ART DUBAI 2019: WHAT NOT TO MISS
The region’s biggest art fair returns for its most diverse showcase yet
From spotlighting artistic excellence from non-Western geographies to amplifying the voices of women artists, Art Dubai, the Middle East’s biggest art fair, will present its most inclusive and diverse showcase to date from today until Saturday. Featuring 92 galleries from 42 countries, and a new focus on the art scene from the Global South, the fair returns to the Madinat Jumeirah with an extensive programme comprising four gallery sections, commissions, performances, talks and new local initiatives.
Here are some highlights from the packed programme:
PERFORMANCE ART
Park your inhibitions and join in the fair’s performance programme, a celebration of togetherness. On Friday, from 9pm, carnival artist Marlon Griffith and 120 performers from Dubai’s Filipino community will stage a large-scale procession and a magical play of light and shadow which will travel through the fair inviting visitors to join in.
Daily from 5pm, taking place will be Muted Situation #2: Muted Lion Dance, a reimagining by artist Samson Young of the traditional Chinese lion dance whereby performers mimic a lion’s movements to bring luck and fortune. ‘TOLERANCE, HAS HISTORY’ PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION From the private collection of Shaikh Hamdan Bin Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince of Dubai and Chairman of the Dubai Executive Council, this exhibition of rare photography presents a compelling visual narrative of the region in the 1960s and 1970s and the values on which the UAE was built.
SOLAROCA BY OPAVIVARA
Certainly a photo opportunity, Solaroca by Brazilian artistic collective Opavivara is a beach-like environment, made up of a large structure covered with brightly-coloured Rio-style beach parasols with beach chairs underneath, designed to get visitors to the fair mingling.
ART DUBAI’S AFTER DARK PROGRAMME
When the gallery halls close (at 9.30pm), Art Dubai continues into the small hours with nightly after parties with local and international DJs playing a mix of sounds drawn from the Middle East, Africa and South America.
GLOBAL ART FORUM
Art Dubai’s critically-acclaimed annual transdisciplinary arts summit takes place today and tomorrow and unites a diverse cast of speakers under the theme of ‘The School is Factory?’ The two-day forum is open to the public, including non-ticket holders.
ART DUBAI CONTEMPORARY
In Art Dubai Contemporary, the largest of Art Dubai’s four gallery sections, first-time exhibitors Andersen’s (Copenhagen) and Spruth Magers (Berlin, London, Los Angeles) bring with them some of the most exciting names in the contemporary art scene.
Andersen’s exhibits a large sculptural piece by Argentine sculptor Tomas Saraceno, Aerosolar Canis Major.
Spruth Magers hangs Ocean IV by Gerndreas man photographer Andreas Gursky as its primary showpiece, along with a neon piece by Joseph Kosuth and two benches from Jenny Holzer — both American conceptual artists — among its standout presentation.
London-based Victoria Miro’s features a
large Stan Douglas work, 0660, guaranteed to set Instagram feeds abuzz, among its sprawling booth which also features towering sculptures from British artist Conrad Shawcross and works by Korean sculptor and installation artist Do Ho Suh.
Ten Dubai-based galleries exhibit within the contemporary halls including Custot Gallery Dubai, with its bright and vibrant booth featuring large neon geometric paintings by Peter Halley among many others, and Lawrie Shabibi’s dual presentation of works by leading Emirati artists Shaikha Al Mazrou and Mohammad Ahmad Ebrahim.
ART DUBAI MODERN
Explore history in the making at Art Dubai Modern, the only platform in the world dedicated to museum-quality works by 20th
Century Modern masters from the region, many of whom are still practising. Dhoomimal Gallery (New Delhi), India’s oldest gallery, debuts with some of the biggest names in Indian Modernism: Francis Newton Souza, Jamini Roy, Krishen Khanna and Abdur Rahman Chugtai. Hafez Gallery (Jeddah) hangs the works of the father of Saudi Arabia’s modernist movement, Abdul Halim Radwi, along with pieces by Mohammad Al Ghamdi.
GATEWAY TO THE GLOBAL SOUTH
Over in Art Dubai’s new gallery section, Bawwaba (‘gateway’ in Arabic), showcases art from artists either living in, from or inspired by the Global South with 10 solo shows from a diverse line-up of artists.
Among the artists are Turkish textile artist Gozde Ilkin (presented by Gypsum Gallery), whose artworks made out of repurposed domestic fabrics such as tablecloths, curtains and bed duvets with stitching, drawing and painting speak of layers of existence as well as issues of belonging; and Adeela Suleman (represented by New York’s Aicon Gallery) whose recurring motifs — such as birds and flowers — are replete with symbolic meaning of notions of loss and disappearance.
THE RESIDENTS PROGRAMME
Art Dubai’s Residents, a unique annual residency and gallery programme, focuses on Latin America this year.
Twelve artists from the continent’s leading galleries were invited to the UAE for a 4-8 week residency, to immerse themselves in the local scene and produce new work for the fair. Head to Gallery 3 (Mina A’Salam) to see the results of the short-term artists residencies.
Hotly tipped is Londonbased Brazilian sculptor Alexandre da Cunha (represented by Galeria Luisa Strina,
Sao Paulo) who during his residency in Dubai has worked on a new set from his series
Beach Towels. In this set, the towels contain imagery of geometric compositions, national flags and brands that are dyed and stretched as canvases.