Arab News

Berlin-based Tunisian artist wins 4th Ithra Art Prize

- Ruba Obaid Jeddah

A Berlin-based Tunisian artist has won the fourth Ithra Art Prize in one of recent history’s most difficult years.

Capturing a moment created by the pandemic, which shut down the global economy, Nadia KaabiLinke employed the iconic symbol for economic growth — a rising arrow — for what she describes as directing humanity to a safer exit from the crisis.

She was chosen from 1,500 submission­s, evaluated and reviewed by a jury of local and internatio­nal leaders in the global art scene. The prize money is worth $100,000, and her artwork proposal will make its debut this coming December.

“I chose to work with the symbol of the arrow as a symbol for economic growth, but at the same time I am using it to represent an exit sign, an exit from what we know, our comfort zones which is the world that is leading us to our extinction,” Nadia Kaabi-Linke told Arab News.

Kaabi-Linke is inviting humanity to view the pandemic as an opportunit­y to create an alternativ­e world and think of a new economy that does not focus on growth anymore. “It is more about hope, being together, and exiting the old world to a new one and to have all the courage to go in a new direction that we do not know,” she said.

After its presentati­on at

Ad-Diriyah Biennale in December, Kaabi-Linke’s work will join Ithra’s prestigiou­s permanent art collection.

“This time we decided to reach out to 22

Arab countries for contempora­ry artists who currently live in the Arab region or have been for more than 10 years, we are very proud of the shortliste­d artists for the prize, we got great names of very well establishe­d in the scene, and the awarded winner will not disappoint the public, I assure,” Farah Abushullai­h, head of the museum of Ithra told Arab News.

Born in Tunis in 1978, Kaabi-Linke has lived between Paris, Dubai

and Tunis. After graduating from the University of Fine Arts in Tunis in 1999, she went on to earn a Ph.D. at Université Paris-Sorbonne,

in 2008.

The artist’s multinatio­nal background and history of migration have influenced her works.

“I am extremely optimistic for the regional art scene and particular­ly for Saudi Arabia, I am so happy from the bottom of my heart that it is opening and that people can come and discover the treasures,” Kaabi-Linke said.

“Through the economic crises, the Western world no longer invests in culture as it used to, but the opposite is happening in the Gulf region,” she said. “I am happy for the region for the upcoming period of culture and extremely honored to be part of it.”

The Ithra Art Prize is presented in partnershi­p with the Ad-Diriyah Biennale Foundation.

I am extremely optimistic for the regional art scene and particular­ly for Saudi Arabia, I am so happy from the bottom of my heart that it is opening and that people can come and discover the treasures.

Nadia Kaabi-Linke

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