Gulf Today

Sharjah Museums Authority hosts Mohammed Mandi’s ‘Luminous Letters’

- Muhammad Yusuf, Features Writer

SHARJAH: Sharjah Museums Authority (SMA) is exploring — and allowing viewers to explore — the visual art of Emirati artist and calligraph­er Mohammed Mandi, in the latest exhibition organised by Sharjah Calligraph­y Museum (Sept. 1 - Dec. 4). The show was inaugurate­d by Sheikh Salem bin Abdul Rahman Al Qasimi, Chairman of the Sharjah Ruler’s Office, and Manal Ataya, Director General of SMA, in the presence of the artist and a number of calligraph­y enthusiast­s and artists. Titled ‘Luminous Leters’, the threemonth long exhibition features over 60 works by Mandi, including one that shows his letering of the word ‘Sharjah’, in 42 different forms.

Mandi’s works in a wide range of decorative mediums are inspired by his local surroundin­gs between the past and present, and also include sayings of His Highness Sheikh Dr Sultan bin Muhammad Al Qasimi, Supreme Council Member and Ruler of Sharjah. “This exhibition celebrates one of the most prominent calligraph­ists in the country; his mastery and creativity are unique, giving him a large fan base,” said Ataya. She said that the event is part of SMA’S mission to support profession­al and talented artists from the region, and to provide them with opportunit­ies through exhibition­s.

“Calligraph­y is part of Islamic culture, and through Sharjah Calligraph­y Museum, the only such museum in the region, we aim to educate visitors about the importance of preserving this distinguis­hed art form, and passing it on to future generation­s via our children and family programmes,” she added. The exhibition displays highlights of the artist’s practice and career path, which began with studies in Cairo and Istanbul, where he was mentored by the famous calligraph­er, Hassan Chalabi. He is sharing his “Al-hilyah Al-sharifah” painting as part of the exhibition and displaying his diploma and the licences he gained in Thuluth, Naskh, Diwani and Jeli Diwani calligraph­y styles.

Further, paintings that carry famous sayings of the late Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan and those by His Highness the Ruler of Sharjah, are among the exhibited works.

Mandi was born in 1953, began his journey with calligraph­y in 1975, taking ater his father who was also an artist. “Calligraph­y highlights the Arabic handwritin­g, and the creation of movement in leter forms to produce creative paintings,” he said. He is recognised internatio­nally for an individual style that combines leters and words to form three-dimensiona­l images and figures.

Working with different shades and colours, he overlays the letering in a laborious process that can take years to complete a singular work. By building up the surface in layers, he transforms the two-dimensiona­lity of script into a vibrant, multi-dimensiona­l compositio­n. The result forges the textual with the visual, the literal with the symbolic, and the representa­tional with the abstract. For the artist, calligraph­y is the art of the soul. Fascinated by the beauty of calligraph­y as a child, he enrolled in the Arabic Calligraph­y Improvemen­t School in Cairo, graduating in 1977.

He continued his training in Turkey during the 1970s under Chalabi. In the 1980s, he returned to the United Arab Emirates, where he has since designed calligraph­y for the logos of government ministries, private companies and commercial establishm­ents. Mandi’s distinctiv­e angular designs are found on banknotes in the UAE and Bahrain, and on passports in the UAE, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar and Kuwait. One of his most notable accomplish­ments is as one of the designers of the interior calligraph­y in the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi. Mandi lives and works in Abu Dhabi.

SMA also organised two virtual sessions to highlight role of cultural institutio­ns in supporting youth humanitari­an action. One was titled “Empowering Youth in Cultural Institutio­ns through Humanitari­an Action” to mark the Internatio­nal Youth Day on August 12 and the other virtual seminar was held on World Humanitari­an Day on August 19. With simultaneo­us translatio­ns into English, the discussion­s brought together Hamed Ibrahim Bin Karam, Programs Senior Manager - Sama Dubai TV; Huda Walid Al Bastaki, President of the Community Developmen­t Authority’s Youth Council-social Care for people of Determinat­ion, and Amna Abdullah Al Naqbi, SMA Training Coordinato­r.

Speakers discussed a number of topics, including humanitari­an action from a youth perspectiv­e, the importance of humanitari­an action, personal experience in humanitari­an work and its impact on both individual and practical aspects. The role of cultural institutio­ns in supporting and inspiring young people to engage in humanitari­an work was also highlighte­d. SMA has dedicated a section for volunteers, for both staff and people wishing to voluntaril­y work in museums. It organises numerous activities and events throughout the year, cooperatin­g with many voluntary entities and teams, supporting youth volunteer teams.

It has launched an array of voluntary initiative­s and campaigns for its staff, such as the “Ramadan Aman” campaign of 2018, which was organised by Al Ihsan Charity Associatio­n. SMA has taken part in Sharjah Voluntary Work Exhibition at the University of Sharjah, which targeted university students and those interested in voluntary activities, and the Volunteer Exhibition at the Higher Colleges of Technology in Dubai, while its staff participat­ed in the Ramadan Itar initiative at an Old People’s Home-care institutio­n. The Internatio­nal Youth Day, which was endorsed by the UN General Assembly in 1999, aims to bring youth issues to the atention of the internatio­nal community and to have their voices heard. The World Humanitari­an Day was designated as such by the UN General Assembly in 2008 to raise awareness about humanitari­an assistance worldwide and to inspire humanitari­an action across health, science, environmen­t, service and relief sectors.

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Mohammed Mandi’s unique calligraph­y.
↑ Mohammed Mandi’s unique calligraph­y.
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Mohammed Mandi’s calligraph­y forms three-dimensiona­l images.
↑ Mohammed Mandi’s calligraph­y forms three-dimensiona­l images.

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