First Graphic Design Biennial in Sharjah begins to take shape
▶ The month-long event will take place in November and features workshops, performances, installations and exhibitions exploring contemporary and historical graphic design work
Fikra Design Studio, the graphic design lab in Sharjah, has announced the first-ever Fikra Graphic Design Biennial, which will take place this November. The month-long event will comprise workshops, performances, installations, a conference and exhibitions exploring contemporary and historical graphic design work. “We wanted to challenge the status of graphic design in this part of the world and the biennial is a way to present it to the public as a trans-disciplinary subject,” says Salem Al Qassimi, Fikra’s founder.
Three artistic directors have been appointed for the inaugural edition: Emily Smith, Na Kim and Prem Krishnamurthy, the latter of whom taught Al Qassimi at Rhode Island School of Design in the United States. Inspired by the UAE’s more novel ministries such as the Ministry of Happiness and the Ministry of Artificial Intelligence, they are creating a fictional “Ministry of Graphic Design” for the biennial’s theme. “We called it a ministry to reflect how the UAE is forward-thinking, but also to elevate the role of graphic design today. To say that it’s a ministry means we’re making it more important as a discipline,” Al Qassimi says. He adds, laughing, “It’s a very graphic design approach to making a biennial – coming up with these structures, making these systems.”
The Ministry will be comprised of five departments, such as the Department of Mapping Margins, which will oversee a conference of the participants and other invitees, and the Department of Graphic Optimism. The latter will look at the messaging put out by the UAE in the 1970s and 80s, by designers such as Hisham Al Madhloum, when it was establishing itself as a country.
Working with these directors – in a slightly complex organisational structure – are curators, who will each organise the five pavilions. Hana Al Ani and Riem Hassan, who are two-thirds of the Dubai graphic design studio Mobius, will curate the “Department of Flying Saucers.” (Lest you think the Biennial has taken the expansive possibilities for graphic design too far, this department was named after the famous flying saucer building in Sharjah, recently restored by the Sharjah Art Foundation, rather than extraterrestrial transportation strategies.) Al Ani and Hassan will invite four different global graphic design studios to present their work for a week each at the biennial.
“The idea of the biennial is to celebrate graphic designers beyond the commercial realm,” says Al Ani “They will work in experimental ways, pursuing artistic content. Creating a platform of this calibre puts the discussion in Sharjah on the international scene.”
Mobius is a good example of this kind of hybrid studio: it works in traditional projects such as book and
Creating a platform [for graphic designers] of this calibre puts the discussion in Sharjah on the international scene HANA AL ANI Mobius
website design, but it also pursues non-commercial work such as the Design House, an annual project in Sharjah that facilitates graphic design pieces, chosen by an open call, such as research publications.
Fikra Design Studio is, in many ways the progenitor of design labs such as Mobius. Al Qassimi launched the company in 2006 and it was one of the first in the region to put Arab typography and design on equal footing with English-language typography, and to engage with ambitious global dialogues about graphic design.
With a diverse collective of creatives on board and such imaginitive themes, it’s looking like a promising first Biennial.