers

- BY A STAFF REPORTER

at to and Intimate Sharjah one “In historical collection, of Object”, the Heritage An most icons The exhibition Sharjah-born important Emirati Museum of the is Burqa: UAE. opening devoted Karima social An Alshomely perspectiv­e been part of towards adopts Emirati a an cultural contempora­ry item that identity has for hundreds of years.

Running from Nov 16 until June 2018, the exhibition of photograph­s, ilms, paintings and installati­ons presents the artist’s personal memories and relationsh­ip with the burqa, as well as her interpreta­tion of its history and concept.

The collection is seen as vital in preserving Emirati heritage, while encouragin­g visitors to take an alternativ­e viewpoint to an item that was once part of traditiona­l everyday dress.

Manal Ataya, Director General of Sharjah Museums Authority, said: “As an object that is deeply personal to each individual wearer, it is appropriat­e that the collection is characteri­sed by Karima’s own relationsh­ip and viewpoint towards the burqa.

“We are confident that visitors will not regard the burqa in the same way again, whether they develop a better understand­ing of its history and the materials used in its design or in the reafirmati­on of its important place in Emirati society.”

The burqa was once considered an item of traditiona­l everyday dress for the majority of Emirati women until around the late 1960s. Changes within Emirati society have led to fewer women wearing the burqa and it is now rarely seen as an everyday item of clothing.

The Emirati burqa has taken on a heritage role and is worn for oficial occasions and ceremonies, becoming one of the most important heritage icons of the Emirates.

The intimacy of the exhibition refers in part to Karima Alshomely’s childhood memories of being fascinated by her grandmothe­r’s burqa. Many pieces within the collection reveal her personal relationsh­ip with the burqa.

In one example, a photograph of a burqa partially submerged in sand on a beach is revealed to represent her views on the increasing disappeara­nce of the item in Emirati life

Alshomely, whose prints, photograph­s and installati­ons have featured in exhibition­s throughout the world, said: “I perceive the burqa to be an intimate object.

“As a material object, an item of dress, an accessory or a marker of status, the burqa can be seen as a thing in the world that exists outside of the individual subject.

“Yet, as this artwork shows, the burqa has been part of Emirati women’s social and cultural identity and it is also deeply personal to each individual woman.”

The highly diverse collection­s use multiple forms of artistic and visual media to present themes including burqa materials and constructi­on, various burqa wearing practices, the loss and recovery of the burqa, and even the typical smells associated with the burqa.

 ??  ?? The collection is seen as vital in preserving Emirati heritage, while encouragin­g visitors to take an alternativ­e viewpoint to an item that was once part of traditiona­l everyday dress.
The collection is seen as vital in preserving Emirati heritage, while encouragin­g visitors to take an alternativ­e viewpoint to an item that was once part of traditiona­l everyday dress.

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